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San Leandro Council Member Handbook | 20212022 <br />27 | Page <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />SECTION V ADMINISTRATION <br />ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT <br />The City Manager’s office provides general staff <br />and administrative support to members of the <br />City Council. Services include scheduling of <br />appointments, calendaring, receipt of telephone <br />messages and light word processing. <br /> <br />EMAIL AND VOICEMAIL <br />Councilmembers are provided with a City email <br />and voicemail account. These communications <br />can raise important legal issues to which <br />Councilmembers should pay special attention. The Brown Act strictly prohibits members from <br />using technology to develop a concurrence by a majority regarding Council actions. <br />Councilmembers should not use telephones, faxes, or email to communicate with other <br />Councilmembers to develop a majority position on any issue that may come before the full <br />Council. <br /> <br />Also, be aware that any email sent by Councilmembers addressing substantive city business, <br />either from a City email account or your personal email account may be a public record according <br />to the California Public Records Act (PRA). Email information is stored on the computer network <br />and may continue to exist on the network’s backup system even after being deleted. As a result, <br />emails can become records of the City maintained in the course of business, and thus available <br />for public disclosure under PRA. <br /> <br />MAIL <br />Councilmembers may receive large amounts of mail. Administrative staff in the City Manager’s <br />office maintains a mailbox for each councilmember in City Hall. <br /> <br />COUNCIL OFFICE <br />There is an office available for councilmembers to use for councilmember business. The office is <br />available on a first-come, first-served basis. <br /> <br />POLICY DEVELOPMENT <br />Local officials best serve their constituents when they listen to the community as well as help the <br />community visualize where it wants to be in the future. <br /> <br />As an elected official, you play a fundamental role in the evolution of the goals, purpose, and <br />direction of your community. You are responsible for making decisions about tax policy and tax <br />rates, the scope of services your government will provide, and the role of the public sector versus <br />that of the private sector in the delivery of those services. You are also responsible for policies <br />that will affect local economic growth, cultural change, and the environment. All these complex and <br />ever-changing factors affect and are affected by a local government’s mission. <br />