He claims he is meeting with resistance, starting with his own status as a city council member.
Williams was appointed to the Elephant Butte City Council in early November 2019. On the same day Edna Trager was moved up from mayor pro tem to mayor, and Kim Skinner was moved up from council member to mayor pro tem. Yet, nearly four months later, only Trager’s elevation to mayor has been updated on the City’s website.
Williams’ email and picture aren’t even on the website yet and he doesn’t have cards, he said, forcing him to continue handing out his personal cards with his personal phone number and email to constituents.
During the Feb. 19 meeting, Williams pointed out the City’s website wrongly gives the impression it is a strong-mayor form of government and asked it be corrected.
Asked by Mayor Edna Trager if he had spoken with Randy Van Vleck, the New Mexico Municipal League attorney, whether strong-mayor was incorrect, Williams said he had, and Van Vleck confirmed Elephant Butte was a mayor-council form of government.
Williams also examined City ordinances and found none declaring Elephant Butte was a strong-mayor form of government.
“I found an ordinance stating the governing body is to hire the clerk-treasurer and the city manager. Another ordinance states the city manager is to handle the day-to-day operations,” Williams said.
Van Vleck concurred “that in itself is the definition of a mayor-council form of government,” Williams said. “It is not a strong-mayor form of government if the city manager handles the day-to-day operations.”
“I spoke with the Mayor this morning,” Williams said. “She said we would have to wait until money is designated in next year’s budget to update the website.”
“What do they say?” Williams said, “Perception becomes reality.”
Trager, in a separate interview, confirmed she spoke with Williams, but he misunderstood what she said. The whole website “infrastructure” needs to be updated, which will wait for the budget. “But titles and emails will be updated as soon as possible,” Trager said.
She spoke with Van Vleck and confirmed the City is a council-manager form of government, “Although everything listed it as a strong-mayor form of government,” Trager said, when the City was incorporated in 1998.
Updating that part of the website “will take longer,” Trager said, because the wording will be approved by Van Vleck.
The City’s website points out why smaller cities moved away from a strong-mayor form of government, without clarifying when Elephant Butte became a council-manager form of government:
“In the strong-mayor form the elected mayor is given almost total administrative authority and a clear, wide range of political independence, with the power to appoint and dismiss department heads without council approval and little, or no public input. In this system, the strong-mayor prepares and administers the city budget, although that budget often must be approved by the council. Abuses in this form led to the development of the council–manager form of local government and its adoption widely throughout the United States. In some strong-mayor governments, the mayor will appoint a chief administrative officer, who will supervise department heads.”