Gay H. Williams, Esq. City Attorney, Oswego
You have requested an opinion as to the validity of the reapportionment of the city's common council. Specifically, you inquire whether reapportionment by resolution without a referendum was proper.
You have explained that in 1983 your common council by resolution adopted a weighted voting system and no referendum was held. The reapportionment was required under the provisions of the city charter which was wholly amended in 1977 as a result of a proposal by a city charter commission. You informed us that prior to the adoption of weighted voting, the mayor had the power to vote to break a tie in the common council. Under the weighted voting system, tie votes are no longer possible. You raise the additional question whether this results in the transfer or curtailment of a power of the mayor that is subject to a mandatory referendum under section
The basic concern is definition of the applicable procedure for reapportionment of your city's common council. Your city charter was completely revised in 1977 with the adoption of a new charter proposed by a city charter commission. Such a proposed charter "may contain such provisions or effect such results as may be made or effected by local law" under the provisions of the Municipal Home Rule Law (Municipal Home Rule Law, §
Under the Municipal Home Rule Law, a city by local law is authorized to apportion its legislative body and, only in connection with this action, revise the composition and membership of the legislative body, the terms of its members, the voting powers of members, and to revise the units of local government or other areas from which representatives are to be chosen (id., § 10[1][ii][a][13]). The provision establishes the procedure for enacting a plan of apportionment. A local law to establish a plan of apportionment is subject to a referendum only in the manner provided by paragraph j of subdivision 2 of section
Since you acted by resolution rather than local law, the reapportionment of your city's common council in 1983 did not comply with the requirements of State law. The failure to enact a local law, with all its attendant procedural safeguards including the conduct of a public hearing, constitutes a material deviation from legal requirements. It is necessary that you take action to reapportion the legislative body properly. This would not constitute a second restructuring in a decade, which is prohibited by law (id., § 10[1][ii][a][13][f]), in that its purpose and effect is to legalize the current structure of the legislative body.
We note that the actions of the common council since 1983 were those of de facto officers and as such are valid (1979 Op Atty Gen [Inf] 198, 203).
With respect to your second question, it seems clear from the express language of the apportionment provision that "only" a referendum under section
We conclude that a city may reapportion its legislative body by local law subject to a referendum on petition or a referendum upon motion of the legislative body.
