CC 02-04-2025 Item No. 12 Study Session on revisions to City Council Procedures Manual_Written CommunicationsCC 02-04-2025
Item No. 12
Study Session on
revisions to the
Cupertino City Council
Procedures Manual
Written Communications
From:Liang Chao
To:City Clerk
Subject:Fw: Proposed changes to the Council Procedures Manual
Date:Monday, February 3, 2025 8:48:09 AM
Attachments:Proposed Revision The March 20, 2024 Council Procedures Manual.docx
Please add this to the written communication of the 1/22 council meeting.
I am told that there is currently no process to include council comments even for council
procedures manual. So, as a council member, I can only submit my comment as a written
communication for this item.
Attached is the redlined version which I sent to the City Attorney on January 5, mentioned in the
email below.
Liang Chao
Mayor
City Council
LChao@cupertino.gov
408-777-3192
From: Liang Chao <LChao@cupertino.gov>
Sent: Sunday, January 5, 2025 11:25 AM
To: Christopher Jensen <ChristopherJ@cupertino.gov>; Pamela Wu <PamelaW@cupertino.gov>
Subject: Proposed changes to the Council Procedures Manual
Attached is a Word document with proposed changes to the Council Procedures Manual.
Sorry for the delay, since I originally hoped to sent it to you before the Christmas break.
I have included the suggested wordings (in Track Change) so hopefully that would save you
some time.
I have also added comments on my rationale.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1YsH-CV6lSs1dPVVvd3a-IOZDhRgpOD3D/edit?
usp=sharing&ouid=110586469630196154436&rtpof=true&sd=true
Liang
Liang Chao
Mayor
City Council
LiangChao@cupertino.org
408-777-3192
The March 20, 2024 Council Procedures Manual
1. Introduction
1.1 Purpose. The purpose of this Manual is to promote communication,
understanding, fairness, and trust among the members of the City
Council, City staff, and members of the public concerning their roles,
responsibilities, and expectations for management of the business of
the City of Cupertino.
1.2 Values. Courtesy and respect for individual points of view should be
practiced at all times. All Councilmembers shall respect each otherʹs
right to disagree. All Councilmembers shall act with decorum and
courtesy.
1.3 Brown Act. All actions of the City Council and City commissions,
committees, and subcommittees shall comply with the Ralph M. Brown
Act.
2. Selection of the Mayor and Vice Mayor
2.1 Selection of Mayor and Vice Mayor. The Mayor and Vice Mayor shall
be selected annually at a special meeting on the second Thursday of
December. The Mayor and Vice Mayor shall not serve consecutive
terms; provided, however, this provision shall not prevent the Vice
Mayor from succeeding to the office of Mayor.
2.2 Removal of Mayor and Vice Mayor. The Mayor or Vice Mayor may be
removed from office, for cause, by a 4/5ths affirmative vote of the
members. Removal for cause shall mean removal of a Councilmember
because of such memberʹs (a) willful and continued failure
substantially to perform their duties, (b) conviction for, or guilty plea
to, a felony, or a crime involving moral turpitude, (c) abuse of illegal
drugs or other controlled substances or habitual intoxication, or (d)
other illegal activities. The removal should proceed with a formal
warning, which states with proven evidence of the member's failure to
perform their duties and proposed corrective measures. The Mayor or
Vice Mayor must be advised of the proposed cause for removal at least
72 hours before any action is taken. If the Mayor is removed from office,
the Vice Mayor shall become Mayor. If either officer is removed from
office, the Vice Mayor
3. Councilmember Committees and Subcommittees
3.1 Appointment.
The Mayor shall appoint Councilmembers to standing
and ad hoc committees and subcommittees established by the City
Council, subject to ratification by the Council at its next regular
meeting. It will be the responsibility of the committees and
subcommittees to inform and submit recommendations to the Council.
3.2 Instructions and Expectations.
The Council shall make certain that all
Council committees and subcommittees are properly instructed in their
assigned scope of work and responsibilities. The committee's or
subcommittee's jurisdiction shall be defined in writing and approved
by a majority of the City Council. All Council committees and
subcommittees having a continuing or indefinite jurisdiction shall be
subject to the Brown Act.
3.3 Reporting.
Council committee and subcommittee members are to
keep the Council informed of the work and progress of their
committee or subcommittee. These reports or minutes shall be made
in writing whenever a recommendation is made to the Council.
4 Other City Commissions and Committees
4.1 Responsibility.
The Council will make appointments to City's
commissions and committees. Qualifications to serve on commissions
and committees shall be set forth in the Municipal Code or by a
resolution or motion of the Council that is not inconsistent with the
Municipal Code. Appointment of Councilmembers to City committees
shall be governed by the procedures in Section 3.
4.2 Attendance at Council Meetings.
The Chair or another commission
member appointed by the Chair shall attend City Council meetings
whenever the commission makes a recommendation to Council
regarding an item of business on the Council agenda. The commission
liaison shall promptly notify the Chair after an item requiring a
commissioner’s appearance is placed on a future City Council agenda.
4.3 Performance Expectations.
The Council shall make certain that all
commissions and committees are properly instructed on their
responsibilities and performance expectations. This will include the
issuance of a Council approved
Commission and Committee
Handbook and a mandatory annual training session for all
Commission and Committee members.
4.4 Appointment.
Commission and Committee applicants will be
interviewed by the Council before being voted on by the Council in a
noticed public meeting. Applicants are considered by motion and
appointed by a majority vote of Council. Two members of an immediate
family or persons residing in the same household shall not be allowed
to serve simultaneously on the same commission or committee.
Immediate family members residing in the same household as a
Councilmember are not eligible for appointment to any commission or
committee. Former Councilmembers are not eligible for appointment to
any commission or committee within four years of having served on the
City Council.
4.5 Removal.
The City Clerk shall notify the Council and make recommendation for potential removal of
commission members for
failure to comply with attendance policies adopted in the
Commissioner's Handbook. Council retains full discretion to review
commission and committee member performance and may take
disciplinary action as needed, including removal from the
commission or committee.
4.6 Undue Influence on Commissioners.
Councilmembers should not
attempt to influence or publicly criticize commission recommendations
or to influence or lobby individual commission members on any item
under their consideration. It is important for commissions to be able to
make objective recommendations to the City Council on items before
them. Councilmembers that attempt to influence commission positions
on an item may prejudice or hinder their role in reviewing the
commission's recommendation as a member of the City Council.
Individual Councilmembers shall have the right to attend meetings of
Cupertino commissions and other Cupertino governmental bodies but
shall refrain from speaking or becoming involved in deliberations.
5. Administrative Matters
5.1 Attendance.
City Councilmembers acknowledge that attendance at
lawful meetings of the City Council is part of their official duty.
Councilmembers shall make a good faith effort to attend all such
meetings. Council members shall notify the Mayor or the City Clerk if
they will be absent from a meeting.
Council attendance will be noted in the agenda of the next regular
meeting and thereafter for that calendar year, if five or more regular
meetings are missed.
5.2 Correspondence.
Proposed correspondence from the Mayor or other
Councilmembers on City stationery should generally be reviewed by
the Council in draft form prior to release. On occasion, there are urgent
requests from the League of California Cities for correspondence
concerning legislation directly affecting municipalities. If the Mayor and
the City Manager agree that the League's position corresponds with that
of the Council, the Mayor may send a letter without first obtaining
Council approval. City letterhead will be made available for routine
correspondence (e.g., thank you notes). Official correspondence (including
email) from Councilmembers should be respectful and professional.
5.3 Regional Bodies.
The Mayor shall appoint Councilmembers to
represent the City of Cupertino on regional bodies subject to ratification
by the Council at its next regular meeting. The Mayor should endeavor
to provide all Councilmembers a fair opportunity to represent the City.
The positions taken by the appointed representatives should be in
alignment with the positions that Council has taken on issues that
directly impact the City of Cupertino. If an issue arises that is specific to
Cupertino and Council has not taken a position, the issue should be
discussed by Council prior to taking a formal position at a regional
board meeting to assure that it is in alignment with Council's position.
Council representatives to such various boards shall keep the Council
informed of ongoing business through brief oral or written reports to
the Council. Councilmembers shall make a good faith effort to attend all
regional meetings that require a quorum of the appointed members to
convene a meeting. Attendance should not be less than 75% of all
scheduled meetings. If a Councilmember is unable to attend, they
should notify their alternate as far in advance of the meeting as possible
so as to allow the alternate to attend. To ensure continuity of the City’s representation, the
alternate should receive all correspondence from the regional bodies that is also sent to the
primary.
5.4 Responses to Public.
It will be the responsibility of the City Manager to
ensure a response is provided to public correspondence for
informational requests addressed to the Council. Staff shall respond to
all requests for services as appropriate, and the City Manager shall keep
Council informed of the City response.
5.5 Reimbursement.
City Councilmembers may be reimbursed for
expenses for travel to and lodging at conferences or meetings related to
their role as a Councilmember as stated in the Elected Officials'
Compensation Program, as may be amended from time to time (Exhibit
A). Any additional expenses that fall outside the scope of this policy
may be reimbursed only if approved by the City Council, at a public
meeting before the expenses are incurred. Any request for
reimbursement of expenses shall be accompanied by an expense form
and receipts to document the expenditure. These documents are public
records subject to disclosure under the California Public Records Act.
Councilmembers shall be eligible to receive City-issued hardware and
software for the conduct of official business pursuant to the Council
Technology Policy (Exhibit B).
5.6 Council Training.
Any member of the City Council and City
commissions or advisory committees formed by the City Council shall
receive ethics and antiharassment
training required by state law. New
members must receive the training within their first year of service and
shall comply with ongoing training requirements imposed by state law.
Members shall attend training sessions that are offered locally in the
immediate vicinity of Santa Clara County, by completing online a state approved
public service ethics education program, or through a state approved
training which may be provided at a conference attended by
the member. The City Clerk shall keep ethics training records for five
years.
5.7 Mayor's Initiative Budget.
The Mayor may use the Mayor's initiative
budget established as part of the City Manager's discretionary fund for
projects that the Mayor deems appropriate during the Mayor's term of
office, subject to the requirements of Resolution No. 07-103 (Exhibit C).
The amount of the Mayor's initiative budget is determined by the City
Council.
6. Relationship with City Staff
6.1 Incorporation of Municipal Code by Reference.
Cupertino Municipal
Code Chapter 2.17 (Exhibit D) governs the City Council's relationship
with the City Manager and their staff under the Council-Manager form
of government. To the extent that the provisions of Chapter 2.17 are
not set below, they are incorporated by reference into this Manual.
6.2 Council/Manager Form of Government.
Under the Council/Manager
form of government, the City Council sets policy direction as the direct
representatives of the community.
To enable the City Council to make informed decisions while weighing community input, the City
Manager provides staff recommendations and presents options, along with their associated pros
and cons.
The City Manager provides the
professional expertise to manage the organization.
The City Manager is responsible for carrying out the
Council's policy direction through the day-to-day management of City
functions, including the oversight of City operating departments.
Neither individual Councilmembers nor the Council as a whole shall
interfere with the City Manager's performance of the administrative
duties conferred upon them in Cupertino Municipal Code section
2.28.040.
6.3 Council-Manager Relations.
The City Council and its members
shall deal with the administrative services of the City only through
the City Manager, except for the purpose of inquiry, and neither the
City Council nor any Councilmember shall give orders to any
subordinates of the City Manager. The City Manager shall take
instructions from the City Council only when given at a duly held
meeting of the City Council, and no individual Councilmember
shall give any instructions to the City Manager. In the event that any suggestion or comment
from an individual Councilmember might be perceived as an instruction by the City Manager or
any staff, the City Manager/staff should assume positive intent and treat it as a suggestion or
comment.
6.4 Individual Councilmember Influence on Staff Decisions Prohibited.
Individual Councilmembers shall not attempt to influence
staff decisions, recommendations, workloads, and schedules, and
department priorities without prior knowledge and approval of the
City Council. If a Councilmember wishes to influence the actions,
decisions, recommendations, workloads, work schedules and
priorities of staff, that member must prevail upon the City Council to
do so as a matter of Council policy.
6.5 Decorum.
All Councilmembers and City staff shall treat each other
with dignity, courtesy, and respect. In exercising the City Council's
policymaking authority, Councilmembers must often critique, modify,
or reject a staff recommendation. While thorough vetting and criticism
of staff policy recommendations or decisions is a necessary component
of Council's policymaking role, criticism should focus on the policy
recommendations and decisions and should avoid personal attacks.
Councilmembers shall refrain from publicly criticizing the general
abilities, character, or motivations of any staff member and should
share any such concerns privately with the City Manager or City
Attorney.
6.6 Councilmember Access to Information.
City Councilmembers have
free access to the flow of any information related to the operation of
the City. The City Manager shall ensure that such information is
communicated by staff in full and with candor to the Council. City
staff will make every effort to respond in a timely and professional
manner to all requests made by individual council members for
information or assistance, provided that, in the judgment of the City
Manager, the request is not of a magnitude either in terms of workload
or policy, which would require that it more appropriately be assigned
to staff through the collective direction of the City Council, based on
the guidelines set forth in Cupertino Municipal Code section 2.17.043.
The City Manager shall place requests that impose a significant
workload on staff on the Council agenda for review by the full
Council, along with a statement from that Councilmember as to why
the information is needed. A Councilmember may file a request for information by
seeking information through a Public Records Act request as any member of the public.
6.7 Authority of City Council.
Nothing in this Manual shall limit the City
Council's power to accept, reject, amend, or otherwise guide and direct
staff actions, decisions, recommendations, workloads and schedules,
department priorities, and the conduct of city business through the
office of the City Manager. This power cannot be delegated to
individual Councilmembers, nor to committees composed of
Councilmembers consisting of less than a quorum of the City Council.
7. Agendas and Staff Reports
7.1 Future Agenda Items.
The City Manager, the City Attorney, the Mayor,
or any two Councilmembers may request that an item be added to a
future agenda for Council action. The City Manager shall provide a
quarterly report to Council regarding the status of future agenda items,
which may include a request to remove items from the list of future
agenda items. Any item may be removed for the future agenda items
list by a majority vote of the City Council.
At the requestor’s discretion, the quarterly report may also include additional information
explaining the rationale for or timing of the agenda item.
Under the “Future Agenda Item” section of each regular Council meeting, a document listing all
current future agenda requests shall be provided.
7.2 Preparation of Agenda.
The City Clerk shall prepare the agenda in
consultation with the City Manager, the Mayor, and the City Attorney.
Absent exigent circumstances, an item will be scheduled for Council
action no sooner than 14 days after receipt of a request to add the item
to the future agenda items list. Any item requiring preparation of a staff
report requires City Manager approval or, in case of a report prepared
by City Attorney's Office staff, City Attorney approval, before being
added to an agenda. The Mayor, in consultation with the City Manager
and the City Clerk, shall determine the order of items on the agenda.
7.3 Agenda Item Descriptions.
Each agenda item shall include a brief
general description of the matter to be discussed (approximately 20
words in length), including any action that may be taken under the
California Environmental Quality Act, and should generally include
the recommendation of the City Manager.
The brief description should be comprehensible by a common resident. For example,
• an amendment to the Municipal Code should include a description of the amendment,
rather than only the Code Section to be amended;
• an item related to a development project should include not only the street address, but
the common name of the project when applicable;
• The second reading of an ordinance should have the same agenda title as the first
reading.
7.4 Staff Reports.
Staff reports should include the following sections:
1. Subject
2. Recommended Action
3. Background
4. Reasons for Recommendation and Available Options
5. Sustainability Impact
6. Fiscal Impact
7. California Environmental Quality Act
The “Background” section should include the date, at least the month and the year, previous
meetings were held and decisions were made on the item so that the public can easily look the
meetings up for reference. When applicable, maps and charts should be provided in the staff
report for easy reference.
7.5 Agenda Publication.
Agenda packets for a regular meeting should be
published and delivered to Councilmembers no later than the
Wednesday prior to a Tuesday Council meeting. Councilmembers are
encouraged to contact staff in advance for answers to questions
regarding an agenda packet. s addressed to
Council shall be forwarded to Council and made available to members
of the public, consistent with the requirements of the Brown Act.
7.6 Supplemental Materials.
Supplemental reports and materials received
by the City Clerk after the agenda is published but before 12:00 p.m. on
the Monday prior to the City Council meeting shall be published and
delivered to Councilmembers at 5:00 p.m. on Monday. Supplemental
reports and materials received by the City Clerk after 12:00 p.m. on
Monday but before 4:00 p.m. on the day of the meeting shall be
published and delivered to Councilmembers prior to the Council
meeting. Council questions and staff-prepared responses will be
included in supplemental materials provided to Council and the public.
7.7 Written Communication.
All written communications on an agenda item sent after the meeting agenda is posted shall be
included in the “Written Communications” document of the council meeting. Any written
communications on items not on the agenda shall be included in the “Written Communications”
document if the sender indicates the desire to be included.
8. Meeting Procedures
8.1 Meeting Schedule.
The City Council conducts its regular meetings on
the first and third Tuesdays of the month, except when Council is in
recess. At the second regular meeting in January, the City Council will
approve the schedule of meetings for the calendar year, which in
addition to the regular meeting schedule may include the cancellation
of regular meetings and the addition of special meetings and study
sessions. This practice does not, however, preclude the Mayor or a
majority of the members of the City Council from calling additional
meetings pursuant to the Brown Act.
8.2 Rules of Order.
City Council meetings shall be governed by Rosenberg's
Rules of Order except as otherwise provided by this Manual. Unless
otherwise required by state law or City ordinance, decisions of the
Council shall be made by a majority of members present and voting.
The Mayor may impose additional reasonable procedural rules not
inconsistent with Rosenberg's Rules of Order and the provisions of this
Manual, unless objected to by a majority of Councilmembers present.
8.3 Order of Business.
The order of agenda items for regular Council
meetings is as follows:
1. Call to Order
2. Pledge of Allegiance
3. Roll Call
4. Closed Session Report
5. Ceremonial Items
6. Postponements and Orders of the Day
7. Oral Communications (public comment on non-agenda matters)
8. Consent Calendar
9. Public Hearings
10. Action Calendar
11. Items Removed from the Consent Calendar
12. City Manager Report
13. Oral Communications (continued)
14. Councilmember Reports
15. Future Agenda Items
16. Adjournment
Oral communications shall be limited to 30 minutes. Additional
speakers wishing to comment on non-agenda items may be given time
to speak at the end of the agenda, after the City Manager's report.
Councilmember Reports shall include Council committee assignments and may include other
matters serving the constituents, in addition to,
ceremonial appearances. In the absence of an objection made by a
majority of Councilmembers present and voting, the Mayor may
modify the order of business to facilitate the fair and efficient conduct
of Council meetings.
8.4 Consent Calendar.
8.4.1 Adding Item to Consent Calendar.
The Mayor, the City
Manager, the City Attorney, or the City Clerk may recommend
that items appearing on the agenda be placed on the consent
calendar for action by the City Council. All items placed on the
consent calendar shall appear together on the agenda with the
recommendation as to the action to be taken by the City Council
with respect to such item. Upon the motion of any member of the
City Council, all items placed upon the consent calendar may be
acted upon together, and each shall be deemed to have received
the action recommended.
8.4.2 Removing Item from Consent Calendar.
Items may be removed
from the consent calendar by a member of the public or a member of the City
Council. To facilitate an efficient meeting, advance notice to the City
Manager and the City Clerk by 12:00 p.m. on the day
of the City Council meeting or earlier is appreciated. As a courtesy, the request may include the
reason for removing the item and any questions to be addressed.
Items removed from the consent
calendar shall be placed on the agenda for consideration after
the action calendar.
8.5 Public Comment.
An opportunity for public comment shall be provided
for the consent calendar, each other agenda item under consideration,
and, during regular meetings, on any matter that is within the subject
matter jurisdiction of the City Council. The Mayor may consolidate
public comment for related agenda items, subject to overruling by a
majority vote of the Council. Nonagenda
matters (including Council
and staff reports) may be addressed by the public during oral
communications. Members of the public wishing to speak regarding an
item shall submit a request to comment to the Clerk ("blue card") or,
where applicable, raise their hand in Zoom within nine minutes of the
time the Mayor opens public comment or prior to the close of public
comment on the item, whichever is earlier. Each individual speaker will
ordinarily have up to three minutes to address the Council. If a speaker
representing five or more members of the public in attendance and
wishing to comment on the item but electing not to speak, the speaker
may have up to 10 minutes to address the Council. Consolidation of time
among speakers is not otherwise allowed. If a large number of speakers
wish to address Council on an item, the Mayor may reduce the time
allotted to each speaker consistent with the Brown Act. Twice the
speaking time will be provided to any member of the public who uses a
translator.
8.6 Communications with Members of the Public.
The City Council may
ask questions of speakers providing public comment but should avoid
an extended discussion with members of the public during meetings.
Additionally, when a member of the public provides comments
regarding a matter that is not on the agenda, Councilmembers may (1)
refer the speaker to staff; (2) refer the speaker to appropriate reference
material; (3) request that staff report back at a future meeting; or (4)
request that staff place the item on a future agenda.
Councilmembers should not otherwise respond to or comment on an
item of business that is not on the agenda. City staff should generally
avoid responding to comments or questions from members of the
public during Council meetings, although the City Manager or City
Attorney may offer to arrange a time to discuss the subject matter of
public comments with members of the public subsequent to the Council
meeting.
8.7 Conduct of Meetings
8.7.1 Councilmembers. Members of the City Council value and
recognize the importance of the trust invested in them by the
public to accomplish the business of the City. Councilmembers
shall accord courtesy to each other, to City employees, and to
members of the public appearing before the City Council.
8.7.2 City Employees. City staff shall observe the same rules of
decorum applicable to the City Council. City staff shall act
at all times in a businesslike and professional manner
towards Councilmembers and members of the public.
8.7.3 Members of the Public. Members of the public attending City
Council meetings are encouraged to treat Councilmembers, City
staff, and other members of the public with the same courtesy
that Councilmembers and City staff must accord to them. Any
members of the public who engages in conduct that disrupts a
City Council meeting shall be removed from the meeting.
Nothing in this Manual or any rules of conduct that may be
adopted by the City Council shall be construed to prohibit public
criticism of the policies, procedures, programs, or services of the
City, or of the acts or omissions of the City Council, City advisory
bodies, or City staff.
8.8 Discussion and Deliberation
8.8.1 Ex Parte Contacts. Councilmembers shall disclose any ex parte
communications prior to deliberation on a quasi-judicial matter.
A quasijudicial
matter is typically a hearing in which the City
Council hears evidence and makes findings of fact to reach a
conclusion based on the applicable law. An ex parte
communication occurs when a Councilmember hearing a quasi-judicial
matter communicates directly or indirectly with any
person or party in connection with a matter before the Council,
without notice and the opportunity for all parties to participate.
8.8.2 Relevance. All discussion must be relevant to the issue before
the City Council. A Councilmember is given the floor only for
the purpose of discussing the pending matter; discussion
which departs from the item agendized for discussion is out of
order. Councilmembers should avoid repetition and shall not
discuss matters that are not on the agenda. Arguments for or
against a measure should be stated as concisely as possible.
8.8.3 Council Questions and Deliberations. Councilmembers may
obtain the floor by seeking recognition from the Mayor.
Following presentations to Council on an agenda item,
Councilmembers shall each be given five minutes to ask
questions of any presenter.
To facilitate a cordial and collaborative environment, Councilmembers are encouraged to yield
any unused speaking time to colleagues who have already used their allotted time.
The Mayor may allow additional
time for questions where appropriate. Following public
comment, the Mayor may request that a motion be made and
seconded. After the motion has been stated to the Council and
seconded, any member of the Council has a right to discuss the
motion after obtaining the floor. A member who has been
recognized shall limit their time to five minutes.
Unless questions are directed to the City Attorney or the City Manager by a Councilmember, they
should seek recognition from the Mayor before taking the floor.
The Mayor may allow additional time for
deliberations where appropriate. This rule shall displace any
conflicting rule in the City's adopted rules of procedure.
8.8.4 Opportunity for Equal Participation. It is the policy of the Council to
encourage the full, fair participation of all members of the
Council in discussions and deliberations. The Mayor may impose
reasonable limits on the time any Councilmember is permitted to
speak to advance this policy. In addition, all Councilmembers
wishing to be recognized should be given an opportunity to speak
before any member is allowed to speak a second time.
8.8.5 Civility. While it is appropriate to vigorously debate a motion,
its nature, or its consequences, Councilmembers shall avoid
attacks on the motives, character, or personality of other
Councilmembers, City staff, and members of the public. The
Mayor shall rule out of order any Councilmember who engages
in such attacks.
8.8.6 Role of the Mayor. The Mayor has the responsibility for
controlling and expediting the discussion of an agenda item. It is
the duty of the Mayor to keep the subject clearly before the
Councilmembers, to rule out irrelevant discussion, and to ensure
civil discussion among Councilmembers.
8.9 Meeting Length. Meetings of the City Council shall adjourn by 11:00
p.m. unless the time of adjournment is extended by a vote of a majority
of the City Council. Discussion of an agenda item shall not begin after
10:30 p.m. Any motion to extend the meeting beyond 11:00 p.m. shall
include a list of specific agenda items to be discussed or approved and
shall specify the order these items shall be considered. If a meeting
continues past 11:00 p.m., it shall end at 11:30 p.m. All meetings shall be
adjourned at 11:30 p.m. unless by a vote of a majority of the City
Council suspends this rule and Council votes affirmatively to extend
reserved to the Council by law. This authority extends throughout the
period of recess established by the City Council and includes the
authority to execute agreements and make expenditures necessary for
the exigent operational matters. The City Manager shall make a full and
complete report to the City Council at its first regularly scheduled
meeting following the period of recess of actions taken by the City
Manager pursuant to this section, at which time the City Council may
make such findings as may be required to ratify the actions of the City
Manager. Nothing in this Section prevents the City Council from calling
a special meeting during the recess period.
9. Closed Sessions
A closed session may be held at any regular or special meeting for any
purpose authorized by the Brown Act. The City Attorney will schedule
closed session meetings in consultation with the Mayor and the City
Manager. Public comment shall be received in open session prior to a closed
session. To ensure strict compliance with the Brown Act, the City Attorney
or the City Attorney's designee shall report out in public session any
reportable action taken during closed session and any other information
from closed session authorized to be disclosed based on a majority vote of
the City Council.
10. Enforcement of Rules; Suspension of Rules
The City Council may enforce repeated or serious violations of the rules set
forth in this Manual through a censure action placed on a Council agenda.
Nothing in this Manual shall be cited to invalidate a properly noticed and
acted upon action of the City Council. Any rule set forth in this Manual may
be suspended by a three votes of the Council.
11. Information Memos
11.1 Information Memos by Staff. Two Councilmembers may request an information memo to be
provided on any issue pertain to the City business. The City Manager shall place requests that
impose a significant workload on staff on the Council agenda for review by the full Council, along
with a statement from that Councilmember as to why the information is needed.
11.2 Information Memos by Councilmembers. Individual Councilmembers may prepare
information memos for inclusion in their Council Activity Reports. Through these memos,
Councilmembers can share any information they have received—whether from staff or other
sources —with their fellow Councilmembers and the public, thereby enhancing transparency
and accountability in City operations. The memos shall not include information which is
protected by law from disclosure.
From:Peggy Griffin
To:City Council
Cc:City Clerk
Subject:2025-02-04 City Council Meeting - ITEM 12 Study Session-Revise CC Procedure Manual
Date:Sunday, February 2, 2025 11:51:59 PM
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MEETING AGENDA ITEM.
Dear Mayor Chao, Vice Mayor Moore and Councilmembers,
This is a great time to review the Cupertino City Council Procedures Manual. Please consider making
revisions to the following items listed below. I have placed a “**” in front of the items a feel most
strongly about.
1. FIX Section 2.2, last sentence
a. needs to be completed. “If either officer is removed from office, the Vice Mayor…”
2. Section 4.5 Removal of commission members
a. Change it to have the City Clerk provide a recommendation to Council for removal of
commission members for failure to comply with attendance policies but leave the final
decision to Council.
3. Section 5.6 Council Training
a. add Brown Act and Rosenberg’s Rules of Order training along with yearly updates when
changes take effect.
4. **Section 7.5 Agenda Publication
a. Add a statement that ALL written communications will be published, even for Oral
Communications.
b. Add a statement that written communication will be posted by 5pm before the 6:45pm
Council meeting and updated and posted the next day with any additional comments
received.
5. Section 8.1 Meeting Schedule
a. In December, at the first meeting following the election of the new Mayor the following
should be done
i. The Council sets the meeting schedule for the upcoming year.
ii. The Mayor assigns commission assignments.
6. **Section 8.5 Public Comment (combining speaker times)
a. Remove the requirement that to combine public speaker time you must have 5 people.
b. Instead, allow 2-5 people to combine their times. When this is done, the combined
time is 2minutes per person.
i. Example1: 2 people combining their time would get 2minutes * 2 people =
4minutes
ii. Example2: 5 people combining their time would get 2 minutes * 5 = 10
minutes
7. Section 8.8.3 Council Deliberations
a. Allow actual discussion and exchange of ideas – more flexibility. Mayor Chao has done
well managing this so far.
8. **ADD a Section “No Texting On The Dais”
a. For anyone on the dais (staff and all Councilmembers) - All cell phones and messaging
apps on computers must be OFF during all meetings. Cell phones need to be put away
completely. This prevents private communications between Councilmembers, staff
and the public.
9. FIX Section 8.9, last sentence on page 13 does not make sense as it flows onto page 14.
a. It’s like they are talking about 2 different situations. One is the extension of a meeting.
The other is what happens during the August recess.
10. Section 10 Enforcement of Rules
a. Define the levels of violation, proof required, noticing/rebuttal and the consequences of
each.
11. Clarify the process for meetings that occur after a Monday holiday.
a. Does the Council meeting still happen on Tuesday? If so,
i. when is the agenda posted
ii. when do questions have to be submitted to be answered?
12. **ADD a Section
a. Prohibiting staff from going on overseas travel paid for by city funds and/or using city
work time.
13. Section ? – there is a section in the procedure manual that overrides the Rosenberg’s Rules of
Order.
a. I suggest removing that change and going strictly by Rosenberg’s Rules of Order.
b. Following these sets of rules means that a new Councilmember or commissioner who
isn’t familiar with the rules can go online and find a video or training session to learn
about them without having to worry about what exceptions to the rules are being used
by Cupertino.
Sincerely,
Peggy Griffin