The Common Council introduced an ordinance (Proposal 2‑2025) that would amend the municipal code to lower the dollar threshold at which the council must approve professional service contracts from $50,000 to $5,000.
The council president asked for unanimous consent to consider the ordinance for adoption that night. Staff clarified the change: “This is the ordinance that would reduce, the number from the current 50,000 down to the proposed 5,000.” The council did not reach unanimous consent, which state procedure requires to take up and adopt an ordinance at the same meeting it is introduced. The council concluded the item was introduced on first reading and will be scheduled for vote at the next council meeting or referred to committee, per council procedure.
Why it matters: Changing the approval threshold would expand the council’s formal oversight of professional service contracts and could increase legislative review of procurement decisions. The council chose not to adopt the ordinance at first reading because consent was not unanimous; the measure remains active and will reappear for later consideration.
What happened: No vote on the ordinance content was taken at the meeting; the item was recorded as introduced on first reading and will return for consideration at a subsequent meeting or committee review.