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102 Op. Md. Att'y Gen. 3 (2017)

handle is hein.sag/sagmd0106 and id is 1 raw text is: 





MUNICIPALITIES


CHARTER     AMENDMENT     PROCESS -     PREEMPTION    - A
     MUNICIPALITY MAY NOT REQUIRE THAT ALL CHARTER
     AMENDMENTS Go THROUGH AN ADVISORY REFERENDUM
     BEFORE BEING CONSIDERED BY THE LEGISLATIVE BODY

                        July 31, 2017

The Honorable Patrick Wojahn
Mayor, City of College Park

     You have asked whether the Council of the City of College
Park may amend the City Charter to require that all future charter
amendments be subject to a non-binding referendum before the
Council may vote on adopting the amendment. In keeping with our
procedures for addressing local governments' opinion requests,
you provided the City Attorney's analysis of the question. Noting
that no Maryland law explicitly prohibits a municipality's use of an
advisory referendum for a charter amendment, the City Attorney
advised that a supportable argument could be made that the City
may adopt the requirement that you describe.

     In our opinion, the State statutes that prescribe the process for
amending municipal charters do not permit municipalities to
require an advisory referendum as an additional step in that
process. Therefore, the City may not condition the commencement
of the charter amendment process on the submission of the
proposed amendment to the City's electorate for what amounts to
a straw vote.
                             I

                        Background

A. The History of the Proposal

     Currently, the City's charter provision on referenda addresses
only binding referenda. That provision requires the Mayor and
Council (Council) to submit the issuance of bonds to a binding
referendum and authorizes the Council to place other items,
except Charter amendment resolutions, to automatic and binding
referendum by a majority vote of said Council. City Charter of
College Park (Charter) § C4-9. With respect to referenda on
charter amendments, the Charter currently incorporates by
reference the process stated in Title 4, Subtitle 3 of the Local
Government Article of the Maryland Code. See Charter § C5- 1.

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