Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Mayor Lungo-Koehn Delivers Final Compromised Version of City Charter to City Council

 


Tue, Apr 1 at 1:07 PM

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – April 1, 2025

Contact: Steve Smirti, Communications Director (ssmirti@medford-ma.gov), 781-393-2529

 

Mayor Lungo-Koehn Delivers 

Final Compromised Version of City Charter to City Council

 

Detailed compromised version upholds Charter Study Committee’s ward representation recommendation and removes the Mayor as Chair of the School Committee

 

Mayor urges Council to unanimously approve at its April 8 regular meeting

 

(MEDFORD)—After reviewing all of the City Council’s edits, the final version of the City’s long anticipated City Charter has been delivered back to the City Council for a final vote at the April 8 regular meeting before being sent to the legislature in hopes of appearing on the ballot for voter approval in November, Mayor Lungo-Koehn announced.

 

This final compromised version upholds the survey results and the recommendation from the Charter Study Committee of increasing the number of City Councilors to 11 with 8 councilors being elected by each ward and the remaining 3 members being councilors-at-large who shall be nominated and elected by and from the voters at large.

 

Two years ago, the Mayor formed a Charter Study Committee to comprehensively study the City’s current charter, gather input from the community, and propose recommendations on changes to the existing document, which had not been reviewed or updated in over 40 years. The members of the committee have been working in collaboration with the Edward J. Collins, Jr. Center for Public Management at UMass Boston to develop a governing document that reflects the current needs of the City, offers comprehensive policy solutions, and ensures that all members of the community are fairly and accurately represented.

 

“I feel this is an extremely strong document that reflects the needs of our community, solidifies the survey results and the recommendations that the Charter Study Committee has heard through over a year and a half of community meetings and the public survey,” Mayor Lungo-Koehn said. “I am so incredibly proud of all of the hard work our diverse Charter Study Committee has done to listen to the people. The help from the Collins Center, edits from the City Council and this final draft has all led to a Charter that is truly emblematic of our City’s values. This final draft makes concessions, and it is not a perfect representation for all members of our community, but the Collins Center believes that as long as this version receives support at the City Council, it will be approved by the State Legislature and appear on the ballot in November. Thank you to the Council for considering this draft and we hope for a positive outcome.”

 

The Council recommended removing the position of Mayor as chair of the School Committee. Mayor Lungo-Koehn agreed to that change as long as ward representation remains as the Committee intended.

 

“The Charter Study Group, which I was the liaison to, was one of the most diverse committees that I have been involved with,” Director of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Frances Nwajei said. “This was demonstrated by the members who brought their diversity of thought, political, educational, socio economical, age, disability, and occupational perspectives. All public outreach materials were translated into our 6 environmental justice languages to get a broad cross section of our community’s needs. The best part was that the public survey received over 650 responses.”

 

"The Collins Center is honored to have assisted the Mayor, City Council, and the citizen-led Charter Review Committee in their efforts to enhance the city charter for the benefit of Medford residents," said Anthony I. Wilson, Esq., Practice Area Lead for Charters and Organizational Structure.

 

You can find more information including the revised compromised charter delivered to the City Council at medfordma.org/charter.

 

The April 8th City Council Meeting will begin at 7 p.m. in the Alden Memorial Chambers and be available on Medford Community and via zoom. Zoom information and the meeting agenda will be available at medfordma.org/events

 

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Steve Smirti

Director of Communications | Office of Mayor Breanna Lungo-Koehn

Medford City Hall

85 George P Hassett Dr, Medford, MA 02155

781-393-2529 (office)

781-885-4296 (mobile)

ssmirti@medford-ma.gov

www.medfordma.org

Please note: The Commonwealth of Massachusetts considers most electronic communications to and from public employees to be public records and disclosable under the Massachusetts Public Records Law and its regulations. *Please consider the environment before printing this email.* 

 

Please note: The Commonwealth of Massachusetts considers most electronic communications to and from public employees to be public records and disclosable under the Massachusetts Public Records Law and its regulations. *Please consider the environment before printing this email.*

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