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REPORT

OF THE

New York Charter Commission

TO THE

LEGISLATURE

1909

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REPORT OF

THE NEW YORK CHARTER COMMISSION,

To the Legislature:

Dated March 8, 1909.

The Charter Revision Commission of 1907 made its report to the Governor on December 1 of that year. The report pointed out the confused condition of the law affecting the city, analyzed the city government, and recommended various amendments.

66 * * *

On April 13, 1908, the legislature passed an act providing for the creation of a new commission to be known as "The New York Charter Commission," to be appointed by the Governor and to consist of fifteen persons to serve without compensation. The act defines the duties of the Commission in the following language: to inquire into the local government of the city of New York and the counties contained therein with power to investigate the manner of conducting and transacting business in the several departments, boards and offices thereof, the effect and working of the charter of Greater New York and the acts amendatory thereof, and supplementary thereto, and of any and all other acts relating to said city, and to suggest such legislation as it may deem advisable with respect thereto. Said Commission may in its discretion draft and submit with its final report a new charter and an administrative code for the city."

The Governor, on April 21, 1908, appointed the Commission, eight of the appointees having been members of the Charter Revision Commission of 1907.

The Commission organized on the 27th day of April, 1908, and at once took up for consideration the present condition of the city government in connection with the report of the Commission of 1907. Some time was necessarily consumed in study of that report by the members of the present Commission who had not served upon the former one. After thorough consideration the Commission has determined, besides reporting its conclusions and recommendations, to present a draft of a charter and of an administrative code, the former of which accompanies this report, the latter of which is in course of preparation and will be submitted at a later date. The two may, we believe, be advantageously made complementary parts of a single statute.

In order to facilitate its work, the Commission was divided into sub-committees to each of which was referred the duty of investigating and reporting upon the manner of conducting and transacting business in the departments referred to it. Throughout the summer the chairman or other members of the sub-committees pursued their work and this preliminary task was carried on unremittingly until in September it had progressed to a point which permitted the Committee on Draft to begin the preparation of the charter, chapter by chapter. From October 1, 1908, until the date of the report that Committee met every night with the exception of Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, and the evenings on which the full Commission was convened, and has repeatedly held sessions during the daytime.

In the preparation of each individual chapter and title the Committee on Draft in every instance through one of its own members or one of the other sub-committees, carefully investigated the actual operations of each department and bureau, and considered the statutory provisions applicable thereto with such officers and employees as were believed to be best qualified to explain the prevailing practice and illustrate the actual administrative interpretation of the charter. It was also sought to discover how far actual organization conformed to the letter of the law, how far the practice was the result of administrative interpretation, and to what extent it was a spontaneous development. Particular care was exercised to ascertain how far administrative practice reflects the law as well as the degree to which the departments had found it necessary to disregard the statute because either of difficulty in its application or of the obsoleteness or unintelligibility of its provisions.

The various committee investigations, although long and te dious, were absolutely necessary if the law and the facts were to be made to correspond, and the law were to be relieved of obsolete, unintelligible and systematically disregarded provisions. A particularly long and precise investigation was required concerning the operations of the finance department, the sinking funds, the dock department, the police department, the health department, the charities department, the department of education, the department of taxes, the borough presidents and the board of assessors, and much time was necessarily spent in investigations of provisions of the existing charter dealing with the city's bonds and obligations, particularly assessment bonds, revenue bonds, special revenue bonds, and general fund bonds.

Inasmuch as the Commission was charged with the investigation of the effect and working of the charter, and all other acts relating to the city and was empowered to report such legislation as it might deem advisable in the premises, it became a matter of primary importance to consider constitutional limitations upon the city's borrowing capacity. The Commission through a subcommittee made as exhaustive a study of the subject as was possible within the time and means at its disposal, and copies of its two reports to the Governor in relation to the subject are hereto annexed. There is also inserted in the proposed charter a section providing so far as the legislature may, a method for calculating the borrowing capacity of the city, the application of which, in the judgment of a majority of the Commission, should render it impossible for the city to find itself again in the position in which it now is viz., without any other standard for the determination of its debt-incurring power than the fluctuating opinions of the administration for the time being. If the legislature have the power to provide such a method, the entire Commission concurs in the wisdom of formulating a rule which, by requiring stated reports by the board of estimate and apportionment, may serve as a partial restraint upon the inclination to reckless expenditure.

The legislative authorization to report a charter and an adminis trative code the Commission interprets as an authorization to report a charter new in form with such substantive changes as it deems necessary to render government economical and efficient. Hence the effort of the Commission has been to conform law with wise administrative practice; to eliminate the purely obsolete; to clarify the text; to harmonize the law with administrative interpretation; to efface the redundant and establish coherence. It has sought to follow the lines of the historical development of the existing charter, with due consideration for the actual experience in charter history of other American cities with similar problems; to make no radical or purely experimental changes; to preserve existing phraseology where it was clear or had received a definite meaning from the courts; to bring all matter relating to the same subject under one title; to correlate and coordinate different departments and bureaus, and, so far as practicable in the time at its command, to substitute order and symmetry for the present confusion and cross division of powers and duties and to give the law, in a word, an intelligible, logical form. One purpose has been to eliminate from the charter much general statutory law which is found both in the charter and in the revised statutes.

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