Boston City Council

The Boston City Council is the legislative branch of government for the city of Boston, Massachusetts. It is made up of 13 members: 9 district representatives and 4 at-large members. Councillors are elected to two-year terms and there is no limit on the number of terms an individual can serve. Boston uses a strong-mayor form of government in which the city council acts as a check against the power of the executive branch, the mayor. The council is responsible for approving the city budget; monitoring, creating, and abolishing city agencies; making land use decisions; and approving, amending, or rejecting other legislative proposals.

Boston City Council
Coat of arms or logo
Seal of Boston
Logo
Logo
Type
Type
History
Founded1822
1909 (current form)
Leadership
Council President
Structure
Seats13 officially non-partisan
   9 district councilors
   4 at-large councilors
Length of term
2 years
Elections
First past the post in 9 districts; Nonpartisan Plurality-at-large voting for the at-large district.
Last election
November 2021
Next election
November 2023
Meeting place
Boston City Hall
Website
https://www.boston.gov/departments/city-council
Constitution
Boston City Charter

The leader of the City Council is the president and is elected each term by the council. A majority of seven or more votes is necessary to elect a councillor as president. When the mayor of Boston is absent from the city, or vacates the office, the City Council president serves as acting mayor. The president leads Council meetings and appoints councillors to committees.

History

Prior to 1909, Boston's legislative body was bicameral, with an eight-member Board of Aldermen as well as a Common Council made up of three representatives from each of the 25 wards in the city. When the Boston City Charter was rewritten in 1909, the Board of Aldermen and the Common Council were replaced by a nine-member unicameral City Council.[1] All nine councillors were elected at-large for terms lasting two years. The new charter also gave the Mayor the power to veto all acts of the City Council. The first council meeting as a unicameral body occurred on February 7, 1910.[2]

The procedure for electing city councillors was changed by Chapter 479 of the Acts of 1924, which provided for the election of 22 city councillors, one from each ward, beginning with the biennial election in 1925. The procedure was changed again by Chapter 356 of the Acts of 1951, which provided for the election of nine city councillors, all at large, for two-year terms.[3]

In November 1981, Boston voters approved again changing the composition of the council, to 13 members: 9 district representatives and 4 at-large members.[4]

District representation

The 1981 referendum establishing the current 13 member composition of the Council did not indicate how the district lines would be drawn, only that the districts be of approximately equal population[4] and district lines not cut across city precincts.

The Council created a districting committee to propose several different possible district maps and hold public hearings before presenting one plan to the council to approve.[4] State law required the City Council to make a final decision on the districts within 90 days of being notified that the referendum had officially passed, meaning that the Council voting on the districts would be the 1982 Council, not the 1981 Council creating them.[4] Then-president Patrick McDonough, who opposed district representation, appointed Rosemarie Sansone, a major advocate of district representation, as chair of the districting committee, but chose Frederick C. Langone, Dapper O'Neil, and John W. Sears as the other three members, all of whom opposed district representation.[5] Both Langone and O'Neil would be returning to the Council in 1982, but Sansone did not run for re-election in 1981 and would not be able to vote on the district boundaries if the committee did not work quickly to present a plan to the council before the end of the year.[4] Public hearings over possible district boundaries were full of heated debate between advocates of drawing lines to protect neighborhood unity and advocates of drawing lines to create two predominantly minority districts and give minorities a voice in local government.[6] Contention centered around Dorchester and the South End. Dorchester, Boston's largest neighborhood, needed to be split into at least two districts.[7] A simple split in half would create either a north and a south district or an east and a west district.[7] An east district would be largely White (75% or greater) and a west district would be largely African-American. North and south districts would have less extreme majorities. Many residents were opposed to both divisions, stating that they would increase racial segregation in Dorchester and continue the political powerlessness of minorities.[7] A more complicated split taking into account areas with large minority populations would create one predominantly minority district and one predominantly white district but treat Dorchester as several smaller neighborhoods to be divvied up among surrounding neighborhoods rather than as one community.[7] In various proposals, the South End, due to its location, was grouped with either South Boston or Back Bay/Beacon Hill by advocates of neighborhood unity, or Roxbury by advocates of minority-dominated districts.[5]

Two days before the 90-day deadline, freshman councillor Terrence McDermott, who had been appointed as Sansone's replacement for chair of the districting committee, presented a plan to the Council which was approved 7–2 (the dissenting votes came from Raymond Flynn and Bruce Bolling).[8][9] Today's district boundaries are only slightly different from those adopted in 1982, with the South End and South Boston forming one district, and Dorchester roughly split into an east and a west district. The Council faced more challenges after finalizing the new districts, such as whether or not district councillors should receive a lower salary than at-large councillors[10] and where office space for four additional councillors could be found in City Hall.

Acting mayors

When the Mayor of Boston is absent from the city, or vacates the office, the City Council president serves as acting mayor. The city charter places some restrictions on an acting mayor's authority:[11] an acting mayor "shall possess the powers of mayor only in matters not admitting of delay, but shall have no power to make permanent appointments."[12] Three presidents of the Boston City Council have served as acting mayors of Boston for extended periods after the Mayor vacated the office:

In June 2021, the city council granted itself the authority to remove its president by a two-thirds majority vote.[12] Should that action occur while a council president is serving as acting mayor, the role of acting mayor would be assigned to the new council president who would be elected by a simple majority of the city council.[12] In 2022 the rule was removed. [23]

Membership milestones

Districts and current council

Council districts
District[39][40] Area[41] Councillor[42] In office since
District 1 Charlestown, East Boston, North End Gabriela Coletta 2022 (May)
District 2 Chinatown, Downtown, South Boston, South End Ed Flynn
President
2018 (January)
District 3 Dorchester Frank Baker 2012 (January)
District 4 Mattapan, Dorchester, Roslindale, Jamaica Plain Brian Worrell 2022 (January)
District 5 Hyde Park, Roslindale, Mattapan Ricardo Arroyo 2020 (January)
District 6 Jamaica Plain, West Roxbury Kendra Hicks 2022 (January)
District 7 Roxbury, South End, Dorchester Tania Fernandes Anderson 2022 (January)
District 8 Back Bay, Beacon Hill, Fenway–Kenmore, Mission Hill, West End Kenzie Bok 2020 (January)
District 9 Allston, Brighton Liz Breadon 2020 (January)
  (At-large) Michael F. Flaherty 2014 (January)
  (At-large) Ruthzee Louijeune 2022 (January)
  (At-large) Julia Mejia 2020 (January)
  (At-large) Erin Murphy 2021 (December)[43]

By law, Boston municipal elections are nonpartisan in that candidates do not represent a specific political party. However, most city councillors have been members of the Democratic Party. John W. Sears was the first Republican elected to the Boston City Council, in 1980.[44] Chuck Turner, who served during 1999–2010, was a member of the Green-Rainbow Party. Althea Garrison, who served during 2019,[45] has identified as an independent since 2012, but formerly served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives as a Republican.

Committees

As of January 2020, the City Council has the following committees:[46]

Standing committees
Special committees
  • Special committee on Charter Reform

Salary

The salary for councillors is half of the mayor's salary. Every four years, the Council votes on whether or not to raise the mayor's salary, thereby also raising its own salaries or not.

In June 2018, the Council voted to increase the salary of the mayor from $199,000 to $207,000, effective after the mayoral election of November 2021 (term starting in January 2022); this increased the salary of councillors to $103,500, effective after the council elections of November 2019 (terms starting in January 2020).[47][48]

City Council salaries since 1980
Year(s)SalaryRef.
1980$20,000[49]
1981–1986$32,500[50][51]
1987–1994$45,000[51][52]
1995–1998$54,500[53]
1999–2002$62,500[54]
2003–2006$75,000[55][56]
2006–2015$87,500[57]
2016–2019$99,500[57]
2020–present$103,500[48][58]

Presidents

(#) denotes different instances of a councillor serving as president

1.^ O'Neil was elected City Council president after the death of predecessor.[59]
2.^ While Kim Janey served as Acting Mayor and was absent from Council proceedings, Matt O'Malley presided over the Council.[60]

Presidents of the Boston Common Council (1822–1909)

Presidents of the Boston Common Council (1822–1909)[61]
Name Tenure
William Prescott1822
John Welles1823
Francis Johonnot Oliver1824–1825
John Richardson Adan1826–1828
Elliphalet Williams1829
Benjamin T. Pickman1830–1831
John Prescott Bigelow1832
Josiah Quincy Jr.1834–1836
Philip Marett1837–1840
Edward Blake1841–1843
Peleg Chandler1844–1845
George Stillman Hillard1846–1847
Benjamin Seaver1847–1849
Francis Brinley1850–1851
Henry Gardner1852–1853
Alexander H. Rice1854
Joseph Story1855
Oliver Stevens1856–1857
Samuel Wallace Waldron1858
Josiah Putnam Bradlee1859–1860
Joseph Hildreth Bradley1861
Joshua Dorsey Ball1862
George Silsbee Hale1863–1864
William Bentley Fowle Jr.1865
Joseph Story1866
Weston Lewis1867
Charles Hastings Allen1868
William Giles Harris1869
Melville Ezra Ingalls1870
Matthias Rich1871
Marquis Fayette Dickinson Jr.1872
Edward Olcott Shepard1873–1874
Halsey Joseph Boardman1875
John Q. A. Brackett1876
Benjamin Pope1877–1878
William Henry Whitmore1879
Harvey Newton Shepard1880
Andrew Jackson Bailey1881
Charles Edward Pratt1881–1882
James Joseph Flynn1883
John Henry Lee1884
Edward John Jenkins1885–1886
David Franklin Barry1886–1888
Horace Gewynne Allen1889–1890
David Frankin Barry1891
Christopher Francis O'Brien1894–1895
Joseph Aloysius Conry1896–1897
Timothy Lawrence Connolly1898
Daniel Joseph Kiley1899–1901
Arthur Walter Dolan1902–1905
William John Barrett1906–1907
Leo F. McCullough1908
George C. McCabe1909[62]

Chairmen of the Boston Board of Aldermen (1855–1909)

Chairmen of the Boston Board of Aldermen(1855–1909)[61]
Name Tenure
William Washburn1855
Phelham Bonney1855
Joseph Wrightman1856–1857
Silas Peirce1859
Otis Clapp1860
Silas Peirce1861
Thomas Philiips Rich1862
Thomas Coffin Amory1863
Otis Norcross1864
George Washington Messinger1865–1866 (1)
Charles Wesley Slack1867
George Washington Messinger1968 (2)
Benjamin James1869
Newton Talbot1870
Charles Edward Jenkins1871
Samuel Little1872
Leonard R. Cutter1873
John Taylor Clark1874–1877
Solomon B. Stebbins1878 (1)
Hugh O'Brien1879–1883 (1)
Solomon B. Stebbins1882 (2)
Hugh O'Brien1883 (2)
Charles Varney Whitten1884–1885
Charles Hastings Allen1886 (1)
Patrick John Donovan1887
Charles Hastings Allen1888 (2)
Homer Rogers1889
William Power Wilson1890
Herbert Shaw Carruth1891
John Henry Lee1892–1893 (1)
Alpheus Sanford1894–1895
John Henry Lee1896
Perlie Appleton Dyar1897–1898
Joseph A. Conry1898
David Franklin Barry1899
Michael Joseph O'Brien1900
James Henry Doyle1901–1904
Daniel A. Whelton1905
Charles Martin Draper1906
Edward L. Cauley1906
William Berwin1907
Louis M. Clark1908
James Michael Curley (acting chairman)1909[63]
Frederick J. Brand1909[64]

Public records of Boston City Council

  • City Departments' Annual Reports
  • Complete stenographic machine record of the public meeting of Boston City Council
  • Full text of Captions from Webcasts/Cablecasts of Boston City Council
  • City Council page at boston.gov
    • Publications of Boston City Council
    • Communications of Boston City Council distributed by email
    • Communications of Council Committees

See also

References

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  2. "Boston City Council 1910–2009: Selected Accomplishments" (PDF): 4. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 24, 2010. Retrieved March 31, 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. "Archives Guide ~ City Council". Archived from the original on April 28, 2015. Retrieved April 27, 2015. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. Radin, Charles A. (November 12, 1981). "Sansone asks neighborhood input on Hub voting-district lines". The Boston Globe. p. 1. ProQuest 294237682.
  5. Radin, Charles A. (December 9, 1981). "Boston district debate begins with sparring over South End". The Boston Globe. p. 1. ProQuest 294126626.
  6. Ashbrook, Tom (December 15, 1981). "Dorchester speakers spar over districting proposals". The Boston Globe. p. 1. ProQuest 294105725.
  7. Radin, Charles A. (January 24, 1982). "Districts – A clash of plans". The Boston Globe. p. 1. ProQuest 294125017.
  8. Powers, John (March 7, 1982). "Neighborhood boy remaps city; Terry McDermott solved a political Rubik's Cube". The Boston Globe. p. 1. Retrieved March 1, 2009 via pqarchiver.com.
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Further reading

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