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before the letter is mailed. Letters to other elected officials or agencies on City issues shall be <br />discussed with the appropriate staff so that the City lobby effort can be coordinated. <br />When writing as an individual, a councilor or the Mayor is free to take any position he/she <br />feels is appropriate. When it is a point of view different from a Council position, this fact <br />should be included in the letter. Use of City stationery and choice of pronouns shall be left <br />to the discretion of the councilor or the Mayor. <br />The governing principle is to advise the Council or staff when expressing a City position, <br />and to make differences clear when speaking as an individual. <br />9.02 <br />The effectiveness of City lobbying in Salem or in Washington, D.C. depends on the clarity of <br />the City’s voice. When councilors or the Mayor represent the City in a lobbying situation, it <br />is appropriate that the councilors or the Mayor avoid expressions of personal dissent from <br />an adopted Council policy. This policy is stated in Resolution No. 4139, Council Policy on <br />Testimony and Funding Applications. <br />A councilor or the Mayor in disagreement with an adopted policy should not be deprived of <br />the right to express such views to the appropriate officials at another time and another <br />place. However, the councilor or the Mayor should feel bound to advise those to whom such <br />disagreement is expressed that it is an individual view and that the Council has taken a <br />different position. <br />9.03 <br />Councilors and the Mayor are encouraged to attend conferences and training sessions <br />which would enhance their skills and knowledge. Any councilor or the Mayor may attend <br />any meeting at which the Council is represented, but only the formally appointed official <br />CityCouncil representative or designated alternate, has the right to vote on matters being <br />considered by the organization or group holding the meeting or conference. Individual <br />councilors or the Mayor may state he or she is representing the City Council if he or she has <br />been formally directed by the City Council to do so. <br />For local intergovernmental bodies oradvisory groups to which an official Eugene City <br />Council representative has been appointed, the representative is to serve as an “instructed <br />delegate;” that is, to represent pertinent adopted City and CityCouncil policy. If possible, <br />the Mayor or councilors should inform the other members of the City Council of the matters <br />being considered by intergovernmental bodies, and to the greatest extent possible, seek <br />direction from the City Council on issues directly pertaining to the City of Eugene and <br />adopted City policy. The representative may express his or her own opinion, provided it is <br />identified as such, but when voting or considering matters with policy implications or <br />budgetary considerations, the representative must follow adopted City or CityCouncil <br />policy and direction. <br />Participating in state and national groups such as the League of Oregon Cities and the <br />National League of Cities presents the opportunity to enhance skills and knowledge and is <br />an important avenue for the Mayor and councilors to advocate for the members of the <br />community and the city itself. If the Mayor or councilors attend meetings of these <br />Exhibit A -- Page 8 <br /> <br /> <br />