Cleveland City Council


Cleveland City Council is the legislative branch of government in the United States|government] for the City of Cleveland, Ohio. Its chambers are located at Cleveland City Hall at 601 Lakeside Avenue, across the street from Public Auditorium in Downtown Cleveland. Cleveland City Council members are elected from 17 wards to four-year terms. In Cleveland's mayor–council (strong mayor) form of government, council acts as a check against the power of the city executive, the mayor. Its responsibilities include "monitoring city departments, approving budgets, and enacting legislation to improve the quality of life ."
The current President of Council is Blaine Griffin. Following Councilman Kerry McCormack's resgination on October 3, Councilwoman Jasmin Santana became Majority Leader. Patricia Britt serves as the Clerk of Council.

History

The structure and membership of city council have fluctuated throughout Cleveland's history. Established in 1802, it initially included three trustees, and when Cleveland was incorporated as a city in 1836, it had three aldermen. After the annexation of Ohio City in 1854, "the revised city council expanded to 11 wards, with 2 trustees elected from each," or 22 representatives in total. By 1885, the city's legislature had grown to 50 representatives. Cleveland's 1892 Federal Plan, which strengthened the powers of the mayor, reduced the size of council to 20 members, but after the plan was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of Ohio in 1902, council membership grew again to 32.
After gaining municipal home rule from the state in 1912, Cleveland's city government, led by Mayor Newton D. Baker, drafted a new municipal charter. In developing the charter, the size of council proved to be the most contentious issue. According to the Encyclopedia of Cleveland History, "those advocating a small council elected at large maintained that it would be more efficient, less expensive and would eliminate local machine corruption. Those who favored a large council elected by ward considered it more democratic, since it made councilmen answerable to their constituents."
The final charter adopted in 1913 introduced a system with 26 wards each represented by a single council member. Due to the city's continued expansion, council grew to 33 members by 1923, making it "second in size only to Chicago's 50-member council." In the 1920s, during the brief council–manager experiment, the number of council members was reduced to 25. When the mayor–council system was restored in 1931, the city had 33 council members again.
In November 1981, as part of Mayor George Voinovich's effort to streamline city government, Cleveland voters approved reducing council to 21 members. In November 2008, during the tenure of Mayor Frank G. Jackson, Cleveland voters passed a charter amendment linking the size of City Council to the city's population. City Council approved a redistricting plan in March 2009, reducing the number of wards to 19 at the start of the 2010–2013 term. Thereafter, the number of wards was tied to the population identified in the decennial United States Census.
Population decreases identified in the 2010 [United States Census|2010 Census] resulted in the elimination of two wards, reducing the number of members to 17. In March 2013, City Council approved new ward boundaries that went into effect in January 2014. Council voted to amend the boundaries on April 17, 2013.

Current council

The members of Cleveland City Council - all from the Democratic Party - are listed below in the order of the ward they serve.
WardNeighborhoodsCouncil MemberIn office sinceWard Map
1Lee–Miles, parts of Mount Pleasant and Union–Miles2017
2Union–Miles, parts of Mount Pleasant2017
3Downtown, Ohio City, north Tremont, north Cuyahoga Valley, part of Stockyards
Majority Leader
2016
4Buckeye–Shaker and Mount Pleasant2022
5Central, Kinsman, parts of Broadway–Slavic Village2022
6Fairfax, University Circle, Buckeye–Woodhill, parts of Broadway–Slavic Village and Union–Miles
President
2017
7Hough, St. Clair–Superior, Goodrich–Kirtland Park 2022
8North Collinwood, parts of Glenville and South Collinwood1977
9Glenville, part of University Circle2001
10South Collinwood, Euclid–Green, parts of Glenville and St. Clair–Superior2017
11West Boulevard, parts of Edgewater, Cudell, and Jefferson2023
12Broadway–Slavic Village, south Tremont, south Cuyahoga Valley, parts of Brooklyn Centre and Old Brooklyn2022
13Old Brooklyn, part of Stockyards2022
14Clark–Fulton, parts of Brooklyn Centre, Stockyards, and West Boulevard
Majority Whip
2017
15Edgewater, Detroit–Shoreway, Whiskey Island, part of Cudell2020
16West Park 2015
17West Park 2019

Committees

As of, City Council has 11 standing committees.
CommitteeChairVice Chair
Development, Planning & SustainabilityAnthony HairstonJasmin Santana
Finance, Diversity, Equity & InclusionBlaine GriffinKerry McCormack
Health, Human Services & the ArtsKevin ConwellRebecca Maurer
Mayor’s AppointmentsJoe Jones
Municipal Services & PropertiesKevin BishopRichard Starr
OperationsKerry McCormack
RulesBlaine Griffin
SafetyMichael PolensekJoe Jones
Transportation & MobilityKerry McCormackCharles Slife
UtilitiesBrian KazyJenny Spencer
Workforce, Education, Training & Youth DevelopmentJasmin SantanaStephanie Howse