The next revision of the Batavia city charter is heading to the attorney for review after the Charter Review Commission polished up its proposed changes tonight.
The last issue to get any discussion dealt with the definition of "affiliation" in the case a city council member resigned office mid-term -- if a council member was elected by a political party different from his or her affiliation at the time of resignation, which party should get to appoint the replacement.
By a 3-4 vote, the commission rejected a proposed change that would have defined according to which party gave the candidate the most votes.
Commission members who objected to the change said the current definition is clear, has worked for years, and less likely to subvert the will of the voters.
"We are trying to infer what voters want instead of keeping it black and white," said Matt Landers. "We're getting into a subjective area."
The issue was raised last month by Councilman Bill Cox, who was elected as a Republican on a Democratic line. He asked who would get to appoint his replacement if he resigned for any reason. Under the current charter, it seems, the Republicans would get to pick the new member.
After the city attorney finishes his review, the commission will meet to discuss any of his language changes and then set a public hearing for the revised charter in July. The vote will be in November.