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1) Regular Charter Commission Meeting dated December 17, 2018 <br />Motion carried. Voting Yes: Chairperson Field, Commissioners Fuhreck, Sivertson, Anderson, <br />Bendtsen, and Leistico. Voting No: None. Absent: Commissioner Barrows, Deemer and <br />Niederhaus. <br />COMMISSION BUSINESS <br />5.1 Review of Charter Chapter 4 Nominations and Elections <br />City Attorney Langel stated that the purpose of the case is to review the existing provisions in <br />the City's Charter relating to conducting elections as the current Charter language is not entirely <br />consistent with State law. He explained that there are sections of Chapter 4 of the Charter that <br />must be amended to comply with the State Statutes, and there are other sections that may be <br />amended. The Charter could suggest an ordinance amending only the provisions that are not <br />consistent with the State Statute or the Charter could suggest an ordinance amending or repealing <br />the entire Chapter 4, making the conduction of elections more straightforward. <br />City Attorney Langel stated that advisory elections are unique to charter cities, but most hardly <br />ever choose to do them. He stated that primary elections are also not required by State law and <br />noted that the process outlined currently in the Charter is unwieldly and there is language that <br />must be ignored as it is not consistent with State law. He reviewed language that is included in <br />the Charter that is not required as it is already defined by State law, which is already very <br />specific, and therefore the duplicative language is not required to be in the Charter. He explained <br />that the duplicative licatilanguage is not providing any benefit to the City of Ramsey. He also <br />p <br />identified language that exists in the Charter and conflicts with State law. <br />Commissioner Bendtsen asked if there should be language stating that the City is going to follow <br />State law, or whether that is just assumed. <br />City Attorney Langel noted that if the language is not included in the Charter, it would default to <br />State law. He referenced the section relating to primary elections, which are not required by <br />State law. He asked if there is a need for primary elections in Ramsey. He explained that until <br />you have passed the filing date, you will be unaware of the number of people that will be running <br />and therefore notice has already been made for a possible primary and the timelines are <br />impacted. <br />Commissioner Anderson stated that there have been a number of communities moving towards <br />using ranked choice voting and asked if that should be considered. <br />City Attorney Langel stated that he did not know if Ramsey has expressed interest in ranked <br />choice voting, as that is still a new process in Minnesota. He was unsure that Ramsey would <br />have a high enough number of people attempting to run that would require ranked choice voting. <br />He stated that his sense is that issue would not be addressed at this time and the focus could just <br />be on cleaning up the section on primary elections. <br />Charter Commission/ February 13, 2019 <br />Page 2ofll <br />