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LOCAL NEWS

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Garrett Brnger, Reporter

Gavin Nesbitt, Photojournalist

Published: November 14, 2023 at 9:34 PM

Updated: November 14, 2023 at 10:06 PM

Tags: San Antonio, City Hall, Ron Nirenberg, City Charter, November 2024
Election

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LOCAL NEWS


SAN ANTONIO VOTERS MAY DECIDE ON MORE COUNCIL DISTRICTS, COUNCIL & CITY MANAGER
PAY IN NOV. 2024 ELECTION


MAYOR NIRENBERG ASKS CHARTER REVIEW COMMISSION TO DELIVER RECOMMENDATIONS BY
JUN. 14, 2024

Garrett Brnger, Reporter

Gavin Nesbitt, Photojournalist

Published: November 14, 2023 at 9:34 PMUpdated: November 14, 2023 at 10:06 PM
Tags: San Antonio, City Hall, Ron Nirenberg, City Charter, November 2024
Election
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More council districts, council & city manager pay could be on San Antonio’s
Nov. 2024 ballot



SAN ANTONIO – San Antonio voters could be asked next fall to decide on longer
terms for council members, whether to add new council districts and how to
determine pay for council members and the city manager.

But the specifics of those possible ballot propositions, and others, must first
be sorted out by a newly reconstituted Charter Review Commission over the next
seven months.

Mayor Ron Nirenberg announced his plans for the 15-member commission in a memo
to council members Tuesday. In his fourth and final term, Nirenberg tasked the
commission with what one expert called a “laundry list” of issues:

 * Whether to add to the 10 current city council districts
 * Whether council member pay should more closely reflect the cost of living in
   San Antonio
 * Whether council and mayoral term limits should change from four, two-year
   terms to two, four-year terms
 * Whether an independent citizen committee should handle the decennial
   redistricting process
 * Whether to undo the 2018 limits on the city manager position (eight years in
   the job and salary capped at 10 times the lowest-paid city employee)
 * Whether the city should appoint an independent ethics auditor
 * Whether the Ethics Review Board should be autonomous and have the power to
   compel testimony
 * A catchall on whether the city charter’s language needs to be updated to
   reflect “current processes, acknowledgments, and roles”

Nirenberg has asked the commission to deliver its recommendations on those
subjects to the city council by Jun. 14, 2024 — a little more than two months
before the city council would need to vote to put any of the recommendations on
the Nov. 5, 2024, ballot.

San Antonio voters would have the final say on adopting any of the proposed
charter amendments.

Heywood Sanders, a professor emeritus of public administration at UTSA, called
the list of possible changes to consider “a laundry list.”

“There are so many there’s not one focus, which is an intriguing thing,” Sanders
said.

The charter can only be amended every two years, at most, and Nirenberg has so
far been unable to oversee many changes. He convened a commission in 2018, but
the fire union beat them to the punch and led a petition drive to get three
proposed amendments onto the November 2018 ballot.

Ultimately, an amendment instituting a salary cap and term limit for the city
manager position passed, as did an amendment allowing the union to bypass
contract negotiations and go straight to arbitration.

The third proposed amendment failed, which would have made it easier to put
referendum votes on the ballot.

One of the issues the 2018 Charter Review Commission had considered ended up
making its way onto the May 2021 ballot.

During the pandemic, city voters agreed to change the charter to allow bond
dollars to be used for more than just “public works,” which paved the way for
the city’s first-ever $150M housing bond a year later.

You can read the mayor’s full memo and list of issues for the 2023 Charter
Review Commission below:




MORE COUNCIL DISTRICTS

The City of San Antonio has maintained 10 council districts since 1977, when
voters replaced the previous system of nine “at-large” council members in favor
of 10 district-specific representatives and an at-large mayor.

The city’s population has exploded in the decades since. The 1980 U.S. Census
counted 970,000 people in San Antonio, but by 2020, there were more than 1.4
million.

After the most recent redistricting effort finished in June 2022, each district
was left with approximately 143,400 people.

Professor Francine Romero, the UTSA Public Administration Department chairwoman
and a member of the 2014-2015 Charter Review Commission, believes the commission
will likely consider increasing the number of districts to 13 or 14.

Romero, who is also a CPS Energy Trustee and chair of the Conservation Advisory
Board, sees that number as the “sweet spot” between just adding one or two
districts and “going crazy with 19 or 20.”

“Council districts can only do so much, and there’s so many people in every
council district now,” Romero said. “So we need to move toward smaller, maybe
more representative districts as well. Not just that they’re more responsive,
but more representative for different pockets of our city.”

More districts would mean redrawing the council district maps, which seems
unlikely to happen in time for the May 2025 city election.

The previous redistricting process took eight months, and there would be only
six between the November 2024 and May 2025 elections.

The commission has also been tasked with deciding whether an independent
committee should be charged with the redistricting process every decade rather
than the city council.

In the most recent process, the council chose to let an advisory committee do
the detailed work of drawing the maps; however, it was still the council
members’ responsibility to approve the final version.


COUNCIL PAY AND TERM LENGTHS

A holdover from the 2018 Charter Review Commission is a question of whether to
change the city council and mayor’s term limits from four, two-year terms to
two, four-year terms.

The lengths would likely come with staggered elections, per the commission’s
list of issues.

Sanders calls various council term limits a “perennial” issue, though he said a
switch from two to four-year terms would be a “pretty dramatic” change for the
city.

“We like keeping our elected officials, for better or worse, on a short leash,”
he said.

The commission has also been tasked with considering whether to change how
council members are paid so they are “compensated on indexed terms that more
accurately reflect the city’s cost of living and lower barriers to participation
in City government.”

Since 2015, council members have received an annual salary of $45,722, while the
mayor gets $61,725. At the time, the council salary was equal to the median
household income in the city — a number the U.S. Census currently puts at
$55,084.

Former District 7 Councilwoman Ana Sandoval cited the pay as one of the reasons
she decided to finish her council term early this year and take another job.

Romero was part of the 2014-2015 Charter Review Commission that recommended
giving council members a full-time salary instead of the $20 per meeting stipend
they used to get.

Though she could not remember why having a cost-of-living adjustment built into
the charter change became “controversial,” she thinks it is important to do it
now as the “salary seems really lacking.”

“So I don’t know if they’re going to consider increasing the base pay, but I
think at least considering some kind of index that raises it with [the] cost of
living would be so important because we don’t have to go back and do this every
few years to raise their salary again,” Romero said.


CITY MANAGER PAY & TENURE

One of the least surprising inclusions to the commission’s duties is the
potential reversal of the 2018 restrictions on the city manager position, which
opponents say could force out a good city manager prematurely and make hiring
top talent for the position harder.

With the fire union leading the charge, 59% of San Antonio voters in November
2018 agreed to cap the salary of the top city administrator to 10 times that of
the lowest-paid city employee. The charter amendment also limited a city manager
from serving more than eight years.

The vote was widely seen as a referendum on the city manager at the time, Sheryl
Sculley. With a base salary of $475,000, Sculley was a polarizing figure, best
known for her clashes with the police and fire unions.

The charter amendment didn’t apply to Sculley, who retired after 13 years in the
position a few months later. But it does apply to her successor, Erik Walsh, who
is already more than halfway through the eight-year term limit after taking the
reins of the city in March 2019.

Walsh’s base salary for FY 2024 is $374,400. In comparison, the heads of the
city-owned utilities, CPS Energy and SAWS, earn salaries of $655,000 and
$593,838, respectively.

Romero sees merit in undoing the 2018 charter amendments.

“I know people are concerned about paying public officials too much, but that’s
almost like saying, ‘we’re a poor city, and we don’t deserve a better-paid city
manager,’” she said.

Sanders thinks trying to reverse a decision that voters made so recently could
prove controversial, though he was not surprised to see it among the
commission’s charges.

“The mayor made no qualms over the years about saying he’d like to see those
change, particularly since he seems pleased with Erik Walsh’s performance as
city manager,” Sanders said.

For his part, Nirenberg said he will hold his opinions until the time comes to
vote, though “certainly I have feelings about each of these issues as a voter
and as a mayor, but it is truly an independent process for the commission to be
engaged in.”


COMMISSION MEMBERS

The 15 members of the commission include numerous members of the business
community and people with ties to the City of San Antonio or similar
institutions, like VIA Metropolitan Transit.

Though Sanders called the list of commissioners “an awfully inside baseball kind
of group,” Nirenberg said it was a “broad cross-selection of folks who bring a
perspective.”

“They also bring constituencies,” the mayor said. “So they will have access to,
you know, plenty of public input. And I’ve charged them also with making sure
that there is a process for general public input.”

 * Co-Chair Bonnie Prosser Elder - General Counsel & Senior V.P. at VIA
   Metropolitan Transit; Former Chairwoman of 2018 Charter Review Commission
 * Co-Chair David Zammiello - Former CEO, Project Quest
 * Elva Pai Adams - Businesswoman; Former Wells Fargo Executive
 * Josh Baugh - Director of Communications, VIA Metropolitan Transit; Former San
   Antonio Express-News Reporter
 * Luisa Casso - Chief of Staff, Trinity University
 * Frank Garza - Municipal Lawyer; Former San Antonio City Attorney
 * Mike Frisbie - Senior V.P., Raba Kistner; Former San Antonio City Engineer
 * Pat Frost - President, Frost Bank
 * Martha Martinez-Flores - Creative Director, MMCreative
 * Naomi Miller - Executive Director, American Council of Engineering Companies;
   Former District Director for Former TX House Speaker Joe Straus (R-San
   Antonio)
 * Bobby Perez - General Counsel, Spurs Sports & Entertainment; Former District
   1 City Council Member
 * Shelley Potter - Former President, San Antonio Alliance (union for SAISD
   teachers)
 * Dwayne Robinson - Managing Director, Robinson Consulting Group & Chairman,
   San Antonio MLK Commission
 * Rogelio Sáenz, PhD - Professor of Sociology and Demography, UTSA
 * María Salazar - Attorney & Chair, Mayor’s LGBTQ Advisory Committee

Copyright 2023 by KSAT - All rights reserved.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

GARRETT BRNGER

Garrett Brnger is a reporter with KSAT 12.

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GAVIN NESBITT

Gavin Nesbitt is a photojournalist and video editor who joined KSAT in September
2021. He has traveled across the great state of Texas to film, conduct
interviews and edit many major news stories, including the White Settlement
church shooting, Hurricane Hanna, 2020 presidential campaigns, Texas border
coverage and the Spurs.

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