The City Commission nearly changed the voting system from individual-seat to at-large voting, but then dropped it until a workshop to engage the public is scheduled.
The opportunity arose because public comment on at-large voting coincided with a do-over on the election resolution passed last month, which set March 3 as Election Day, named the three open seats and the length of their terms.
During public comment, Ron Fenn asked the City Commission to change the City’s individual-seat voting system to an at-large voting system.
“All candidates need to be considered equal and not pitted against each other in individual seat races,” Fenn said.
“There would be a single pool of candidates,” Fenn said. “Each voter would have a single vote. This is how state and federal legislative elections are run.”
The top three vote-getters would fill the three empty seats, eliminating unopposed candidates and taking the “fear factor” out of running against “incumbents and prominent-family names,” Fenn said.
“We don’t have geographic districts, therefore there is no need for seat races,” Fenn said. “This splits up the vote so 300 people of like mind can fill every seat.”
“One vote focuses the voter, forcing them to choose the best candidate to represent them,” Fenn said. “One vote per voter eliminates factions and gives their voice greater power.”
“When you remove seat or block voting, you open up the field to more diverse candidates . . .[who] will be forced to listen to a wider base of voters to win a seat,” Fenn said. “More responsive representatives give the people more power.”
“The New Mexico election code does not require seat voting. Neither does the City code. You can just do it,” Fenn said.
After public comment, Mayor Pro-Tem Kathy Clark said, “I agree with Mr. Fenn on at-large voting. We shouldn’t be pitting one person against another. At-large voting would bring more people in.”
Mayor Sandra Whitehead also agreed: “I like that idea too.”
When the election resolution came up, City Clerk Renee Cantin said they could change to at-large voting by amending the resolution, but they would have to do it right then to make the Secretary of State’s deadline for the local-election proclamation.
Whitehead asked if the experiment didn’t work if it would be reversible. Cantin said it would probably be difficult to change back and City Attorney Jay Rubin agreed.
City Commissioner George Szigeti said he didn’t like the one-vote per voter idea. “Each voter should be allowed to pick three candidates. . . [one vote] does not reflect the majority of voters.”
Cantin said, “That’s how the resolution would read,” agreeing with Szigeti.
Szigeti said the public had not weighed in and a workshop should be held and the City Commission agreed the March 3 election would use the same method. They moved on to Cantin’s corrections.
The prior resolution incorrectly stated Seat 5 was a two-year term. It is occupied by George Szigeti, chosen by the City Commission to take Steve Green’s place, who resigned about a year ago.
State law gives the power to the City Commission to select an interim member until the next election, when the people decide who will represent them for the remainder of the resigning-commissioner’s term.
City Clerk Renee Cantin discovered Green’s term ends 2020, not 2022, therefore seat 5 is a four-year, not a two-year term.
Seat 2, occupied by Kathy Clark, and Seat 4, occupied by Rolf Hechler, also have terms expiring 2020, therefore there are three seats open, each with four-year terms that will appear on the ballot.
Cantin also added run-off election information. One will be held if the “top two vote-getters are within 10 percent of each other,” she said.