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Devers Opts Out of
Council Presidency
LAWRENCE -
After two successful years of reforming the City Council
presidency and reshaping the decorum at Council meetings,
Lawrence City Council President, Marcos Devers says he is
taking himself out of the running for the spot in January
and stepping aside "to give others an opportunity to
serve."
The City Council chooses a new president every two years.
The City Council President presides over the meetings,
assigns which Councilors will sit on sub committees,
approves the agenda, becomes acting mayor if the current
mayor goes on vacation or leaves office prior to the end
of his term and has the authority to drive the issues at
the Council table.
Devers took over as City
Council President two years ago after topping the ticket
in a city wide At-Large race and serving for 28 days as
acting mayor when former mayor Dowling abandoned the city
to take a judgeship.
"I have been Council president for two years and I
think others should have the opportunity to serve in that
position," Devers said Monday evening. "It is a
very difficult and time consuming job. I have many other
projects that I am working on and I need to concentrate
on those things that are best for the city."
Upon becoming Council President in 2002 Devers brought a
welcome change to the Council, reversing the leadership
style of his predecessor Frank Kivell. Under Kivell,
debate on city issues were stifled, Councilors did not
have the ability to speak freely, members of the public
were denied the right of public participation and Council
agenda items that he thought embarrassed Mayor Dowling
were removed from the agenda.
Devers, in contrast opened up the Council meetings to
unlimited debate and allowed members of the public as
well as fellow Councilors the opportunity to speak at
length and openly discuss the issues facing the city.
Devers said the controversy surrounding him running for
reelection as Council President (namely that the Latino
Councilors were supporting him and the non-Latino
Councilors were supporting Patrick Blanchette) was
"something the city doesn't need right now. We have
to work together and put aside those kinds of things and
do the business of the people. We don't need the kind of
division that a vote like that could bring," he
said.
District "A" (Prospect Hill) Councilor, Patrick
Blanchette, who currently sits as the
Vice-President of the Council is poised to replace Devers
as President in January at an organizational meeting
directly following a swearing in ceremony of new
Councilors elected last month.
Blanchette already has the five required votes to ascend
to the presidency.
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