The Board of Mayor and Aldermen took up Ordinance No. 1666, an ordinance to add an "abusive conduct prevention" policy to the city's personnel policies, but the board did not advance the measure and the initial motion was withdrawn to allow further review.
City counsel said the text was drawn from state enabling legislation that allows municipalities to adopt such policies; the draft copies wording from the state as a starting point. Several board members said they supported the idea of strengthening personnel protections but preferred the language be reviewed by outside HR professionals the board had just authorized to assist with personnel-policy work.
Alderman Wilson and other members argued the city should wait for the HR firm’s recommendations and refine the ordinance wording before a second reading. After discussion the mover withdrew the motion and the item was not advanced at this meeting. The transcript records that the initial motion was withdrawn rather than taken to a vote.
Why it matters: The ordinance would add definitions and procedures to the personnel manual that could affect how the city handles workplace conduct complaints. Board members said they want expert input before adopting a stand-alone ordinance.
Actions: The ordinance was introduced and discussed; the initiating motion was withdrawn (no passage or rejection recorded).