LA PLATA, Md. – The possible change in the form of the Charles County local government structure achieved a major milestone last week, and the battle lines appear to be shaping up for the high-stakes decision set to be made by voters on Election Day, November 5.
Charles County has long operated under a “County Home Rule system” of government. On the November 5 election ballot, voters will be able to choose whether to reorganize the local government into a “Charter Form” of governance.
The Charter Form will create a new executive branch of government, headed by a county executive, with a separate five-member county council handling legislative functions. This differs from the existing Home Rule form of governance, in which the executive and legislative functions are managed by a five-member board of county commissioners who hold both executive and legislative authority.
Proponents argue that this proposed charter was created through the exhaustive efforts of the Charter Board, appointed in 2023 and now disbanded after holding dozens of public meetings and soliciting citizen input to create the proposal now presented to the voters for an up or down vote by referendum on the November 5 ballot.
They highlight increased efficiency in operations and decision-making, and the creation of an Office of Inspector General, which would be empowered to investigate and report on waste, abuse, and fraud, as reasons voters should strongly consider adopting the proposed charter on Election Day. Indeed, the Charter Board unanimously approved the completed proposal they presented to the commissioners as a final document.
Critics of the change to Charter Government point to the increased cost and size of local government and suggest that this will inevitably lead to higher tax burdens for local businesses and citizens. At the July 23 commissioners meeting where the final charter proposal was presented, Jacob Dyer, the acting director of fiscal and administrative services, briefed the commissioners on the impact of the transition and estimated the costs to be between $1.1 and $1.6 million. These costs do not include any needed expansion of buildings or space to accommodate the possible expanded staffing of the new form of government.
Some outspoken critics have pointed to the large increase in executive authority and worry that this centralization of executive authority could make it easier for powerful interests to influence the wielding of that power on behalf of those interests.
As the battle lines become more defined, voters are going to be asked to render a verdict at the polls this November, leaving many scrambling to understand the nuances of the issue. Some local fire, EMS, and police organizations have publicly expressed concern that this charter could eventually lead to the establishment of a municipal fire or police department, replacing or reducing the power of the Sheriff’s Office and/or the volunteer fire and EMS systems in place. However, proponents of the charter are quick to point out that those proposals do not exist in the current charter document now before the voters.
What remains clear is that this issue is increasing in intensity as the deciding vote looms. The proposal, the final work of the Charter Board presented to the commissioners at the July 23 meeting, is available for public review on the county website as voters prepare to choose whether to move forward and adopt this change.
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