City Governments What makes your city tick?
What’s a city? It must have at least 200 residents It must be located at least 3 miles from the boundaries of nearest city It must have 60% of its land divided into tracts to be used for residential, commercial, industrial or government purposes
City services Police protection License businesses Maintain streets/sidewalks Control traffic Provide water/sewage
3 types of city government Mayor-Council form – elected council makes laws, elected mayor acts as executive officer and oversees that laws are carried out Council-Manager form – elected council establishes laws and policies, elected/appointed mayor, hired manager runs city day-to-day Constitution form – elected commissioners, run different departments
Conyers Council-Manager - Under this structure, the city manager serves similar functions as a CEO, the Mayor serves as the chairman of the board and the council as the board of directors. The council-manager form of government seeks to enhance the effectiveness of local policy-making and municipal operations by bringing together skilled lawmakers, community representatives, and experts in municipal administration and management.
Conyers The City of Conyers operates under the direction of Mayor Randal S. Mills. The Conyers City Council Members are: Councilman Chris Bowen (District 2, Post 1) Councilman Vince Evans (District 2, Post 2) Councilman John Fountain (District 4) Councilman Gerald Hinesley (District 3) Councilman Cleveland Stroud (District 1)
Cities Areas outside the city get water and sanitation from a city commission form of local gov’t Special purpose district – created for a single job or group of tasks Example – school systems: their purpose is to teach y’all Example in ATL – MARTA (Metro-Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority)
Cities Most of the money that local governments spend comes from local property taxes Types of property that can be taxed: real property (lands, homes, businesses) and personal property (vehicles, boats, trailers, airplanes, mobile homes) SPLOST – special purpose local option sales tax – pay a tax over a 5-year-period to fund certain projects
County services Bldg & Plan: zoning, bldg permits, flood plain monitoring Child/Family: deals with activities of children and families Emergency: fire and police, EMTs Health dept: helps sick folks Road dept: monitors roads & bridges Sheriff: jail, legal services, courts Tax Comm: collects taxes Waste: waste facility, solid waste landfills
Conyers Chart
Local Gov’t – Weak Mayor Form Mayor’s Powers limited executive authority presides over council meetings Council’s Powers Has executive and legislative powers Makes laws/policies Enforces laws/policies Example: Smyrna
Local Gov’t - Strong Mayor Form Mayor’s Powers Executive and legislative powers Proposes budget Has power to veto Council’s Powers Determines government policy Responsible for raising revenue ($$) Example: Atlanta
Atlanta Atlanta is governed by a mayor and the Atlanta city council. The city council consists of 15 representatives— one from each of the city's twelve districts and three at- large positions. The mayor may veto a bill passed by the council, but the council can override the veto with a two- thirds majority. The mayor of Atlanta is Kasim Reed.
Local Gov’t – Council-Manager Council’s Power: Legislative powers, policies, ordinances, appropriations Elected by the public Manager’s Power: Selected by the council Manages the day-to-day activity of the city (like a CEO)