Description










hamiltoncommunityblog@gmail.com



Tuesday, November 2, 2010

How Does City Hall Work??

Ever wonder how City Hall works?? Why do we have a Council? What is the job of a Councillor?
I thought you'd never ask.

Why City Hall Matters

City government is the most accessible level of government, and City Council makes decisions that most affect our daily lives – from garbage collection to bus service to policing to the provision of electricity, water, sewers, roads, parks, recreation centres and many social services. Virtually all land use decisions are made by City Council, including permission to build new houses, malls and big box stores. The City also employs over 6000 staff.

Hamilton collects half a billion dollars in taxes each year. These come from everyone who lives in Hamilton. Homeowners, business owners and others who own land in Hamilton pay property taxes directly to the City. People who rent also pay property taxes, but through their landlord. About 20% of the average rent goes to pay city taxes.

How City Hall Works

Hamilton has 15 city councillors plus the mayor. City Council meets twice per month, normally on the evening of the second and fourth Wednesdays. There are four standing committees of Council as well as numerous smaller special purpose committees, some of which have citizen members.

The standing committees each meet twice per month. The standing committees are composed of seven or eight councillors each. This is where most of the real decision-making and almost all of the debate takes place. These committees make recommendations to Council, which makes the final decision. There is usually little debate at the full Council meetings. The smaller special-purpose committees usually report to one of the standing committees. Meeting times are posted on the City’s website. Click here to check the monthly listings. A list of all the city committees and their council members can be found here.

The agendas for each standing committee, as well as for Council, are required to be posted on the City’s website at least three days prior to the meetings. The agendas include detailed reports from City staff, and these reports are a good source of information about what is taking place in the City. You can read these agendas and reports by going to the City’s website and following the links. You need Acrobat Reader (free download) to do this.

All councillors meet monthly in two other decision-making bodies – the Committee of the Whole and the Board of Health. Their schedules and agendas are posted in the same city website locations as those of the standing committees.

No comments:

Post a Comment