Minutes

The first duty imposed on the city clerk under the Government Code is keeping an accurate record of the proceedings of the legislative body.  See Section 40801 below:

“The city clerk shall keep an accurate record of the proceeding of the legislative body and the board of equalization in books bearing appropriate titles and devoted exclusively to such purposes, respectively. The books shall have a comprehensive general index.”

The question becomes what is the definition of “accurate record?”  Prior to computers, clerks would handwrite the Minutes directly into the Minute Book.  The Minutes were merely a handwritten document noting the motions and votes on all items the city council acted upon.  With the advent of computers, Minutes became more formalized with titles of the agenda item, discussion, and the motion and vote.  Some city clerks even prepared verbatim minutes, including dialogue between the council members.

Mostly, minutes are action minutes in which the city clerk records the title of the agenda item and the action taken by the city council.  Regardless of the type of minutes prepared by the city clerk, the most important aspect of preparing minutes is to make sure they are accurate and to have them completed before the following meeting so they can be approved by the legislative body and recorded in the Minute Book.

I can’t tell you how many cities I have worked for where minutes were months to years behind.  In my opinion, this is a derelict of duties on behalf of the city clerk.  If a clerk has too much work and completing minutes becomes a problem, he/she should request assistance.  If assistance is not an option, then it is the clerk’s responsibility to prioritize completing the minutes. 

   

What a City Clerk Does

How many times have you been asked what you do for a living, and when you say you are a City Clerk, you receive a strange look and have to explain what you do. That happened to me all the time. And as proud as I was to be a City Clerk, explaining what what I did was not easy. I prepare agendas for City Council meetings, type the minutes of the meeting, respond to public records requests, post and publish legal notices, and administer municipal elections. Oh, you’re in administration, is the reply I often received.

The truth of the matter is, the duties of a City Clerk are much more complicated because while those are only some of your duties, you are responsible for ensuring a City and the various departments within, can do their jobs by having access to Council policies; the required information for the City to run efficiently are available when needed; and statutory deadlines are met,

I always saw the position as the cog in the wheel that keeps the wheel going around. A City Clerk wears many hats and we are going to explore the hats worn by a City Clerk and why each are very important.

I welcome your feedback and questions as we look at the various duties of a City Clerk

-Carol-