Vote 'yes' on amendment regarding City of Tampa Charter Review Advisory Commission

Power and the way it’s allocated is meant to be checked.

click to enlarge Interpretations of the charter have recently been major roadblocks at Tampa City Council. - Photo by Noah Densmore/Adobe
Photo by Noah Densmore/Adobe
Interpretations of the charter have recently been major roadblocks at Tampa City Council.
Interpretations of the charter have recently been major roadblocks in issues like police accountability, appointments of department heads and the creation of citizen boards. This amendment changes the charter review frequency to every eight years (instead of once a decade), and requires the city to hire a lawyer and facilitator to help the process along.

The hiring of that lawyer would also be subject to city council approval.

Again, if we’d had a mayor with a better approach to transparency, we might not be having this conversation, but eight years between charter reviews is reasonable. Power and the way it’s allocated is meant to be checked, and so what if citizens want a tune-up every eight years?

Vote yes on the charter amendment about the charter review commission. See the ballot language below.
Amendment to Tampa Charter Section 10.10 Regarding the Charter Review Advisory Commission

Shall the amendment to section 10.10 of the Tampa Charter, providing that, commencing in 2025, a Charter Review Advisory Commission shall be established every eight years, instead of every ten years, providing for the hiring by the city of legal counsel and a professional facilitator for the Commission, with city council approval, and correcting a scrivener’s error, as set out and proposed by City of Tampa Ordinance No. 2023-5, be ratified and approved:
See all of CL's endorsements and charter amendment recommendations here.