In a four to three vote, Mitchell Wayne Smith was appointed by the
Alexander City Council to fill the vacancy in the Ward-1 Position-2
seat. The two other candidates were Ross L. Lawhon and Jo E. Shell.
The seat was declared vacant by the council, that existed at the
time, during the December, 2022 council meeting. A resignation letter
was sent, by E-mail, by now former Council Member Elizabeth Bland.
Bland resigned after the November election. She had moved to Little
Rock and did not seek re-election. Also, no one filed for that
position to run in the November General Election.
Under
normal circumstances the vacancy would have been filled one month
later at the next meeting, providing a candidate could be found.
Appointing someone was on the January agenda but Mayor Crystal
Herrmann was able to get it tabled for one month.
“I
was notified by the election commission that it was done incorrectly
and that I had to contact Municipal League, which I have,” Herrmann
claimed during the January council meeting. “And I'm waiting on the
email and writing on how to move forward.”
Council
Member Tony Staton asked, “What clarification?”
“They
just notified me that it was handled incorrectly and it had to go
through the court,” Herrmann responded. “I'm waiting on writing
on if we can move forward without having to go to the court. So we
will have to table that one.”
This
was Herrmann’s first meeting as mayor.
Prior to the vote at the February 27 council meeting, council members
listened to comments by the three candidates. Each gave their reasons
why they should be selected to fill the vacancy.
Ross Lawhon, a resident of the Knollwood Mobile Home Park, was first
to speak.
“I've lived here for 17 years and four months, and ... I would be
honored to represent Ward-1,” Lawhon said. “The former person
that was here, Elizabeth Bland, had been a neighbor of mine, and I
would like to do what I can to bring honor and respect from two of
Ward-1 to the council meeting and support the council meeting in
whatever way I possibly can, God willing.”
“I'm also an ordained minister,” Lawhon added.
Next was Jo E. Shell. Shell has lived in Alexander since November
1989 and resides on Kelli Place.
“I've been here for 33 years,” Shell said. “I'm interested in,
because I know there are children who are hungry, some on my street
that sometimes they get food that's sent home with school teachers
and especially with weekends. I want to be able to do whatever I can
do to help our community, whatever it takes.”
“I will be retiring from my full time job, and I'm less than two
years,” Shell continued. “Whether I get to [sic] honor holding
this position or not, I still want to help.”
Mitchell W. Smith, who goes by Wayne, is a long-time resident of
Alexander. He is the brother of City Recorder Sharon Bankhead and the
son of former city council member, the late Dortheria Smith.
“I do like to help the community,” Smith said. “I would like to
do that.”
He says he’s “prudent” and “then I do the effort.”
Unfortunately, when it came time to vote the voting procedure was not
explained to council members. Under state law, to fill a vacancy, the
majority vote is based on the number of council members minus the
vacant seat. In this case eight seats becomes seven and the majority
changes from five to four.
Council
Member Joe Pollard made the motion to appoint Mitchell W. Smith to
the council and Council Member Joy Gray seconded. In a roll call vote
Joe Pollard, Joy Gray, Harold Timmerman, and
Juanita Wilson voted “Yes.”
Gina
Thomas
and Angela Griffin voted “No.” Council Member Tony
Staton was
absent due to illness, which also counts as a “No” vote.
Even
though the final vote was four to three, due to the misunderstanding,
Council Member Angela Griffin nominated Jo E. Shell to fill the
vacancy. Council Member Gina
Thomas
seconded. As expected the vote was two “Yes” and five “No.”
Staton again was counted as a “No” vote.
Once
council members were made aware of the error the second nomination
was rescinded. Mayor Crystal Herrmann then swore-in Smith to fill the
vacant seat.
During
the interim time between the January and February meetings Council
Member Joy Gray researched the process required to fill a vacancy on
a city council. Prior to the February 27 meeting Gray released E-mail
threads that were developed during her research. The first thing she
did was to send an E-mail to the mayor asking for the response from
the Arkansas Municipal League (AML).
----
On Wed, 25 Jan 2023 12:16:20 -0600 ...
wrote ----
Good
afternoon Mayor,
I
have been thinking about the Municipal League emailing you to state
that the council made a procedural mistake in how we handled the
vacating of the last position on the council. Which of course led to
us not being able to fill the position per the instructions of the
League. At the meeting you stated that someone from the League had
emailed you and stated they were looking into it and that we could
not fill the position until the League provided further guidance. I
was wondering if I might get a copy of that email so that I can see
where exactly we went wrong so that we don't ever make a similar
mistake. It was something I thought of asking for the other night but
it was a busy evening so it slipped my mind until my current lunch
break. I look forward to seeing what the problem was and what our
corrective action should be. Thanks in advance for sending it.
Regards,
Joy
Gray
Mayor
Crystal Herrmann responded with the following.
From:
Crystal Herrmann
Sent:
Monday, February 6, 2023 at 02:13:12 PM CST
Subject:
Re: Mistake from December meeting
Good
afternoon Joy,
Does
Elizabeth Bland have a letter of resignation?
If
so it needs to be filed at the Election Commission office in Benton.
Without
it the city could be at risk for a lawsuit if the vacancy is filled
and she shows up saying she didn't agree. It puts the city at risk
for lawsuit if that happens.
The
vacancy can be filled this next meeting with the resignation letter
is on file at Election Commission.
Sincerely,
Mayor
Herrmann
It
had been stated during the January council meeting Bland had provided
a resignation letter. To verify the Mayor’s assertion Gray contacted Caleb Alexander with
the Arkansas Municipal League (AML).
From:
Joy Gray
Sent: Monday, February 6, 2023 2:46:54 PM
To:
Caleb Alexander
Subject:
Fw: Re: Mistake from December meeting
Please
see below. Do we need to get Elizabeth Bland to file something with
the election commission in order for this move forward? The vacancy
was declared in December if you recall, nobody ran for that seat, and
she no longer lives in Alexander. I'm willing to track her down if I
need to, but if we can do it without me hunting her down that would
be great. Any guidance you can provide is much appreciated. As I said
in my prior discussions with you, I have been unable to find much in
the way of exact specifications required to declare the vacancy
beyond what we have already done. If a letter must be on file
somewhere I will get it.
Regards,
Joy
Gray
Alexander
forwarded the question to Lanny Richmond, another attorney with AML.
He responded with the following.
-----
Forwarded Message -----
From:
"Lanny Richmond"
To:
"lanajoy@*****.com", "mayor@cityofalexander.org"
Cc:
"Caleb Alexander"
Sent:
Tue, Feb 7, 2023 at 9:32 AM
Subject:
RE: Mistake from December meeting
All,
Caleb
and I have conferred on this issue, and it seems we are running out
of advice to offer. A resignation does not have to be in writing, but
would certainly be preferable, particularly if the alternative is
only a verbal resignation to one person. However, a verbal
resignation is an option.
As
an initial matter, the election commission does not have any role in
the appointment of municipal officials, they only have roles in
regards to the election of municipal officials. Of course, if they
have offered some legal advice please forward it over. But, no law
requires a resignation get filed with the election commission.
I
hope this helps.
Sincerely,
Lanny
Richmond, II
Senior
Legal Counsel, Arkansas Municipal League
Gray
then E-mailed the following to council members and the mayor.
2/7/2023
Please
see below. Should anyone have any further questions, I think the
Municipal League has been CLEAR on this matter.
What
we did in December was fine. There is no threat of legal action and
any word otherwise is untrue.
Gray
then took it a step further and spoke to Charlie Morris; Election
Administration Supervisor with the State Board of Election
Commissioners. She followed-up the phone conversation with an e-mail.
Thank
you for speaking with me earlier. I wanted to confirm my two
questions that I asked.
1.
A letter of resignation received by the city is sufficient for a city
council vacancy. We do not file resignation letters with the county
or state election commission.
2.
If no citizen petitions to run for a specific position on the
council, and therefore no one is elected to that seat, the seat is by
default a vacant seat that can be filled.
Thank
you again for taking the time to speak with me today.
Regards,
Joy
Gray
Morris
responded with the following.
You
are correct on both points........… I would advise the letter just
be filed with your city clerk or recorder.
Glad
to be of assistance...........
Charlie
Morris
Election
Administration Supervisor
State
Board of Election Commissioners
According
to Morris not only was the Ward-1 council seat vacant by a letter of
resignation and declaration by the council, it was vacant January 1,
2023 due to no one running for it in the General Election.
The
next meeting of the Alexander City Council is Monday, March 20 at
6:00 PM in the courtroom at the Alexander Municipal Complex. The
public is invited to attend.