A group of Brooklyn Center residents pushing to have a full-time mayor has submitted a petition requesting that voters get a chance to decide in November whether they want to change how the city is governed.
The north metro suburb's Charter Commission forwarded the petition this week to the city clerk, who will now begin verifying the 1,103 signatures collected over the past few months by the group Citizens for a Full-Time Mayor.
"The people we elect should be the ones to lead us," said Joe Mason, a spokesperson for the group. "We believe the mayor should be in charge of the city. Every four years we'd have the opportunity to go to the poll and make a change. We can't do that with the city manager."
Brooklyn Center, which has a population of about 32,000, has a form of government like other similarly sized suburbs in which the City Council oversees the city manager, who is tasked with running the city. Proponents of the full-time mayor idea have cited the fact that the city manager is an appointed position without term limits — and the current city manager, Reggie Edwards, lives in Mankato.
"We have a role that pays six figures annually, makes decisions about taxes and other items that do not affect them or their neighbors, and can be in this role indefinitely," Mason said. "This does not give the people of Brooklyn Center much say over what happens in their city. Only an elected official should have that kind of power."
Mayor Mike Elliott, who is up for re-election this year, has said he favors the full-time mayor idea. In the aftermath of the 2021 police shooting of Daunte Wright and the civil unrest that followed, the City Council voted to give authority over the Police Department to the mayor's office. Before that, only the city manager could fire members of the department.
The City Council subsequently fired City Manager Curt Boganey, who'd been with the city since 2005, and Elliott appointed Edwards to the position.
"We have an unelected person who can hire or fire anybody in the city, and often nobody hears about it," Elliott said during a mayoral candidate forum sponsored by the League of Women Voters last month. "There are examples of thriving communities all around us where people get to decide who runs the city: the mayor. Whoever is in the position should be answerable to the people of Brooklyn Center."