Finance Director Brad Hozenjak told the council that the agenda packet contained incorrect figures and that the correct attorney contract spans four years (Jan. 1, 2026–2029). He said the first-year dollar amount in the prepared contract is $960,000, with 5% increases in subsequent years, representing a 7.9% increase over the prior contract because of heavier demand for legal hours for public records responses, code enforcement and prosecution work.
Hozenjak said the $960,000 figure was already included in the 2026 budget. Councilmember Hornby said the increased cost also secures more attorney hours and moved to approve a four-year contract for legal services with Davis Arneill Law Firm LLP and authorize the mayor's signature. The motion was seconded and carried on a voice vote.
Council discussion framed the change as addressing a measurable increase in workload for legal services tied to public records requests and municipal enforcement. The transcript does not include a roll-call vote; the vote was recorded by voice ('Aye') and the motion carried.
Next steps: the mayor will sign the contract and the city will proceed under the new four-year agreement, with staff continuing to monitor legal workload and costs.