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BOROUGH COUNCIL
· Council
President Gerry Carey (Term Expires 31 December, 2009)
· Council
Vice-President Patrick Williams (Term Expires 31 December, 2009)
· Councilman Roy
Davis (Term Expires 31 December, 2009)
· Councilman
Robert Bennett (Term Expires 31 December, 2011)
· Councilman
Kathy Drake (Term Expires 31 December, 2011)
· Councilman
Barbara Evans (Term Expires 31 December, 2011)
· Councilman
Herman Johnson (Term Expires 31 December, 2011)
TERM OF OFFICE
The term of Office
for an elected Councilperson is four (4) years.
COUNCIL MEETINGS
Regular Borough
Council Meetings are conducted the first Wednesday of each month at 7:00
P.M. in Borough Council Chambers. Council Public Hearings and Special
Meetings are conducted as required. Normally, these meetings are
advertised in the Abington Suburban Weekly but may be advertised in the
Scranton Times/Tribune.
COUNCIL
WORK SESSIONS
Regular Borough
Council Work Sessions are conducted the fourth Tuesday of each month at 7:00
P.M. in Borough Council Chambers. Council Work Sessions are conducted as required.
ROLE OF COUNCIL
Council plays the
central role in borough government. Section 1202 of the Borough Code (a
State/Commonwealth Law) places general supervision of the affairs of the
borough in the hands of council. Councilpersons combine many of the
roles found in separate branches or levels of the state and federal
governments. Council serves as the legislative body of the borough,
setting policy, enacting ordinances and resolutions, adopting budgets
and levying taxes. Council may also perform executive functions such as
formulating the budgets, enforcing ordinances, approving expenditures
and hiring employees. Some boroughs (as in Clarks Summit) hire borough
managers, while most boroughs in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania use
the borough secretary for general administrative purposes.
Because of the
councilpersons elected status, an individual in that position is often
looked to as a community leader. Certainly councilpersons are the proper
recipients of complaints, ideas and suggestions concerning borough
affairs. In many cases the councilperson is called upon to perform as a
problem solver, acting as an agent for borough citizens with municipal
or even outside agencies. The councilperson has a role in representing
the borough's communal interests, past, present and future. Although
assisted by a planning commission, a paid administrator or historical
commission, many of the final decisions must be made by the elected
councilperson.
The extent of any
one councilperson's activities in these roles will be defined by the
individual's own view of civic responsibilities, particular fields of
individual interest and personal skills and talents. To a large degree
the councilperson's role is also defined by the local political culture,
the generalized local attitudes toward municipal government and
commonly-held expectations of how elected councilpersons will operate.
COUNCIL MINUTES
Copies of Council
Minutes can be obtained in the Borough Office following their approval
at the next month's Council meeting.
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