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State and Local Government

State and Local Government. Chapter 7: Cities and Villages. Background. Cities and villages are granted broad authority by the state constitution to govern themselves without state interference They are run by councils or board elected to represent voter’s wishes: representative government

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State and Local Government

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  1. State and Local Government Chapter 7: Cities and Villages

  2. Background • Cities and villages are granted broad authority by the state constitution to govern themselves without state interference • They are run by councils or board elected to represent voter’s wishes: representative government • Villages and cities are “incorporated,” meaning formed from an area originally part of a town but tied together into a municipal corporation (a larger, more populous city) • Also villages and cities have more independence than a town, more like a subdivision of the state which provides many services • Towns thus have direct democracy, but fewer options, services, and less independence

  3. How Cities and Villages Start • People living in an area desire certain services • They decide to incorporate as a village or city • Have to get a number of signatures from voters and property owners • The DOA has to approve the request and the circuit court has to approve it • A final vote is taken in the area seeking incorporation • New cities and villages are added frequently: Caledonia in 2005, Bellevue in 2002, etc.

  4. Boundary Changes • Once incorporated, cities and villages may grow in size, called annexation • Take part of an adjoining town and add it to the city • Again, voters and the council need to approve the addition • May also grow by consolidation: the process of two or more units of government combining into one larger unit • Have to be located next to each other • 2/3 majority approval in each local government unit and approval of voters in the affected areas • Towns, cities, and villages may all consolidate together

  5. Population Differences • 190 cities and 402 villages in the state • Cities usually have more people than villages (less than 1000 people usually) • The smallest village has only 75 people • The largest is Menomonee Falls with 34000 people! • Can be a city once it has 1000 people but not all choose to do so • Largest city is Milwaukee, about 600,000 • Madison is 2nd • There are 13 other cities with populations over 40,000

  6. Organizational Differences • Villages are governed by a board of trustees that is generally elected at-large, meaning that members are chosen from the village as a whole rather a smaller district (small villages have two trustees, large villages have six, all serve for two years and are elected in nonpartisan elections) • People also elect a village president who votes on matters before the board but does not have veto power

  7. For cities, the governing body is called a common council, made up of alderpersons who are elected on a nonpartisan basis and usually serve for two years • Thus, cities are divided into aldermanic districts • The CEO in most cities is the mayor who is elected for two years, three years, or four years depending on location • Mayor is a member of the council, presides over meetings, and has the authority to vote in case of a tie, also may get to make some appointments

  8. Home Rule • Allows cities and villages to decide how to manage their own affairs, unless the state constitution specifically prohibits it • Otherwise, cities may adopt their own laws, called ordinances • Also, cities/villages operate under a charter, similar to a constitution • By changing the charter, cities can determine how long elected terms are, how much power any officials have, etc • Bigger cities tend to give more power to officials like the mayor in order to get more things done more efficiently • Administrators may also help with such activities as handling budgeting, purchasing and personnel management • Professionally trained managers may also work for cities and villages

  9. Budget • Any new projects are paid for by the residents of that city/village (although state funds may offset the costs of certain projects) and are financed through loans which are usually paid back through property taxes • City councils outline their own budgets • See p 98-9 and 102-3 • First, the amount that needs to financed is assessed. Then state and other aid is subtracted and what is left has to be financed by property taxes • Depending on the value of your property, your property taxes will be set (the more land, the more taxes, the better the location, the more taxes) • Thus, if the city needs to levy 1,000,000 in property taxes and all taxable property in the city is worth 40,000,000, then you would divide 1,000,000/40,000,000 which equals $0.025. Take 0.025 times your property value (i.e. a 100,000 dollar house) and you get the amount of tax (2500 dollars in this example)

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