The City of Elephant Butte passed its Open Meetings Act resolution at the Dec. 16 meeting—conforming to the state requirement for the resolution’s yearly renewal—but went even farther to ensure governmental transparency by including strictures not required under state law.
The resolution requires the EB city council meeting agenda—and the attending documents necessary to understand agenda items—be made available to the public and city councilors three working days before the meeting. This provision lengthens the advance notice the city must provide of specific business to be conducted at meetings.
The state OMA requires that agendas be posted only 72 hours before an open government meeting is held and does not require attending documents explicating agenda items to be posted. Nor does the state specify that advance notice must include only “working days” hours, allowing government entities to foreshorten notice by including weekends in their count of 72 hours.
City Councilors Travis Atwell and Michael Williams spearheaded the expanded OMA requirements, which formalize their previous requests for more transparency. In several past meetings, they have asked City Manager Vicki Ballinger to deliver meeting documents to them before 5 p.m. the Friday before Wednesday meetings, and, if the attending documents cannot be supplied in time, to leave the item off the agenda.
Atwell and Williams initially recommended that the OMA resolution require the agenda and documents to be posted five working days before a meeting, but Williams amended the motion to three working days after board discussion.
City Attorney Ben Young advised the city councilors against making the OMA resolution stronger than state law. All state funding applications require the grantee’s OMA resolution to be submitted, and funders, Young said, “could conceivably hold you to task” for failure to meet the additional proposed strictures.
Young suggested the councilors instead give “a directive to the city manager.”
“We’ve already done that,” Williams said.
“We already gave directives and it hasn’t helped,” Atwell said.
Mayor Pro Tem Kim Skinner said five working days would mean the city packet “would have to be out a week before the meeting,” and suggested a compromise of three working days, which was approved unanimously.
The City of Truth or Consequences and Sierra County have not passed their yearly OMA resolutions, but generally it is done around the first of the year.
Elephant Butte, T or C and the county regularly fail to provide pertinent documents in meeting packets, rendering their city councilors or commissioners ill prepared to make educated decisions. The public is also left in the dark, unable to make informed public comment or to assess whether their government is operating for and by the people.
Even background documents explaining public-hearing items are often not made available, making it impossible for the public to give meaningful testimony.
This lack of transparency is not a violation of the state’s OMA.
Elephant Butte is the only government entity in Sierra County to fix this gaping hole in state law.
Ironically, the Elephant Butte City Commission passed an ordinance at the Dec. 16 meeting without providing notice for or holding a public hearing, as required by state law.
EB has a very much more intelligent commission than T or C. I don’t think the T or C bunch even has a clue yet of how their manager totally dominates, and controls them—the agenda and the conversation—which is always one way, with little or no public input desired or allowed.
The spark of freedom is still alive in Sierra County, thank you! What did Shakespeare say about lawyers? It was Jay Rubin who came up with the legal excuse to ignore our citizen’s petition.