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Issue 23: Cincinnati residents vote to pass an amendment to the city's charter

Cincinnati City Hall
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CINCINNATI — Cincinnati residents have passed a new amendment to the city charter.

Issue 23, which was introduced by council member Liz Keating, covered multiple topics and was only on ballots for city of Cincinnati residents.

The issue proposed changes mainly to the city charter to make new rules for how a person can add their amendment to the ballot. The issue also addresses multiple other smaller measures.

Prior to this election, Cincinnati didn't have any rules for proposing a charter amendment.

Keating said the amendment, which she told WXVU was the "least controversial issue on the ballot," had been in the works for at least two years.

Here is what Issue 23 will change:

Issue 23 will mirror Ohio state law.

This would mean a copy of any initiative, referendum or charter amendment petition has to be filed with the clerk of council before any signatures can be collected. These would be filed publicly so anyone could see what proposed amendments are circulating.

Issue 23 will now limit citizen-led ballot measures to one proposal.

Ballot measures alongside mayoral and city council candidates will also get a "cure period" if the amendment is passed. This will allow candidates or petitioners to collect more signatures for those submitted without enough valid signatures, as long as those added signatures are submitted by a deadline.

Currently, if a petition doesn't have enough signatures, petitioners have to start from scratch.

The charter amendment will also specify that candidate petition circulators would have to sign a statement rather than just having their notarized affidavit alongside their petitions.

City council voting:

The city currently interprets the charter's "yay or nay" requirement for city council as meaning a vocal vote is needed. This measure now will give city council permission to submit votes electronically instead of only by voice.

The amendment doesn't give a specific way council members would do this, but simply offers the option.

"It doesn't mean that we could vote remotely ... all this does is just allow us to push a button that could do a green light [or] red light or put our name on a board under yes or no," Keating previvously told WXVU. "There's many different ways to do this."

Special elections:

The amendment also will modify what would happen if a mayor would leave early enough in their term to trigger a special election.

Currently, candidates must submit petitions at least 50 days before a special election. On top of that, Ohio law says that Hamilton County Board of Election has to mail ballots to overseas voters at least 46 days before the election. Because of this, that leaves only four days for the board of elections to certify signatures and determine whether a candidate is approved to be on the ballot.

Issue 23's passing will push back that 50 day threshold to 60 days, which would allow the board of elections 10 full days to certify signatures.

City Council terms:

In 2018, a charter amendment passed, which shortened Cincinnati council terms from four years to two years.

Since then, not all relevant portions of the charter have been updated, and Issue 23 will now clarify throughout the charter that council terms are two years.

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