The Contributor: July 20, 2022

Page 27

BALLOT BREAKDOWN

COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS, WESTERN DIVISION (CONT.) John Everett Williams John Everett Williams was appointed to the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals’ Western Division by then Republican Governor Don Sundquist, in 1998,

The Charter of The Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, commonly referred to as the “Metro Charter”, established the creation of Metro Nashville and governs it to this day. Metropolitan Nashville and Davidson County (often called “Metro Nashville” or “Metro”) is the con-

elected in 2000 and retained in 2006 and 2014. Williams received his law degree from Cumberland School of Law, Samford University in 1981. Before beginning his judicial career, Williams was an attorney with Williams and Williams Attorneys at Law.

Judge Williams is a member of the Tennessee Bar Association, Tennessee Trial Lawyers Association, and participated in the Tennesseans for Fair and Impartial Courts Project. He lectures frequently on legal topics and is involved in the American

Heart Association, American Cancer Society, and Carroll County Habitat for Humanity, among several other community organizations. In 2014, Williams was unanimously recommended for retention by the Tennessee Judicial Performance

Charter Amendments

solidated city-county structure that governs Davidson County, the City of Nashville, and the municipalities of Belle Meade, Berry Hill, Forest Hills, Oak Hill, and parts of Goodlettsville, which retain their charters, provide police services, and regulate zoning, while being otherwise governed and served by

Metro Nashville. The Metro Charter operates at a local level like the Constitution does at a federal level; it is the legal document and framework explaining what Metro Nashville can do and how those things get done. In essence, the Charter sets up a structure of government, requires

Evaluation Commission. He received notable ratings in giving parties adequate time to be heard in oral arguments as well as demonstrating respect to court personnel. Williams’ judicial philosophy is one that approaches the law practically.

a city budget, and delegates powers, such as setting property taxes, regulating zoning, and establishing public schools. It establishes the City Council, sets term limits, and regulates tax bonds. In addition, it establishes and governs the form of important Metro service departments, including police, fire,

public works, transit, library, and water/sewer. In short, if it happens through the Metro Nashville government, the Metro Charter provides for and regulates it. Amending the Charter is comparable to amending the Constitution; it is a change in the government structure for Metro Nashville.

County would be in line with state standards and every other county in Tennessee, as it changes the floating standard, that requires signatures of 10% of voters who participated in the previous countywide election, to a fixed standard requiring 10% of total registered

voters, in order to get an amendment on the ballot after certification. With its passage, amendments to the Metro Charter would require certification from a Charter Revision Commission, a legal review, and significantly more signatures to get on the ballot.

man Resources to carefully study and adopt appropriate standards to determine whether applicants for positions in MNPD possess the required physical qualifications. This includes conducting physical

examinations and reporting these findings to the Civil Service Commission. This amendment would also further update U.S. citizenship requirements to reflect Tennessee state law.

to occupation but who work outside the medical profession, and are voted in by the board unanimously. The Board of Health will appoint a Director of Health who will oversee the direction of the department with

“respect to all administrative functions of the Metropolitan Government pertaining to.” This amendment will also modernize the language used in the charter by replacing the word “insane” with “mentally ill.”

ARTICLE 19 - Changing Requirements to Alter the Metro Charter The Metro Council, consisting of both Republicans and Democrats, unanimously voted to amend Article 19 of the Metro Charter which would alter the process and timing in which amendments to the charter are to be filed, certified, and placed on the ballots

in Davidson County. This amendment establishes a Charter Revision Commission and requires a legal review of the proposals before certification. It clarifies the timelines for submissions of revisions, and timeline requirements for this process

of certification. It also clarifies that if a petition garners certification, the signature requirement must be met within 90 days to be placed on the ballot. Importantly, it also changes the number of signatures required. With passage of this amendment, Davidson

ARTICLE 8, SECTION 208 - Changing MNPD Physical Qualification Requirements The Metro Council, consisting of both Republicans and Democrats, unanimously voted to amend Article 8, Section 208 of the Metro Charter which would alter the physical qualification requirements for the

Metro Nashville Police Department (MNPD) proposing that members of the department follow the standards of the civil service commission rather than US Army and Navy standards, at the request of the MNPD.

If this amendment passes, the Civil Service Commission will work with appropriate parties including the Civil Service Medical Examiner’s Office, Metro Nashville Police Department, and Metro Hu-

ARTICLE 10, SECTIONS 101-107,110,208, & 306 - Establishing a Board of Health The Metro Council, consisting of both Republicans and Democrats, unanimously voted to amend Article 10, Sections 101-107,110, 208, & 306 of the Metro Charter to make a clearer distinction between the Board

of Health, and the Metro Health Department; the former being the administrative over see-er of the latter. These changes come as a response to the county’s ability to respond to the pandemic. The amendment creates

and clarifies the makeup of the Board of Health: one doctor and one licensed mental health professional, both having at least 5 years of experience in his or her profession; one registered nurse; and two members, without reference

CHAPTER 4, ARTICLE 8, SECTIONS 401-406 - Creating a Department of Transportation The Metro Council, consisting of both Republicans and Democrats, unanimously voted to amend Chapter 4, Article 8, Sections 401406, to create The Department of Transportation and Multimodal Infrastructure to replace Public Works.

The amendment establishes that the new department will be responsible for the following: the design, construction, and maintenance of all public roads, bridges and other related structures; maintenance of automotive equipment used to perform these functions;

construction and creation of all of all documents and plans needed to execute projects that seek to address community infrastructure needs; overseeing administration and enforcing of licensing and permits; and overseeing the operation of traffic control devices. It also

discusses the qualifications and compensation of the new Director of Transportation. From 2010-2020 the Nashville/ Davidson County population has grown 14.7%, which is double the nation’s average. This amendment could allow Nashville to catch up

to other major cities that use this framework to maintain large populations’ effect on infrastructure. The Metropolitan Government will continue to provide all the services of the former Department of Public Works that fall outside of these tasks.

The following candidates had no information online and did not respond to our emails requesting information, and therefore were not included in this issue: Pime Hernandez, Republican running for Tennessee Senate in District 19.; Christopher Huff, Republican running for Tennessee House of Representatives in District 60.; Lee Jones, Republican running for State Executive Committeewoman in District 20. ; Michael Bono and Joy O’Dell running for Oak Hill City Commissioner. July 20 - August 3, 2022

| The Contributor | NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE | PAGE 27


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Vendor Writing

3min
page 29

Hoboscopes

7min
page 28

Charter Amendments

5min
page 27

TN Judges Races

34min
pages 22-27

Register of Deeds

2min
page 21

County Clerk

2min
page 21

Juvenile Court Clerk

2min
page 20

Criminal Court Clerk

2min
page 20

Circuit Court Clerk

2min
page 19

Sheriff

2min
page 19

Juvenile Court Judge

2min
page 19

County Trustee

2min
page 18

Public Defender

2min
page 18

District Attorney General

3min
page 18

School Board

9min
pages 16-17

General Sessions Judge

12min
pages 15-16

Criminal Court Judge

7min
page 14

Circuit Court Judge

9min
page 13

Chancellor, Chancery Court

5min
page 12

Oak Hill City Commissioner

2min
page 12

State Executive CommitteeMan & CommitteeWoman Office

14min
pages 10-11

TN House of Representatives

14min
pages 8-9

TN State Senator Office

8min
pages 6-7

US House of Representatives

14min
pages 4-6

Governor of the State of Tennessee

7min
page 3

Please Vote Nashville: Intro

1min
pages 1-2
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.