This page (revision-109) was last changed on 28-Mar-2023 00:24 by Administrator

This page was created on 28-Mar-2023 00:25 by unknown

Only authorized users are allowed to rename pages.

Only authorized users are allowed to delete pages.

Page revision history

Version Date Modified Size Author Changes ... Change note
109 28-Mar-2023 00:24 6 KB Administrator to previous
108 28-Mar-2023 00:25 6 KB Administrator to previous | to last
107 28-Mar-2023 00:25 6 KB Administrator to previous | to last
106 28-Mar-2023 00:25 6 KB Administrator to previous | to last
105 28-Mar-2023 00:25 6 KB Administrator to previous | to last
104 28-Mar-2023 00:25 6 KB Administrator to previous | to last
103 28-Mar-2023 00:25 6 KB Administrator to previous | to last
102 28-Mar-2023 00:25 6 KB Administrator to previous | to last
101 28-Mar-2023 00:25 6 KB Administrator to previous | to last

Page References

Incoming links Outgoing links
Organizations
Organizations

Version management

Difference between version and

At line 63 changed one line
There's more than one way that cities have their council members and mayor defined. Some have five members and some have four or seven. Some have elections for mayors, attorneys, clerks and treasurers, and others appoint those positions. Some have the majority elections on presidential election years and others on the mid-terms. Even with that variety, though, we can quantify the different models and those models, and the cities that use them, are shown below.
There's more than one way that cities have their council members and mayor defined. Some have five members and some have four or seven. Some have elections for mayors, attorneys, clerks and treasurers, and others appoint those positions. Some have the majority elections on presidential election years and others on the mid-terms. Even with that variety, though, we can quantify the different models. Those models, and the cities that use them, are shown below.