Two county charter amendments on November ballot

Two proposed amendments to the King County Charter have been placed on the November ballot by the Metropolitan King County Council. The council acted upon a recommendation from a citizen commission that met last year.

The proposed measures would:

Remove “budget allotments” language: Deletes Charter Section 475, which mandates that the County Executive provide estimates, or “allotments,” of what each county agency will spend each quarter. This process was used in the past when budgeting and accounting was primarily done on paper without the use of automated systems (Ordinance 2009-0282).

The Financial Policies Advisory Task Force, a panel created by the council to review the financial and debt policies of King County, recommended to the county’s Charter Review Commission that the allotment language be removed.

Clarify Charter Review Commission procedures: Clarifies the selection process of the members of the Charter Review Commission by making them subject to council confirmation. It also would require the County Council to publicly discuss each recommendation made by the Charter Review Commission and how the council will proceed with these recommendations (Ordinance 2009-0348).

The adopted amendments were recommended by the King County Charter Review Commission last year. These recommendations were published in the commission’s final report, which can be found at: http://your.kingcounty.gov/exec/charter/pdf/crc_final-report.pdf

Every 10 years, a commission of King County citizens is appointed to recommend changes to the charter, which is the basic “constitution” of county government. The commission proposed 12 charter amendments, but recommended placing the measures before voters in phases to avoid overloading the ballot in any one year.

The council placed six charter amendments on the November 2008 ballot, of which voters approved five. Charter amendments must appear on the November general election ballot.