St. Paul is considering a change to its charter that would give the city more leeway to impose fines for code violations to keep the cases out of the criminal court process.
Ricardo Cervantes, director of the city's Department of Safety & Inspections, told the St. Paul Charter Commission on Monday that the suggested change would give more teeth to certain city ordinances and avoid a lengthy prosecution process.
It also aims to minimize the possibility of a non-crime code violation — for an unlicensed dog or failure to comply with a zoning site plan, for instance — going on someone's record and affecting future housing, job or education opportunities, he said.
At the commission's public hearing Monday, labor advocates spoke in support of the change, saying it would help with enforcement of St. Paul's ordinances regulating minimum wage and earned sick and safe time.
The change also could affect rules surrounding animal control, zoning, illegal use of fire hydrants and other issues that have proved difficult for staff to obtain compliance, Cervantes said.
But others, including attorney Jack Cann of the Minnesota-based Housing Justice Center, raised concerns that the proposed charter amendment could burden low-income families with fines they can't afford.
If the Charter Commission recommends the change, which could happen as soon as next month, the City Council must unanimously approve the amendment for it to take effect.
If that happens, the council would look to pass an ordinance establishing procedural rules governing administrative fines.