Metropolitan Council of Nashville and Davidson County | |
---|---|
Type | |
Type | |
Term limits | 2 consecutive four-year terms |
Leadership | |
Vice Mayor and Metropolitan Council President | Angie Henderson |
President pro tempore | |
Structure | |
Seats | 40 Seats: 5 At-Large Seats 35 District Seats |
Committees | — Budget and Finance – Charter Revision – Codes, Fair, and Farmer's Market – Convention, Tourism, and Public Entertainment Facilities – Education – Health, Hospitals, and Social Services – Parks, Library, and Arts – Personnel, Public Information, Human Relations, and Veterans – Planning, Zoning, and Historical – Public Safety, Beer, and Regulated Beverages – Public Works – Rules, Confirmations, and Public Elections – Traffic, Parking, and Transportation |
Length of term | Four (4) Years |
Elections | |
Last election | August 1, 2023 |
Next general election | August 1, 2027 |
Website | |
https://www.nashville.gov/Metro-Council.aspx |
The Metropolitan Council (officially the Metropolitan Council of Nashville and Davidson County) is the legislative body of the consolidated city-county government of Nashville, Tennessee and Davidson County.
The Council has 40 members, 35 of which are district council representatives, and five of which are council members at-large. If an at-large member resigns or dies before serving a full four-year term, the member's seat remains vacant until the next election. If a district council members resigns or dies more than eight months before the end of their four-year term, a special election is held to fill the seat. At-large council members are elected by the entirety of the area the metropolitan government encompasses. The Metropolitan Council is the 3rd largest in the United States, behind the Chicago City Council and the New York City Council. [1] The Historic Metro Courthouse, 1 Public Square, is where the Council meets.
Under the Metropolitan Charter, members must be over the age of 25 and have lived within Davidson County for a year at the beginning of their terms. Members must also have lived in the district they represent for six months, and they must continue to reside in that district for the duration of their terms. In 2019, according to The Tennessean , annual salaries for council members increased for the first time since 2005 from $15,000 to $23,100. [2] The members elected by districts represent 15,000 to 17,000 residents each, and all Metro Council members serve part-time. According to the Charter as currently amended, members are elected to no more than two terms consecutively, not including any partial term to which they may have been elected. However, district member and at-large member are considered to be separate offices for the purposes of this provision.
In the 2015 municipal elections, two amendments to the Metropolitan Nashville Charter which would have increased term limits for members of the Council, both at large and district-wide to three consecutive terms, as well as reducing the size of the council to 27 members, were proposed. Both amendments failed with Davidson County voters.[ citation needed ]
The popularly elected vice mayor is the President of the Metropolitan Council and serves as its presiding officer, but is not a member of the Metro Council and does not vote except to break ties. The vice mayor, a part-time position, is paid $25,230 annually. [2]
Members elect a president pro tempore to serve in the absence of the Vice Mayor, and a deputy president pro tempore once the president pro tempore becomes presiding officer due to the Vice Mayor's death or resignation. Members of the Metro Council who act as presiding officer during the Vice Mayor's absence retain their right to vote on all resolutions and ordinances.
Angie Henderson is the incumbent vice mayor. [3] Zulfat Suara is the president pro tempore.
Two-thirds of the Metropolitan Council are required to constitute a quorum before the business of the council can be conducted. The council holds regular meetings each first and third Tuesday of each month. In addition, with 48 hours' written notice, a special meeting may be called by the mayor or the vice mayor. It may also be requested by the majority of the council, which would require 21 votes in favor of the meeting. Meetings are broadcast live on Metro 3 and are archived on the Nashville government website.
The mayor may veto resolutions and ordinances passed by the Metropolitan Council, but the veto can be overridden with a two-thirds majority of the Council. With three-fourths of the entire council in favor, and not subject to veto, investigations may be conducted by the whole council or its committees.
Name | No. of Members | Chair | Vice Chair |
---|---|---|---|
Affordable Housing | |||
Budget and Finance | 15 | Porterfield | Toombs |
Charter Revision | 8 | Weiner | Johnston |
Education | |||
Human Services | |||
Public Facilities, Arts, and Culture | 9 | Styles | Vo |
Planning and Zoning | 13 | Gamble | Harrell |
Public Health and Safety | 13 | Evans | Taylor |
Rules, Confirmations, and Public Elections | 8 | Sepulveda | Preptit |
Transportation and Infrastructure | 12 | Parker | Evans Segall |
Ad Hoc East Bank | 7 | Parker | Kupin |
In 2005, mayor Bill Purcell called for cutting the number of legislators in the council down to 20 in a proposal in which fifteen seats would be elected by districts and five seats would remain at-large. In 2006 the Metro Charter Review Commission scheduled a public hearing on the council's size. In a poll by The Tennessean , 21 councillors favored keeping the council as it is, and nine favored a reduction in the size of the council.
Dissidents said that if the size of the council were to be reduced, being elected could become a matter of who can raise the most money, and special interests may get involved. Other concerns voiced included council members not being able to get in contact with their constituents, the council becoming less ethnically diverse, and council membership changing from a part-time to a full-time job. Councilwoman Amanda McClendon said a reduction in size may make it easier to pass legislation.
In 2023, the state government enacted a law reducing the size of the Metro Council from 40 members to 20. [5] The move was widely opposed by Nashville residents and leaders. In April 2023, a court issued an injunction against the change, indicating that it unconstitutionally changed election procedures during the campaign. [6]
District | Name | Area(s)/Neighborhoods Represented |
---|---|---|
At-Large, Seat 1 | Zulfat Suara | Davidson County |
At-Large, Seat 2 | Delishia Porterfield | Davidson County |
At-Large, Seat 3 | Quin Evans Segall | Davidson County |
At-Large, Seat 4 | Burkley Allen | Davidson County |
At-Large, Seat 5 | Olivia Hill | Davidson County |
1 | Joy Kimbrough | Bordeaux, Joelton, Whites Creek, Scottsboro |
2 | Kyonztè Toombs | North Nashville, Bordeaux, Metro Center |
3 | Jennifer Gamble | Brick Church, Goodlettsville, Madison, Whites Creek |
4 | Mike Cortese | Brentwood, Nipper's Corner |
5 | Sean Parker | East Nashville, Cleveland Park, Maplewood, Madison |
6 | Clay Capp | East Nashville, Lockeland Springs, Rosebank |
7 | Emily Benedict | East Nashville, Inglewood, Madison |
8 | Deonte Harrell | Antioch |
9 | Tonya Hancock | Madison |
10 | Jennifer Frensley Webb | Goodlettsville, Madison |
11 | Jeff Eslick | Old Hickory, Hermitage |
12 | Erin Evans | Hermitage |
13 | Russ Bradford | Donelson, Airport |
14 | Jordan Huffman | Donelson, Hermitage |
15 | Jeff Gregg | Donelson, Opryland |
16 | Ginny Welsch | South Nashville, Woodbine |
17 | Terry Vo | South Nashville, Fairgrounds, Berry Hill, 12 South |
18 | Tom Cash | South Nashville, Waverly-Belmont, Vanderbilt |
19 | Jacob Kupin | North Nashville, South Nashville, Downtown |
20 | Rollin Horton | West Nashville, The Nations, Cockrill Bend |
21 | Brandon Taylor | North Nashville, West End, Midtown, TSU |
22 | Sheri Weiner | West Nashville, Bellevue |
23 | Thom Druffel | West Nashville, Belle Meade |
24 | Brenda Gadd | West Nashville, Sylvan Park |
25 | Jeff Preptit | Oak Hill, Green Hills |
26 | Courtney Johnston | Crieve Hall, Paragon Mills |
27 | Robert Nash | Southeast Nashville, Tusculum |
28 | David Benton | Southeast Nashville, Antioch |
29 | Tasha Ellis | Priest Lake |
30 | Sandra Sepulveda | Southeast Nashville |
31 | John Rutherford | Antioch, Cane Ridge, Lenox Village |
32 | Joy Styles | Antioch |
33 | Antoinette Lee | Antioch, Cane Ridge |
34 | Sandy Ewing | City of Forest Hills, Green Hills, Bellevue |
35 | Jason Spain | Bellevue |
District | 2019–2023 | 2015–2019 | 2011–2015 | 2007–2011 | 2003–2007 | 1999–2003 | 1995–1999 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Vice Mayor [lower-alpha 1] | Jim Shulman [lower-alpha 2] | David Briley [lower-alpha 3] | Diane Neighbors | Howard Gentry Jr. [lower-alpha 4] | Ronnie Steine [lower-alpha 5] | Jay West | |
AL 1 | Bob Mendes | John Cooper | Megan Barry | Tim Garrett | Buck Dozier | Chris Ferrell | Vic Varallo |
AL 2 | Sharon Hurt | Erica Gilmore | Ronnie Steine | Megan Barry | Diane Neighbors | Leo Waters | George Armistead |
AL 3 | Burkeley Allen | Bob Mendes | Tim Garrett | Charlie Tygard | Carolyn Baldwin Tucker | David Briley | Ronnie Steine |
AL 4 | Steve Glover [lower-alpha 6] | Sharon Hurt | Charlie Tygard | Ronnie Steine | David Briley | Carolyn Baldwin Tucker | Chris Ferrell |
AL 5 | Zulfat Suara | Jim Shulman [lower-alpha 7] | Jerry Maynard | Adam Dread [lower-alpha 8] | Howard Gentry Jr. [lower-alpha 9] | Leo Waters | |
1 | Jonathan Hall [lower-alpha 10] | Lonnell Matthews Jr. | Brenda Gilmore | Regina Patton | |||
2 | Kyonztè Toombs | DeCosta Hastings | Frank Harrison | Jamie Isabel | Melvin Black | ||
3 | Jennifer Gamble | Brenda Haywood | Walter Hunt [lower-alpha 11] | Chester Hughes [lower-alpha 12] | Ron Nollner | ||
4 | Robert Swope | Brady Banks | Michael Craddock | Don Majors | |||
5 | Sean Parker | Scott Davis | Jamie Hollin [lower-alpha 13] | Pam Murray | Lawrence Hall Jr. | Frank Harrison | |
6 | Brett Withers | Peter Westerholm | Mike Jameson | Eileen Beehan | |||
7 | Emily Benedict | Anthony Davis | Erik Cole | Earl Campbell | |||
8 | Nancy VanReece | Karen Bennett | Jason Hart | Lawrence Hart | |||
9 | Tonya Hancock | Bill Pridemore | Jim Forkum | James Dillard | |||
10 | Zach Young | Dough Pardue | Rip Ryman | Bettye Balthrop | Tim Garrett | ||
11 | Larry Hagar [lower-alpha 14] | Darren Jernigan | Feller Brown | Mike Wooden | |||
12 | Erin Evans | Steve Glover | Jim Gotto | Tony Derryberry | Phil Ponder | ||
13 | Russ Bradford | Holly Huezo | Josh Stites | Carl Burch | Bruce Stanley | Charles O. French | |
14 | Kevin Rhoten | Bruce Stanley | Harold White | James Bruce Stanley | |||
15 | Jeff Syracuse | Phil Claiborne | J.B. Loring | Roy Dale | |||
16 | Ginny Welsch | Mike Freeman | Tony Tenpenny | Anna Page | Armanda McClendon | Jerry Wayne Graves | |
17 | Colby Sledge | Sandra Moore | Ronnie Greer | Mansfield Douglas | |||
18 | Tom Cash | Burkeley Allen | Kristine LaLonde [lower-alpha 15] | Ginger Hausser | Stewart Clifton | ||
19 | Freddie O'Connell | Erica Gilmore | Ludye Wallace | Julius Sloss | |||
20 | Mary Carolyn Roberts | Buddy Baker | Billy Joe Walls | Morris Haddox | |||
21 | Brandon Taylor | Ed Kindall | Edith Langster | Edward Whitmore | Willis McCallister | ||
22 | Gloria Hausser | Sheri Weiner | Eric Crafton | Norma Hand | John Aaron Holt | ||
23 | Thom Druffel | Mina Johnson | Emily Evans [lower-alpha 16] | Chris Whitson | Bob Bogen | Eric Crafton | |
24 | Kathleen Murphy | Jason Holleman | John Summers | Horace Johns | |||
25 | Russ Pulley | Sean McGuire | Jim Shulman | David Kleinfelter | |||
26 | Courtney Johnston | Jeremy Elrod | Chris Harmon | Greg Adkins | Michelle Arriola [lower-alpha 17] | ||
27 | Robert Nash | Davette Blalock | Randy Foster | Janis Sontany | |||
28 | Tanaka Vercher | Duane Dominy | Jason Alexander [lower-alpha 18] | Durward Hall | |||
29 | Delishia Porterfield [lower-alpha 19] | Karen Johnson | Vivian Wilhoite | Saletta Holloway | |||
30 | Sandra Sepulveda | Jason Potts | Jim Hodge [lower-alpha 20] | Michael Kerstetter | Leroy Hollis | ||
31 | John Rutherford | Fabian Bedne | Parker Toler | Don Knoch | Tom Alexander | ||
32 | Joy Styles | Jacobia Dowell | Sam Coleman | Craig Jenkins | |||
33 | Antoinette Lee [lower-alpha 21] | Robert Duvall [lower-alpha 22] | Tommy Bradley | Ron Turner | |||
34 | Angie Henderson | Carter Todd | Lynn Williams | Charles Fentress | |||
35 | Dave Rosenberg | Bo Mitchell | Charlie Tygard [lower-alpha 23] | Vic Lineweaver [lower-alpha 24] |
Nashville is the capital and most populous city in the U.S. state of Tennessee and the county seat of Davidson County. Located in Middle Tennessee, it had a population of 689,447 at the 2020 U.S. census. Nashville is the 21st most populous city in the United States, and the fourth most populous city in the southeastern U.S. Located on the Cumberland River, the city is the center of the Nashville metropolitan area, and is one of the fastest growing in the nation.
Richard Harmon Fulton was an American Democratic politician who served as a member of the Tennessee State Senate and of the United States House of Representatives, and the second mayor of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County.
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