Camilla Getz, the district's attorney invited to the meeting, walked the commission through Rosenberg rules adapted for government bodies, emphasizing clarity and public transparency in meeting procedure. "The chair is the body that's charged with applying the rules for the conduct of the meeting," Getz said, describing the chair's responsibility to announce items, call for presentations, invite technical clarifying questions, open public comment and then call for motions.
Getz explained common motions — basic motions, motions to amend or substitute, withdrawal, and motions to limit debate — and noted that a motion to limit debate ("move the previous question") requires a two‑thirds vote. She also reviewed decorum recommendations (one person at a time, chair recognition) and the use of "orders of the day" to return to the agenda if discussion drifts.
Commissioners asked procedural clarifications, including whether a motion can be amended more than once, whether a chair may move a motion, and the distinction between technical clarifying questions to staff versus commissioner discussion. Getz advised that some choices (for example, order of speaking during discussion) are at the chair's discretion and that the commission could formally adopt Rosenberg rules in the future if it wished; she noted staff informally follows the guidance already.
No formal action was taken to adopt or amend the rules at this meeting; the presentation was intended as a refresher and to provide a consistent framework for future deliberations.