Chancellor Weaver's ruling makes it clear that there were massive systemic failures at every juncture of the Knox County charter process: inception, preparation, filing, administration. Had the charter been properly written and filed, or had someone been diligent and caught the errors and fixed them in an appropriate manner, we wouldn't be in the mess we're in today.
So who's responsible for this? (More after the jump.)
It might be easier to identify who isn't responsible, but I'd like to open the floor for nominations to the Knox County Cavalcade of Incompetents. In my view, anyone who had any role in drafting, reviewing, preparing, (non-)filing, overseeing, administering, or enforcing the County Charter would be well served to 'fess up now to their errors. Broadly, that would be anyone on the charter's drafting commission, the County Commission, and anyone who has held any County office of any responsibility since the Charter came to life.
I'd love to hear some specific names, though. It's time for the blame game, because mistakes of this magnitude should have genuinely adverse consequences for those responsible.
If you can't even create your government properly, you're not fit to govern. The manifest and sustained incompetence of our elected leaders is the second-best argument for term limits; the best argument, of course, being that the people voted for them, expected to get them, and can be expected to vote for them earnestly again.
|
Topics:
|
138
vote
|
Discussing:
- A couple of good books (9 replies)
- Who do you like in the Super Bowl? (13 replies)
- Campfield's willingness to mislead surmounts itself: abortion causes breast cancer (22 replies)
- What is the purpose of printing this type of letter to the editor? (30 replies)
- Bean on His Staceyness, Mayor Burchett, & the Governor (5 replies)
- Did Gloria Ray get a raw deal? (23 replies)
- Komen Foundation backs down (10 replies)
- In the wake of KTSC - another local vendor contract that needs a closer look (2 replies)
- Burchett: Duncan may have to resign as Trustee (3 replies)
- Gov. Haslam's administration fires top TDEC officials (1 reply)
- More Campfield greatest hits (35 replies)
- The other side of Governor Haslam's three-dollar bill (6 replies)
Upcoming events:
- Feb 13 2012 - 6:30pm (1 week 17 hours from now)
- Feb 15 2012 - 12:00pm (1 week 2 days from now)
User login
Navigation
TN Progressive
- Update on proposed 6th and Garfield development (Enclave)
- Half Time In America (Southern Beale)
- Bridges v. Walls – Annexation Edition (Vibinc)
- The Honest Rape (Southern Beale)
- From Our "Shocked" Dept: TVA's Watts Bar project will take longer, cost more (RoaneViews)
- Clay Bennett (RoaneViews)
- Colbert's Legendary Defense of Planned Parenthood: Pap Smears at Walgreens (Video) (TN Guerilla Women)
- Belmont working on community relations (Enclave)
- Lame logic (Enclave)
- Vanderbilt Students Bristle at Notion of Inclusiveness (Sean Braisted)
- The real Problem With the "Cure" (Kitchen Table)
- Haynes Is Out, Who's In The Bullpen? (Sean Braisted)
- Selenium Contamination Needs to be Monitored Closely (RoaneViews)
- Getting Past Guns, God And Gays Legislation (Newscoma)
- What The Hell Is Stacy Campfield Doing? (Southern Beale)
- Obama (Probably) Gonna Be On Georgia Ballot (Sean Braisted)
TN Politics
- Environmentalist, Governor Agree: Consolidation Won't Change Things (Tom Humphrey)
- Two NRA-Drafted Bills Filed on Guns in Cars (Tom Humphrey)
- Kingsport Alderman Challenging Shipley in GOP Primary (Tom Humphrey)
- New Locks for Ballot Boxes (Tom Humphrey)
- UT Folk Happy With Haslam Budget (Tom Humphrey)
- Hamilton County Lincoln Day Dinner, storified (TN Ticket)
- Mayfield churns 3rd District race (TN Ticket)
- Team delay (Post Politics)
- Congressional race roundup, District One (TN Ticket)
- That's twice as long as he lasted previously (Post Politics)
- Planned Parenthood sues state (Post Politics)
- The state wants in on the action (Post Politics)
Local Media Blogs
- The inventor of the camera phone may surprise you (Jack Lail)
- Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics (Metro Pulse)
- Friday briefing (Josh Flory)
- The Weekend Plan-It: Feb. 3-5 (Metro Pulse)
- Black Wednesday anniversary slipped by (Jack McElroy)
- Culver Schmid joins new firm (Josh Flory)
- Gloria Ray's Job Not Long for This World? (Metro Pulse)
- Film Notes: ET First Friday Film Series + The Innkeepers (Metro Pulse)
- O Youth Wins Last Sound Off Qualifier (Metro Pulse)
- Thursday briefing (Josh Flory)
- KTSC hires spin team, board chair quits (Mike Donila)
- Voting locations, sample ballot released (Mike Donila)
Local Paper
- East Knoxville house fire ruled suspicious (KNS News)
- UT educators like Haslam's budget proposal (KNS News)
- TVA's Watts Bar project will take longer, cost more (KNS Business)
- Ray maintains competitive spirit amid KTSC turmoil (KNS Business)
- Marriage licenses issued in Knox County (KNS News)
- Haslam seeks more control over Tennessee's agencies (KNS News)
- City has no independent record of KTSC performance evaluations (KNS Business)
- Births (KNS News)
- People and Honors: February 5 (KNS Business)
- Business Bulletins February 5 (KNS Business)
Local TV News
- Knoxville bars, law enforcement working to reduce drunk driving after Super Bowl (WATE)
- One injured in shooting between father and son (WATE)
- Student takes stands against bullying (WBIR)
- Local businesses hoping for a touchdown on Super Bowl Sunday (WATE)
- Westbound lane back open on I-40 after rockslide cleanup (WBIR)
- KFD: East Knoxville fire is 'suspicious' (WBIR)
- One I-40 westbound lane opens after Cocke County rockslide (WATE)
- Meet Herschend, Dolly's silent partner in family fun parks (WBIR)
- Knoxville-based RAM aims to help more people in more places (WATE)
- East Tennesseans receive free healthcare (WBIR)
- TDOT announces "extensive" plans to stabilize spot of recent rock slide (WVLT)
- Interstate 40 west reopens as fallen rocks removed (WVLT)
State News
- What's going on outdoors Feb. 5, 2012 (Commercial Appeal)
- Robert J. Samuelson: Globalization's double-edged sword (Commercial Appeal)
- Editorial: Manners matter (Commercial Appeal)
- E.J. Dionne: Naivete didn't give us Citizens United (Commercial Appeal)
- Editorial: Time to talk -- and listen (Commercial Appeal)
- 2 brought to Erlanger after Marion County crash (Times Free Press)
- Search on for escaped Silverdale inmate (Times Free Press)
- Top Web Stories - Jan 29- Feb 3 (Times Free Press)
- SWAT standoff resolved; man in custody (Times Free Press)
- Lady Mocs lead Wofford at half (Times Free Press)
Wire Reports
- Asian stocks rise as U.S. jobs gain outweighs fears (Reuters) (Yahoo Business)
- Glencore offers 8 percent premium to Xstrata to seal deal: FT (Reuters) (Yahoo Business)
- GM aims for 10 percent profit margin over next few years: report (Reuters) (Yahoo Business)
- Goldman's Blankfein campaigns for gay marriage (Reuters) (Yahoo News)
- GOP race turns to Colorado, Minnesota (AP) (Yahoo Politics)
- Analysis: Romney win leaves rivals few options (AP) (Yahoo Politics)
- Class War 2012: Why Both Parties Are Flying the Anti-Wall Street Banner (Time.com) (Yahoo News)
- Inside Facebook's IPO: How the Social Web Will Reshape the Economy (Time.com) (Yahoo News)
- "Intentional" explosion kills husband, two sons of missing woman (Reuters) (Yahoo News)
- As Facebook grows up, it courts Madison Avenue (Reuters) (Yahoo Business)
- Police clear DC Occupy site, protesters look to a new day (Reuters) (Yahoo News)
- Greek parties face Monday EU bailout deadline (Reuters) (Yahoo Business)
- Obama says he deserves re-election, job's not done (AP) (Yahoo Politics)
- Colorado rocky for Republicans in 2012 (AP) (Yahoo Politics)
- In Minn., rightward drift challenges Romney (AP) (Yahoo Politics)
Popular today
Popular this week
- What is the purpose of printing this type of letter to the editor?
- First Friday with Mayor Rogero and the KCDP
- “If you were to rank big mistakes in the history of this country,”
- More Campfield greatest hits
- Layoffs report
- Haslam: Believe in Better
- In the wake of KTSC - another local vendor contract that needs a closer look
TN Progressive
- BlountViews
- Cup of Joe Powell
- Left Wing Cracker
- Newscoma
- Out of the Blue
- RoaneViews
- Sean Braisted
- Southern Beale
- TN Citizen Action
- TN Talking Points
- Tiny Cat Pants
- TN Guerilla Women
- Vibinc
- View From My Kitchen Table
- Wade Munday
- WhitesCreek Journal
Nearby:
- AC Entertainment
- Agrarian Urbanite
- Blount Dems
- Bottom Line
- Craig Thomas
- Daily Pulse
- David Oatney
- Discover ET
- Domestic Psychology
- Dwight Van de Vate
- Ellen Smith
- Erin Chapin
- Fletch
- Fort Sanders
- Frank Murphy
- Frussie's
- Gene Patterson
- Home/Work
- Instapundit
- Jack Lail
- Jack McElroy
- Jim Stovall
- Julie Apple
- Knox Dems
- KnoxBlab
- Knoxify
- Knoxvillager
- Last Home
- Les Jones
- Long Pauses
- Lynn Point Records
- MamaPundit
- Michael Silence
- Mike Donila
- MoxCarm Blue Streak
- Mushy's Moochings
- Pam Strickland
- P.E.N. Studio
- Phyllis Patterson
- Pittman Properties
- Political Leverage
- Property Scope
- Randall Brown
- Reality Me
- Resonance
- Rikki Hall
- Rob Huddleston
- School Matters
- Snark Bites
- Stacey Campfield
- Stick With a Nose
- Stop Alcoa Parkway
- Suzy Trotta
- Tabloid Boy
- Terry Frank
- Thirteen Letters
- TN Clean Water
- Tom Humphrey
- Tri Cities
- Wendy Pitts Reeves
Beyond:
- Andy Axel
- Daily Docket
- Democratic Talk Radio
- Enclave
- Ginger Snaps
- Just Wonderin'
- Lean Left
- Post Politics
- Quiet Life
- Smart City Memphis
- Southern Liberal Living
- TN Dems
- TN Ticket
- TN Trivia
- TN Women's Caucus
- West TN Liberal
- Bob Stepno
- Facing South
- Great Smoky
- Lovable Liberal
- Newsrack
- Opinari
- Wandering Hillbilly
At large:
- Agonist
- Alterdestiny
- American Street
- Atrios
- Burnt Orange Report
- Buzzflash
- College Dems
- Common Cause
- Crooks and Liars
- Daily Kos
- Democratic Strategist
- Democrats.org
- Digby's Hullabaloo
- DSCC
- Ezra Klein
- The Fix
- Huffington Post
- Lefty Blogs
- Liberal Oasis
- Media Matters
- MyDD
- Open Secrets
- Pam's House Blend
- Political Wire
- Politico
- Progressive States
- Seeing the Forest
- Skippy the Bush Kangaroo
- Suburban Guerrilla
- Swing State Project
- Talk Left
- Talking Points Memo
- Think Progress
- Truthdig

Well, I wasn't around during
Well, I wasn't around during any of this so you can't blame me (although I owned property and paid taxes - think I can get a refund?).
But here's a list of suspects from the Charter its own bad self:
OFFICIALS of KNOX COUNTY, TENNESSEE
AT THE TIME OF THIS CODIFICATION
County Executive:
Thomas Schumpert
County Commission:
Diane Jordan
Rudy Dirl
Madeline Rogero
Billy G. Tindell
Wanda Moody
Pat Medley
Bee DeSelm
Scott Davis
Mike Ragsdale
Frank Leuthold
John Griess
Mark Cawood
Ralph Teague
Mary Lou Horner
Leo J. Cooper
Mike McMillan
John Mills
Robert Bratton
Howard Pinkston
County Law Director:
Richard Beeler
County Clerk:
William Mike Padgett
It doesn't say who was running the Election Commission, which I presume had some statutory role in filing certification for the vote on the charter? It also doesn't say who wrote the thing.
That's a fine start.
I believe there was a "charter commission" responsible for authorship. That's a list I'd really like someone to find. Meantime, I think fair questions to any of these people would be: (1) how did you actively contribute to the charter process, (2) how did you satisfy yourself that everything was compliant, and (3) what would you do differently if you could, knowing what you know today?
"cavalcade"
Just wanted to say, "Cavalcade! Damn. That's a good word."
I need to work that into conversation today.
____________________________
"The iPod was not developed by Baptists in Waco." -- G.K.
simple
(3) what would you do differently if you could, knowing what you know today?
Change one instance of the phrase "constitutional officers" to "Sheriff, Trustee, Register of Deeds, County Clerk and Property Assessor". That's all it would take for Weaver's ruling to dissolve. The charter document required that it be properly ratified with the state, so you can't blame that on the charter commission.
Given the language of the Supreme Court ruling in Bailey, I give Weaver's interpretation 50-to-1 odds of holding up on appeal, but it will certainly hold up long enough to get the incumbents into their first ill-gotten term.
but it will certainly hold
but it will certainly hold up long enough to get the incumbents into their first ill-gotten term.
Which is the end game of this whole little passion play. Don't look for a White Knight on a white horse because there aren't any left. The Charter will be saved after and only after the ballot is locked.
Removal for cause, violation of their oath, is probably the most realistic option. But that would only remove five of them. The other four ineligible incumbent commissioners would get a free ride.
This is about the ten votes on County Commission that the County Mayor needs to pass his agenda. Will the November ballot have a removal for cause referendum for the five who violated their oath when they sued Knox County to invalidate the Charter? Even if or when they are removed County Commission would select the replacements. No need to concern the voters with such responsibility. So the ten vote majority would be unchanged.
Is a want-to-be Sun Tzu laughing at us from his lair in Nashville? The utter contempt for the people and the law knows no bounds.
Well, I wasn't around during
Well, I wasn't around during any of this so you can't blame me (although I owned property and paid taxes - think I can get a refund?).
But here's a list of suspects from the Charter its own bad self:
OFFICIALS of KNOX COUNTY, TENNESSEE
AT THE TIME OF THIS CODIFICATION
County Executive:
Thomas Schumpert
Randy, I think that document is from 1997. I have been looking for the 1988 version for the correct names. Dwight Kessel served from 1982 to 1994 so he was the County Executive at the time. I believe Tommy Schumpert served from 1994 to 2002.
Billy Tindell, Mary Lou Horner, and Wanda Moody were present on County Commission at the time the Charter was written in 1988. Workman was the County Law Director in 1988.
I don't know the entire list
I don't know the entire list of the Charter Commission (it should be available somewhere). But... Billy Tindell was on it. Yes, the same Billy Tindell who sued to have the very document he helped write declared invalid.
Who said irony was dead?
P.S. I also heard Susan Richardson Williamson say the other day that she was on it. I think Frank Leuthold was as well.
You are making these
You are making these judgments based on one (1) judge's opinion. How do you know that he's not the one who is wrong?
How do you know that the people who wrote the charter aren't at least as smart as he is, and that they maybe had good reasons and ample precedent for writing the document the way they did?
How do you know that Weaver wasn't constructing a case to justify his own previous obiter dicta** which gave birth to this misbegotten lawsuit?
(Law.com: (oh-bitter dick-tah) n. remarks of a judge which are not necessary to reaching a decision, but are made as comments, illustrations or thoughts. Generally, obiter dicta is simply dicta.
See also: dicta dictum)
This charter has worked fine for 16 years. The "fatal" flaws Weaver sees hardly constitute sufficient reason to create all this uncertainty (not to mention flout the clear intent of the people who voted for term limits) by tossing it. let's be clear here: Weaver's own ramblings gave the five commission plaintiffs and their lobbyist lawyers who were desperately seeking a way to evade term limits an issue to claim as their own. It also gave them a friendly court to hear their case.
And the result made almost everybody in the courthouse happy.
The fat lady ain't sung on this one yet.
A moment for rebuttal?
OK -- let's identify them and hear from them. You're probably the most enterprising reporter in town, so if you'll tell their story maybe you can help set things straight. Instead of just railing against the opinion, educate us about why it's incorrect, why and how these people did what they did in the charter process.
Sadly, all we have to go on now is the opinion, which is (or should be) based upon the evidence that was properly presented in the courtroom. If someone had presented evidence that the charter was correctly drafted or filed, I doubt that Chancellor Weaver would have ignored that evidence. By your own estimation, he's honest and hardworking. And if he did ignore such evidence, or if he's just flat wrong as a matter of law and it was properly drafted or filed, then Weaver will get reversed.
Aside: all this panic about purported uncertainty in the county government is wholly manufactured. The laws provide that if your charter fails, you revert to the standard statutory governance scheme. If you have to re-enact some ordinances, that's not too difficult to manage -- or at least it shouldn't be. Given our experience, I am about convinced Knox County politicians could screw up a baked potato.
Finally, there's no such thing as dicta. Everything a judge says or writes tells you something about his or her view of the law. You ignore it at your peril.
reasonable assumptions
I offered a fairly detailed explanation for why I think Weaver's ruling is flawed and will be overturned. It's under the heading "Reasonable assumptions."
The uncertainty is not about the county government so much as this year's elections. Let's review: filing deadline passes under the Court of Appeals ruling invalidating term limits; deadline for finalizing the ballot passes, absentee ballots are mailed; Supreme Court overturns Court of Appeals, making most incumbents ineligible; two incumbents suspend their campaigns; more than 40 write-in candidates register; voters cast their ballots believing that term limits will be enforced; during early voting, Weaver idly speculates that the charter might be invalid; following the primary, Weaver hears a case which has expanded from the original question -- whether term limits apply to all county offices or just commission and mayor -- to questioning the validity of the charter; write-in candidates who attained 5% support begin raising and spending money; Weaver rules, knocking a couple write-ins from the ballot.
Potentially, we could see another ballot finalized, then fouled before voting begins or during early voting if Weaver's ruling is overturned. Alternately, August winners could be later deemed ineligible, necessitating a special election. Or Weaver's ruling could hold up.
I'm not so sure.
You do write a thoughtful summary of why the ruling could be overturned, but here are the problems I still see, all of which point back to the politicians charged with getting these things right in the first place:
- "The alleged omissions are Weaver's creation." Not really. He explains the statutes they had to follow and explains how they failed to follow them.
-- "No offices or duties were created, destroyed or redefined by the charter, and the casual references to 'constitutional offices' in the charter clearly imply the continued existence of those offices, though they are not explicitly named. It is obvious that the intent of the charter was to change nothing at all about the county government except for the need to get state approval for legislative acts." I would submit that the "casual references" evidence sloppiness and that, when you have to tell me the intent is obvious, it probably is not. The best way to make your intent obvious is to follow the statute and spell things out. Nobody did that here.
-- "John Schmid's argument that the unnamed offices were abolished is absurd, as Weaver found, yet Weaver's decision to invalidate the entire charter because those offices are only mentioned implicitly is equally extreme." I think there's plenty of room for disagreement here. Again, follow the statute and do what it says, and you button down this issue. Fail to do so, and you create a governing document that violates the law.
--"Similarly, his conclusion that the failure of county functionaries to properly ratify the charter renders it invalid is an absurdity. Office holders do not have the power to nullify the will of the voters by simple neglect." Really? Seems to me they do it all the time at all levels of government. I doubt any of the people involved here is or was smart or Machiavellian enough to have failed to ratify the charter while thinking this could be the result years later. But the laws require ratification for a reason, and someone who cared should have made sure it happened. No one did.
chumps?
The requirements for ratification should have been satisfied, but that is only reason to insist they be met, not reason to invalidate the charter. Mike Moyers submitted the charter to the state last week. Sure, it's 16 years late, but it's better than permanently blowing off the will of the voters.
As for the objections to the language of the charter, it basically boils down to whether you are looking for a technicality by which to trash the thing or a way to repair it. The vague language leaves room for play, but the intent of the voters is plain. Changing a single instance of the phrase "constitutional offices" to a discrete list of those offices would render Weaver's objections to the charter language moot. That's a technicality leveraged against voter intent.
Voter intent has been clear all along, persistent attempts to ignore or abolish it by executives, commissioners, law directors and judges notwithstanding. Is your position that voters are just sad-ass chumps for trusting a bunch of clowns with the authority to represent them? That might be true. I'd certainly entertain a reasonable argument to that end.
Chumps aplenty.
Please understand: I agree with you that the voters' intent is clear and that we should have term limits. I think that's clear from the last graf of my post. But I also think it's unfair to blame Chancellor Weaver for this mess. Judges can only act on what's properly in front of them.
What I guess I've been trying to avoid saying in so many words is, we're all chumps. (I didn't live here at some of the relevant times but I'll bear some responsibility anyway.) We elected people to do a fairly straightforward job, they proved (intentionally or negligently) incapable of doing it, and -- this has sort of been the unsaid part -- all of us should have pushed all of them harder to make sure it happened.
Sadly, when only 15% of us vote (and when the other 85% probably don't read this blog) we utlimately have no one to blame but ourselves. But I'd like to think those we elected and trusted to do what we told them to do would at least be able to follow fairly clear rules and procedures. I think Chancellor Weaver's opinion and the evidence presented to him make it clear that our elected leaders cannot or will not do that, and those responsible should be held accountable.
rikki's got a point
Best I can figure,Rikki's got a point.The Chancellor was compelled to require the county follow the manner spelled out by the Constitution.However,nothing indicates that the manner to ratify does not allow the filing of results 16 yrs. later.With respect to the Chancellor's opinion of the duties per the Charter.In the Courts some have agreed with the Chancellor's opinion.Others have argued that as long as the Charter does not grant additional duties(which shall be written into the Charter) the ultimate authority of the Constitution prevails.What the opinion does is root the ambiguity out of the code concerning how a Charter defines duties. So the results are on file & in November we define the duties;the Charter lives.The question is...how will term-limits be enacted.
accountability
I think we are in general agreement. In my original post, I said "Weaver was operating in a vacuum" in reference to the lack of an uncompromised argument on behalf of the voters. I would have more sympathy for Weaver if not for the fact that he was the first to suggest the charter might be invalid. I also think he went too far in his ruling. The deficits he identifed are real, but they do not seem insurmountable or irreparable, so he should have sought a resolution honoring the will of the voters.
I'm not sure what it might mean to hold accountable those officials who might be responsible for the charter deficiencies. We could remove them from office, but they're not in office anymore. Removing their sucessors seems more vengeful than just. The damages here are fairly abstract, so the legal system will probably not be the venue for holding any officials accountable.
I do think the voters have been penalized by this ruling, and that needs to be remedied. Ragsdale's solution is excellent for fixing the charter if Weaver will consent to a stay, but at this point, it looks like the 2006 county elections, already bruised, will take a further beating. A superfast reach-down appeal by the TSC could prevent candidates who ultimately might be declared ineligible from appearing on the August ballot, but they'd then be replaced by party nominees, and time is rapidly expiring for all that to transpire.
Accountability via memory
Unless they're still in office and can be voted out, the best way to hold them accountable is to remember they had a chance to get this right and failed. That's why I hope more names will come to the surfaqce. We should henceforth affix an asterisk next to the name of any official who had anything to do with this train wreck so people can remember to enhance their skepticism of the official accordingly.
rikki or someone who has
rikki or someone who has read the lawsuit--how is it that the charter review committee thinks it can "fix" the technical issues with the charter, without including putting term limits back in? If they're going to further define the constitutional officers, can they not further define term limits so that they can stick? Can anyone explain that? Or are county term limits dead unless another referendum on them is placed on the ballot?
presumption
I'm not sure what makes you think the committee intends to do anything other than repair the defects in the charter identified by Chancellor Weaver. On the other hand, I don't know why such a large body is needed to correct a small and discrete omission.
If the committee ends up being formed and empowered and they do anything other than honoring the expressed will of Knox County voters, I'd hope someone starts a petition to dissolve the entire county government and elect a new one in 2008 or sooner. It might not be a bad idea to start collecting signatures right away to remove from power any officeholder who has served two or more terms. That would help keep the rewrite committee honest.
Given that the enabling legislation in the state Constitution says a charter is ratified when approved by the voters, it would seem that invalidation of the document is not an option, that repair of the deficient language and negligent filings is the only Constitutional remedy.
Repairing the Charter
Rikki, the only method to "repair" the charter is to call for the creation of a Charter Review Committee, and under the Charter provision that allows for that, 9 of the members must be county Commissioners, and 10 must be non-commissioner citizens, hence the size of the committee. There's no other route to "fixing" the Charter - only an appeal, or a complete re-write which could not go into effect until 2010 by operation of state law. Actually that's not quite right - the County Commission itself can by 2/3 vote of its membership itself suggest charter revisions to go on the ballot, but I think that's unlikely to happen.
If the committee ends up
If the committee ends up being formed and empowered and they do anything other than honoring the expressed will of Knox County voters, I'd hope someone starts a petition to dissolve the entire county government and elect a new one in 2008 or sooner.
It sounds like you are suggesting the people take back the government. Maybe the "Wheel Tax" crowd and the "Take back the Government" group had a point?
What makes you think...
Rikki said: "I'm not sure what makes you think the committee intends to do anything other than repair the defects in the charter identified by Chancellor Weaver."
answers:
1) naivete
2) hope
3) despair
4) respect for the will of the voter.
except that unfortunately, the current commissioners obviously viewed term limits as the biggest defect of all.
We really do need a recall provision in the Charter
I'm not sure what it might mean to hold accountable those officials who might be responsible for the charter deficiencies. We could remove them from office, ...
Under the Charter the only way you could remove a commissioner was at the ballot box. However under the State Constitution there is a recall provision. The Charter does not allow a recall or removal option. In re-writing the Charter a recall provision should be included.
In today's Sentinel there is a disturbing item about Commissioner Mike Hammond. While the rest of the panel of 19 feels term limits should be in the Charter Hammond is soft on the issue.
Voters overwhelmingly approved term limits in 1994.
"The will of the people needs to be a major factor in how we proceed," Anderson said.
Another citizen member of the committee, Nancy Young, said she also supports term limits being part of any future charter.
So, too, did commissioners David Collins, Diane Jordan and Ivan Harmon, all three of whom are members of the review committee. Collins and Jordan are plaintiffs in the lawsuit that led to Weaver's ruling.
"I've never had a problem with term limits. It's just the way this came about. I'm for the wishes of the people," Jordan said.
And Collins added, "I don't have any problem in the revised charter having the term limits in it. I will support that."
"That would be the first thing I'd make sure is in there," Harmon said.
But first-term Commissioner Mike Hammond, also a member of the review committee, said he's not yet willing to decide one way or another on that issue.
"It all depends on what happens Monday. There are several questions that I have, like when would they go into effect," Hammond said.
He also questioned whether the county should have individual referendums on offices like sheriff.
But he added, "Citizens have made it clear they want term limits."
So in District 5 you have John Griess who sued to invalidate the Charter and you have Mike Hammond who can't decide about term limits.
We really do need a recall provision in the Charter.
http://www.knoxnews.com/kns/local_news/article/0,1406,KNS_347_4781827,00...
I agree with the Beanster
I agree with the Beanster that Weaver's own comments started this mess. Which makes me wonder why everyone was so suprised at his ruling. I kind of expected it, since he set it up already.
I heard Frank Leuthold on tee vee say that the Charter Commission omitted specific language about the Constitutional offices because they thought it was unnecessary and already covered by the Constitution, and that may be a good reason. Leuthold was also very gracious in his remarks about Chancellor Weaver, saying something to the effect that he really couldn't argue with the flaws he found.
Just to be clear, I personally wasn't criticizing the Charter Commission, just Billy Tindell for participating on it and then suing to overturn its work when he thought it was to his personal benefit.
P.S. Nice piece, Rikki.
statutory construction
This week's Metro Pulse editorial comes down hard on Chancellor Weaver as the primary culprit in this mess. They point out that the legal principle of statutory construction obligates judges to endeavor to preserve legislation rather than abandon it whenever possible, a principle Weaver seems to have disregarded. The editorial goes so far as to express regret that Weaver has no opposition on the August ballot, leaving voters no recourse against him.
A write-in Democratic candidate for that seat in May would have made it much harder for Weaver to justify keeping this case in his court. It is still possible for someone qualified to be judge to mount a write-in campaign, and with the new voting machines, it is no longer necessary for voters to go out of their way to request a paper ballot. It can all be done right there on the machine, making write-in campaigns more viable than they once were.
Are there any Knox Co lawyers out there willing to mount a write-in campaign against Weaver?