Ann Arbor school board commits to 5-hour limit to meetings
The Ann Arbor Board of Education’s regular meeting may have stretched from Wednesday night in to the wee hours of Thursday morning for the last time.
The board voted unanimously to cap its meetings at five hours duration at about 12:30 a.m. Thursday, effective immediately.
AnnArbor.com file photo
The board meets at 7 p.m. and the first several hours of the meeting can contain student performances, public comment and staff presentations, which causes the board to discuss and vote on policy late at night.
The new five-hour limit means the meeting must be over by midnight.
Additional time restrictions will be placed on each agenda item for trustees and presenters to follow. Trustees will be able to vote to extend the discussion by 15 minutes.
Those time limits will be set by Ann Arbor Public Schools Superintendent Pat Green, Mexicotte and two trustees.
Trustee Simone Lightfoot said she felt Mexicotte’s policy changes was too constrictive.
“I feel this is a lot of constraining going on, in a time when we’ve got budget cuts all over the place,” Lightfoot said. “I fear we’re stifling ourselves.”
Trustee Andy Thomas added that under the new subcommittee structure introduced and later passed by the Board of Education Wednesday night, items coming to the full board will likely have already been vetted, so less discussion would be needed.
The board voted 6-1 to create three subcommittees: Planning, performance and a governance committee that will meet quarterly to provide oversight. Trustee Susan Baskett was the opposing vote.
Subcommittees will be made up of three trustees, and will all be in compliance with the Open Meetings Act, Mexicotte said, meaning the meetings will be announced, open to the public and minutes will be recorded.
Trustees are not required to serve on them, but they can serve on more than one.
Subcommittees were eliminated from the Board of Education in fall 2011. Mexicotte has said she wanted to bring them back to make full board meetings more efficient, and potentially less lengthy.
The move was among a number of other policy changes brought forward by Mexicotte, all of which were passed by the board after much discussion and some dissent.
Mexicotte had worded the policy to only allow another trustee to sit in on a subcommittee meeting as a guest if one member of the subcommittee was absent to keep a sub-quorum and avoid a functional quorum.
Lightfoot asked if the wording to Mexicotte’s proposed policy could be changed to allow a trustee to sit in on a different subcommittee meeting from the one on which they serve if they have a vested interest in the topic on the agenda -- a move that Trustee Glenn Nelson supported.
“The real question here is do we as trustees trust the committee structure, or do we not?” Thomas said. “Experience has shown that when that person attends, the visitor does not sit there like a potted plant. Inevitably, they become engaged in the conversation.”
Lightfoot introduced a friendly amendment to Mexicotte’s drafted language that would allow a trustee to sit in on a three-member subcommittee meeting but not participate.
Trustee Christine Stead said she believed that the action would violate the Open Meetings Act and so she would not be supporting it.
“My feeling is that it does not pass legal muster; that we can’t do this,” Mexicotte said.
The measure quickly died in a 3-4 vote, with trustees Baskett and Glenn Nelson supporting Lightfoot.
Time limits to subcommittee meetings were set at two hours, after trustees Nelson and Irene Patalan voiced objections to Mexicott’s proposed three-hour cap.
Measures passed Wednesday night also removed “Committee of the Whole” language from the organization’s bylaws.
Mexicotte will be working throughout the next two weeks to develop the subcommittees.
Amy Biolchini covers Washtenaw County, health and environmental issues for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at (734) 623-2552, amybiolchini@annarbor.com or on Twitter.
Comments
treetowncartel
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 9:09 p.m.
FYI staff, Patricia Green resigned last night
DonBee
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 5:21 p.m.
LOL - by the time the last report was read and before business started almost every member of the public had left. This vote happened to an almost empty room. 13 or 14 speakers from the public, they get up, say something and then leave. No waiting for results. Does that say anything?
treetowncartel
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 4:09 p.m.
Public commentary should be limited to two minutes per individual, per meeting. Also, wouldn't you run this by counsel before introducing it so you can be pretty sure, but as always not certain, if the new setup is within the boundaries of the OMA.
Always Amazed
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 3:10 p.m.
Seriously? No one could possibly attend closely for five hours. Two hours should do it.
alarictoo
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 3:01 p.m.
Simone, In the immortal words of Archie Bunker, "Stifle yourself!" In all seriousness, far too much of the discussion time that I see occurring during BoE meetings are meaningless platitudes and excess verbiage; one of the worst for this is Glenn Nelson. If the BoE will learn to streamline their speech, and really talk to the issues instead of talking around them, keeping within a five-hour time limit should prove no great difficulty.
John of Saline
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 2:55 p.m.
Take away their chairs. THAT will shorten the meeting.
Bob W
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 2:58 p.m.
Bingo! We have a winner.
Bob W
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 1:22 p.m.
Still too long and too late at night. Presumably all attendees have put in a full day of work before the meeting starts. I wonder how safe the driving is for both attendees and others on the road at around 1:00 a.m? According to the NTSB fatigued driving is like drunk driving.
Floyd
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 12:05 p.m.
How about they do away with the part of the meeting when Pat Green describes at length all the classes and schools she's visited in the last week in order to combat the community's impression that she doesn't work a full time job? It's wasted rhetoric because it sucks up air time and makes her look defensive.
alarictoo
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 3:02 p.m.
Wish I could vote this one up 1,000 times.
Danielle Arndt
Thu, Apr 11, 2013 : 2:29 p.m.
Floyd, it's interesting that you would suggest this. I think it's a fair suggestion considering most of the accolades and experiences Pat Green shares during her superintendent update at the board meetings can be found on the district's website under the "This Week in the Ann Arbor Public Schools" tab: http://www.aaps.k12.mi.us/aaps/admin.super/this_week. The district also recently added an easy-to-find link on the homepage to this section of the website. It can be found on the right-hand side of the homepage in a light yellow box: "Good News in AAPS from Dr. Green."