By Roberta Millstein
The City’s handling of the proposed noise ordinance was good in some respects and quite bad in others.
First, the good: At Tuesday night’s meeting, led by Mayor Donna Neville, the council agreed that the noise items weren’t an ordinance clean-up item and that they deserved a true staff report and separate consideration. The noise ordinance (Chapter 24) items were pulled from the Consent Calendar and Item 4B’s noise ordinance “clean-up” will come to the council at a later date.
I am grateful to the Council for hearing the Davis citizens who emailed and gave public comment concerning the noise ordinance. (Previous Davisite articles about the proposed changes can be found here and here).
Now for the bad: This should have never been on the Consent Calendar in the first place, which is for noncontroversial items that do not need discussion. I’m not quite sure how or why it was put there, or why the Council passed it unanimously at its “first reading” (Tuesday was the “second reading”), but to me it’s a continuation of a “trust staff implicitly” mentality. I hope that this is a sign that the Davis City Council recognizes that it (the Council), not staff, is the responsible party who we voted for and that oversight is needed.
Another concern is the way that comments emailed to Councilmembers were handled. I received a reply from Barbara Archer, the City’s “Public Information Officer,” asserting (in essence) that the concerns I raised were not valid. There are several problems with this:
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