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Wikipedia

Local government in the United States

Most U.S. states and territories have at least two tiers of local government: counties and municipalities. Louisiana uses the term parish and Alaska uses the term borough for what the U.S. Census Bureau terms county equivalents in those states. Civil townships or towns are used as subdivisions of a county in 20 states, mostly in the Northeast and Midwest.[1]

The "Embodied" statue, representing justice, in the Civic Center neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, which mostly consists of City of Los Angeles government offices. Visible in the background are the Los Angeles City Hall and the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center.

Population centers may be organized into incorporated municipalities of several types, including the city, town, borough, and village. The types and nature of these municipal entities vary from state to state. In addition to these general-purpose local governments, states may also create special-purpose local governments.[2] Depending on the state, local governments may operate under their own charters or under general law, or a state may have a mix of chartered and general-law local governments. Generally, in a state having both chartered and general-law local governments, the chartered local governments have more local autonomy and home rule.[3] Municipalities are typically subordinate to a county government, with some exceptions. Certain cities, for example, have consolidated with their county government as consolidated city-counties. In Virginia, cities are completely independent from the county in which they would otherwise be a part. In some states, particularly in New England, towns form the primary unit of local government below the state level, in some cases eliminating the need for county government entirely. Many rural areas and even some suburban areas of many states have no municipal government below the county level.

In addition to counties and municipalities, states often create special purpose authorities, such as school districts and districts for fire protection, sanitary sewer service, public transportation, public libraries, public parks or forests, water resource management, and conservation districts. Such special purpose districts may encompass areas in multiple municipalities or counties. According to the US Census Bureau's data collected in 2012, there were 89,004 local government units in the United States. This data shows a decline from 89,476 units since the last census of local governments performed in 2007.[2]

Each of the five permanently inhabited U.S. territories is also subdivided into smaller entities. Puerto Rico has 78 municipalities, and the Northern Mariana Islands has four municipalities.[4] Guam has villages, the U.S. Virgin Islands has districts, and American Samoa has districts and unorganized atolls.[4][5][6]

Each Indian Reservation is subdivided in various ways. For example, the Navajo Nation is subdivided into agencies and Chapter houses, while the Blackfeet Nation is subdivided into Communities.

History edit

When North America was colonized by Europeans from the 17th century onward, there was initially little control from governments back in Europe. Many settlements began as shareholder or stockholder business enterprises, and while the king of Britain had technical sovereignty, in most instances "full governmental authority was vested in the company itself."[7] Settlers had to fend for themselves; compact towns sprung up based as legal corporations in what has been described as "pure democracy":

The people, owing to the necessity of guarding against the Indians and wild animals, and to their desire to attend the same church, settled in small, compact communities, or townships, which they called towns. The town was a legal corporation, was the political unit, and was represented in the General Court. It was a democracy of the purest type. Several times a year the adult males met in town meeting to discuss public questions, to lay taxes, to make local laws, and to elect officers. The chief officers were the "selectmen," from three to nine in number, who should have the general management of the public business; the town clerk, treasurer, constables, assessors, and overseers of the poor. To this day the town government continues in a large measure in some parts of New England.––historian Henry William Elson writing in 1904.[8]

Propertied men voted; in no colonies was there universal suffrage.[9] The founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1629 by a group of Puritans led by John Winthrop came with the understanding that the enterprise was to be "based in the new world rather than in London."[10] The notion of self-government became accepted in the colonies, although it was not totally free from challenges; in the 1670s, the Lords of Trade and Plantations (a royal committee regulating mercantile trade in the colonies) tried to annul the Massachusetts Bay charter, but by 1691, the New England colonies had reinstalled their previous governments.[11]

Voting was established as a precedent early on; in fact, one of the first things that Jamestown settlers did was conduct an election.[12] Typically, voters were white males described as "property owners" aged twenty-one and older, but sometimes the restrictions were greater, and in practice, persons able to participate in elections were few.[12] Women were prevented from voting (although there were a few exceptions) and African-Americans were excluded.[12] The colonists never thought of themselves as subservient but rather as having a loose association with authorities in London.[11] Representative government sprung up spontaneously in various colonies, and during the colonial years, it was recognized and ratified by later charters.[13] But the colonial assemblies passed few bills and did not conduct much business, but dealt with a narrow range of issues, and legislative sessions lasted weeks (occasionally longer), and most legislators could not afford to neglect work for extended periods; so wealthier people tended to predominate in local legislatures.[12] Office holders tended to serve from a sense of duty and prestige, and not for financial benefit.[12]

Campaigning by candidates was different from today's. There were no mass media or advertising. Candidates talked with voters in person, walking a line between undue familiarity and aloofness. Prospective officeholders were expected to be at the polls on election day and made a point to greet all voters. Failure to appear or to be civil to all could be disastrous. In some areas, candidates offered voters food and drink, evenhandedly giving "treats" to opponents as well as supporters.––Ed Crews.[12]

 
Rules and orders for the regulation of the corporation when met in Common Council, Philadelphia, c. 1800–1809

Taxes were generally based on real estate since it was fixed in place and plainly visible, its value was generally well known, and revenue could be allocated to the government unit where the property was located.[14]

After the American Revolution, the electorate chose the governing councils in almost every American municipality, and state governments began issuing municipal charters.[15] During the 19th century, many municipalities were granted charters by the state governments and became technically municipal corporations.[15] Townships and county governments and city councils shared much of the responsibility for decision-making which varied from state to state.[15] As the United States grew in size and complexity, decision-making authority for issues such as business regulation, taxation, environmental regulation moved to state governments and the national government, while local governments retained control over such matters as zoning issues, property taxes, and public parks.[citation needed] The concept of "zoning" originated in the U.S. during the 1920s, according to one source, in which state law gave certain townships or other local governing bodies authority to decide how land was used; a typical zoning ordinance has a map of a parcel of land attached with a statement specifying how that land can be used, how buildings can be laid out, and so forth.[16] Zoning legitimacy was upheld by the Supreme Court in its Euclid v. Ambler decision.[16]

Types edit

The Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution makes local government a matter of state rather than federal law, with special cases for territories and the District of Columbia. As a result, the states have adopted a wide variety of systems of local government. The United States Census Bureau conducts the Census of Governments every five years to compile statistics on government organization, public employment, and government finances. The categories of local government established in this Census of Governments is a convenient basis for understanding local government in the United States. The categories are as follows:[2]

  1. County Governments
  2. Town or Township Governments
  3. Municipal Governments
  4. Special-Purpose Local Governments

County governments edit

County governments are organized local governments authorized in state constitutions and statutes. Counties and county-equivalents form the first-tier administrative division of the states. The county equivalents in Louisiana are called parishes, while those in Alaska are called boroughs.

All the states are divided into counties or county-equivalents for administrative purposes, with most, although not all counties or county-equivalents, having an organized county government. County government has been eliminated throughout Connecticut and Rhode Island, as well as in parts of Massachusetts. The Unorganized Borough in Alaska also does not operate under a county level government.

The specific governmental powers of counties vary widely between the states. In some states, mainly in New England, they are primarily used as judicial districts. In other states, counties have broad powers in housing, education, transportation and recreation. In areas lacking a county government, services are provided either by lower level townships or municipalities, or the state.

Counties may contain a number of cities, towns, villages, or hamlets. Some cities including Philadelphia, Honolulu, San Francisco, Nashville, and Denver are consolidated city-counties, where the municipality and the county have been merged into a unified, coterminous jurisdiction—that is to say, these counties consist in their entirety of a single municipality whose city government also operates as the county government. Some counties, such as Arlington County, Virginia, do not have any additional subdivisions. Some states contain independent cities that are not part of any county; although it may still function as if it was a consolidated city-county, an independent city was legally separated from any county. Some municipalities are in multiple counties; New York City is uniquely partitioned into five boroughs that are each coterminous with a county.

Town or township governments edit

In many states, most or all of the land area of counties is divided into townships, which may or may not be incorporated. In New York, Wisconsin and New England, county subdivisions are called towns. The U.S. Census divides counties in states not having such subdivisions into other minor civil divisions, sometimes using electoral districts.

The terms "township" and "town" are closely related (in many historical documents the terms are used interchangeably). However, the powers granted to townships or towns vary considerably from state to state. Many states grant townships some governmental powers (making them civil townships, either independently or as a part of the county government. In others, survey townships are non-governmental. Towns in the six New England states and townships in New Jersey and Pennsylvania are included in this category by the Census Bureau, despite the fact that they are legally municipal corporations, since their structure has no necessary relation to concentration of population,[2] which is typical of municipalities elsewhere in the United States. In particular, towns in New England have considerably more power than most townships elsewhere and often function as legally equivalent to cities, typically exercising the full range of powers that are divided between counties, townships, and cities in other states.[17] In New England, towns are a principal form of local municipal government, providing many of the functions of counties in other states. In California, by contrast, the pertinent statutes of the Government Code clarify that "town" is simply another word for "city", especially a general law city as distinct from a charter city. In some states, large areas have no general-purpose local government below the county level.

Town or township governments are organized local governments authorized in the state constitutions and statutes of 20 Northeastern and Midwestern states,[2] established to provide general government for a defined area, generally based on the geographic subdivision of a county.

An additional dimension that distinguishes township governments from municipalities is the historical circumstance surrounding their formation. For example,[clarification needed] towns in New England are also defined by a tradition of local government presided over by town meetings — assemblies open to all voters to express their opinions on public policy.

The term "town" is also used for a local level of government in New York and Wisconsin. The terms "town" and "township" are used interchangeably in Minnesota.

Some townships or other incorporated areas like villages, boroughs, plantations, and hamlets have governments and political power; others are simply geographic designations. Townships in many states are generally the product of the Public Land Survey System.

Municipal governments edit

Municipal governments are organized local governments authorized in state constitutions and statutes, established to provide general government for a defined area, generally corresponding to a population center rather than one of a set of areas into which a county is divided. The category includes those governments designated as cities, boroughs (except in Alaska), towns (except in Minnesota and Wisconsin), and villages.[18] This concept corresponds roughly to the "incorporated places" that are recognized in Census Bureau reporting of population and housing statistics, although the Census Bureau excludes New England towns from their statistics for this category, and the count of municipal governments excludes places that are governmentally inactive.

Municipalities range in size from the very small (e.g., the village of Monowi, Nebraska, with only 1 resident), to the very large (e.g., New York City, with about 8.5 million people), and this is reflected in the range of types of municipal governments that exist in different areas. There are approximately 30,000 incorporated cities in the United States, with varying degrees of self-rule.

In most states, county and municipal governments exist side by side. There are exceptions to this, however. In some states, a city can, either by separating from its county or counties or by merging with one or more counties, become independent of any separately functioning county government and function both as a county and as a city. Depending on the state, such a city is known as either an independent city or a consolidated city-county. A consolidated city-county differs from an independent city in that in a consolidated city-county, the city and county both nominally exist, although they have a consolidated government, whereas in an independent city, the county does not even nominally exist.[19] Such a jurisdiction constitutes a county-equivalent and is analogous to a unitary authority in other countries. In Connecticut, Rhode Island, and parts of Massachusetts, counties exist only to designate boundaries for such state-level functions as park districts or judicial offices (Massachusetts). In Puerto Rico, Guam, and Northern Mariana Islands, there are municipalities (villages in Guam) and no counties. (Municipalities in PR and the NMI are used as county equivalents by the U.S. Census, but Guam is treated as a single county.[20]) There are no municipal governments in the District of Columbia and the United States Virgin Islands; only the district-wide and territory-wide governments under federal jurisdiction.

Special-purpose local governments edit

In addition to general-purpose government entities legislating at the state, county, and city level, special-purpose areas may exist as well. Conservation districts are one such type of special purpose area, created for the purpose of conserving land, natural scenery, flora, and fauna.

There are also numerous "special district governments" in existence throughout the various states. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, such governments are:

independent, special-purpose governmental units (other than school district governments) that exist as separate entities with substantial administrative and fiscal independence from general-purpose local governments. Special district governments provide specific services that are not being supplied by existing general-purpose governments. Most perform a single function, but, in some instances, their enabling legislation allows them to provide several, usually related, types of services. The services provided by these districts range from such basic social needs as hospitals and fire protection to the less conspicuous tasks of mosquito abatement and upkeep of cemeteries. The Census Bureau classification of special district governments covers a wide variety of entities, most of which are officially called districts or authorities.[21]

Additionally, U.S. courts have ruled that there are smaller areas which are to be considered as fulfilling government functions, and should therefore be bound by the same restrictions placed on "traditional" local government bodies. These include homeowners associations (determined in Shelley v. Kraemer, Loren v. Sasser, Committee for a Better Twin Rivers v. Twin Rivers Homeowners' Association), and company-owned towns (both for employees and for consumers, decided in the USSC case Marsh v. Alabama in 1946). Many homeowners' and neighborhood associations are considered non-profit organizations, but have the ability to raise taxes or fees, fine members for infractions against association-rules, and initiate lawsuits. The question of civil rights in such communities has not yet been conclusively determined, and varies from state to state.

School districts edit

School districts are organized local entities providing public elementary and secondary education which, under state law, have sufficient administrative and fiscal autonomy to qualify as separate governments. The category excludes dependent public school systems of county, municipal, township, or state governments (e.g., school divisions).

Special districts edit

Special districts are all organized local entities other than the four categories listed above, authorized by state law to provide designated functions as established in the district's charter or other founding document, and with sufficient administrative and fiscal autonomy to qualify as separate governments;[22] known by a variety of titles, including districts, authorities, boards, commissions, etc., as specified in the enabling state legislation. A special district may serve areas of multiple states if established by an interstate compact. Special districts are widely popular, have enjoyed "phenomenal growth" and "nearly tripled in number" from 1957 to 2007.[23]

Councils of governments edit

It is common for residents of major U.S. metropolitan areas to live under six or more layers of special districts as well as a town or city, and a county or township.[24] In turn, a typical metro area often consists of several counties, several dozen towns or cities, and a hundred (or more) special districts. In one state, California, the fragmentation problem became so bad that in 1963 the California Legislature created Local Agency Formation Commissions in 57 of the state's 58 counties; that is, government agencies to supervise the orderly formation and development of other government agencies. One effect of all this complexity is that victims of government negligence occasionally sue the wrong entity and do not realize their error until the statute of limitations has run against them.[25]

Because efforts at direct consolidation have proven futile, U.S. local government entities often form "councils of governments", "metropolitan regional councils", or "associations of governments". These organizations serve as regional planning agencies and as forums for debating issues of regional importance, but are generally powerless relative to their individual members.[26] Since the late 1990s, "a movement, frequently called 'New Regionalism', accepts the futility of seeking consolidated regional governments and aims instead for regional structures that do not supplant local governments."[27]

Dillon's Rule edit

Unlike the relationship of federalism that exists between the U.S. government and the states (in which power is shared), municipal governments have no power except what is granted to them by their states. This legal doctrine, called Dillon's Rule, was established by Judge John Forrest Dillon in 1872 and upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in Hunter v. Pittsburgh, 207 U.S. 161 (1907), which upheld the power of Pennsylvania to consolidate the city of Allegheny into the city of Pittsburgh, despite the wishes of the majority of Allegheny residents.

In effect, state governments can place whatever restrictions they choose on their municipalities (including merging municipalities, controlling them directly, or abolishing them outright), as long as such rules do not violate the state's constitution. However, Dillon's Rule does not apply in all states of the United States, because some state constitutions provide specific rights for municipalities and counties.[28]

State constitutions which allow counties or municipalities to enact ordinances without the legislature's permission are said to provide home rule authority.[29] New Jersey, for example, provides for home rule.[30]

A state which is a Dillon's Rule state, but which also allows for home rule in specified circumstances, applies Dillon's Rule to matters or governmental units where home rule is not specifically authorized.[citation needed]

Structure edit

The nature of both county and municipal government varies not only between states, but also between different counties and municipalities within them. Local voters are generally free to choose the basic framework of government from a selection established by state law.[2]

In most cases both counties and municipalities have a governing council, governing in conjunction with a mayor or president. Alternatively, the institution may be of the council–manager government form, run by a city manager under direction of the city council. In the past the municipal commission was also common. Across the US, local governments employ more than ten million people.[31]

The ICMA has classified local governments into five common forms: mayor–council, council–manager, commission, town meeting, and representative town meeting.[32]

Elections edit

In addition to elections for a council or mayor, elections are often also held for positions such as local judges, the sheriff, prosecutors, and other offices. Local governments across the US consist of hundreds of thousands of elected officials. Local elections are often marked by "abysmally low" voter turnout, as these elections are de-synchronized from state and federal elections. A 2009 study found that less than 40% of registered voters participate in local elections for mayor and city council.[31] Turnout is highest among homeowners, the elderly, and the wealthy.[31]

Indian reservations edit

While their territory nominally falls within the boundaries of individual states, Indian reservations actually function outside of state control. The reservation is usually controlled by an elected tribal council which provides local services, and some reservations have their own determined subdivisions.

Chapter (Navajo Nation) edit

Navajo Nation is divided into five agencies. The most local form of government in the Navajo Nation is the Chapter, which deals with local responsibilities expected of a municipal government.

Census of local government edit

A census of all local governments in the country is performed every five years by the United States Census Bureau, in accordance with 13 USC 161.

Governments in the United States[2]

(not including insular areas)

Type Number
Federal 1
State 50
County 3,034
Municipal (city, town, village...) * 19,429
Township (in some states called Town) ** 16,504
School district 13,506
Special purpose
(utility, fire, police, library, etc.)
35,052
Total 87,576

* note: Municipalities are any incorporated places, such as cities, towns, villages, boroughs, etc.
** note: New England towns and towns in New York and Wisconsin are classified as civil townships for census purposes.

Examples in individual states edit

The following sections provide details of the operation of local government in a selection of states, by way of example of the variety that exists across the country.

Alaska edit

Alaska calls its county equivalents "boroughs", functioning similarly to counties in the Lower 48; however, unlike any other state, not all of Alaska is subdivided into county-equivalent boroughs. Owing to the state's low population density, most of the land is contained in what the state terms the Unorganized Borough which, as the name implies, has no intermediate borough government of its own, but is administered directly by the state government. Many of Alaska's boroughs are consolidated city-borough governments; other cities exist both within organized boroughs and the Unorganized Borough.

California edit

California has several different and overlapping forms of local government. Cities, counties, and the one consolidated city-county can make ordinances (local laws), including the establishment and enforcement of civil and criminal penalties.

 
A city council meeting in Fullerton, California

The entire state is subdivided into 58 counties. The only type of municipal entity is the city, although cities may either operate under "general law" or a custom-drafted charter. California has never had villages or townships. Some cities call themselves "towns", but the name "town" is purely cosmetic with no legal effect. As a result, California has several towns with large populations in the tens of thousands and several cities that are home to only a few hundred people.

California cities are granted broad plenary powers under the California Constitution. For example, Los Angeles runs its own water and power utilities and its own elevator inspection department, while many other cities rely upon private utilities and the state elevator inspectors. San Francisco is the only consolidated city-county in the state.

The city of Lakewood pioneered the Lakewood Plan, a plan under which the city reimburses a county for performing services which are more efficiently performed on a countywide basis. Such contracts have become more widespread throughout California, as they enable city governments to concentrate on particular local concerns. A city that contracts out most of its services is known as a contract city.

There are also "special districts", which are areas with a defined territory in which a specific service is provided, such as port or fire districts. These districts lack plenary power to enact laws, but do have the power to promulgate administrative regulations that often carry the force of law within land directly regulated by such districts. Many special districts, particularly those created to provide public transportation or education, have their own police departments.

District of Columbia edit

The District of Columbia is unique within the United States in that it is under the direct authority of the U.S. Congress, rather than forming part of any state. Actual government has been delegated under the District of Columbia Home Rule Act to a city council which effectively also has the powers given to county or state governments in other areas. Under the act, the Council of the District of Columbia has the power to write laws, as a state's legislature would, moving the bill to the mayor to sign into law. Following this, the United States Congress has the power to overturn the law.

Georgia edit

The state of Georgia is divided into 159 counties (the largest number of any state other than Texas), each of which has had home rule since at least 1980. This means that Georgia's counties not only act as units of state government, but also in much the same way as municipalities.

All municipalities are classed as a "city", regardless of population size. For an area to be incorporated as a city, special legislation has to be passed by the General Assembly (state legislature); typically the legislation requires a referendum amongst local voters to approve incorporation, to be passed by a simple majority. This most recently happened in 2005 and 2006 in several communities near Atlanta. Sandy Springs, a city of 85,000 bordering the north side of Atlanta, incorporated in December 2005. One year later, Johns Creek (62,000) and Milton (20,000) incorporated, which meant that the entirety of north Fulton County was now municipalized. The General Assembly also approved a plan that would potentially establish two new cities in the remaining unincorporated portions of Fulton County south of Atlanta: South Fulton and Chattahoochee Hills. Chattahoochee Hills voted to incorporate in December 2007; South Fulton voted against incorporation, and was the only remaining unincorporated portion of Fulton County until 2017.

City charters may be revoked either by the legislature or by a simple majority referendum of the city's residents; the latter last happened in 2004, in Lithia Springs. Revocation by the legislature last occurred in 1995, when dozens of cities were eliminated en masse for not having active governments, or even for not offering at least three municipal services required of all cities.

New cities may not incorporate land less than 3 miles (4.8 km) from an existing city without approval from the General Assembly. The body approved all of the recent and upcoming creations of new cities in Fulton County.

Four areas have a "consolidated city-county" government: Columbus, since 1971; Athens, since 1991; Augusta, since 1996; and Macon, which was approved by voters in 2012.

Hawaii edit

Hawaii is the only U.S. state that has no incorporated municipalities. Instead it has five counties, generally coextensive with one or more of the islands. Most of the state's population resides in the "consolidated city-county" of Honolulu, on Oahu. All communities are considered to be census-designated places, with the exact boundaries being decided upon by co-operative agreement between the Governor's office and the U.S. Census Bureau.

Kalawao County, formed exclusively as a leper colony, is the second smallest county in the United States by population, lacks most government powers, and is often considered part of adjoining Maui County.

Louisiana edit

In Louisiana, counties are called parishes; likewise, the county seat is known as the parish seat. The difference in nomenclature does not reflect a fundamental difference in the nature of government, but is rather a reflection of the state's unique status as a former French and Spanish colony (although a small number of other states once had parishes too).[citation needed]

Maryland edit

Maryland has 23 counties. The State Constitution charters the City of Baltimore as an independent city, which is the functional equivalent of a county, and is separate from any county — e.g., there is also a Baltimore County, but its county seat is in Towson, not in the City of Baltimore. Other than Baltimore, all cities are the same, and there is no difference between a municipality called a city or a town. Cities and towns are chartered by the legislature.

North Carolina edit

North Carolina has 100 counties, the seventh highest number in the country.

The North Carolina Councils of Government (or the Regional Councils of Government) are voluntary associations of county and municipal governments, established by the North Carolina General Assembly in 1972 that serve as an avenue for local governments across North Carolina to discuss issues that are particular to their region. In banding together at the regional level, the voice of one community becomes the voice of many, thus providing a better opportunity for those issues to be addressed. Today the majority of citizens and local governments in North Carolina are represented by regional councils, making them an increasingly important facet of local government operations.

Today North Carolina calls itself home to 16 regional councils of government. Regional councils in North Carolina are committed to working together. In 2010 the seventeen regional councils existing at that time signed an inter-regional cooperative agreement that established a policy to enhance their value by sharing member resources and capacity to deliver services to the state of North Carolina. This agreement also endorses regional councils, to carry out activities in regions outside their boundaries with consent when those services are to benefit the region and the state. Regional boundaries correspond to county borders, with each council being made up of both county and municipal governments. Although the number of regional councils in North Carolina has decreased over the years, the number of citizens served by the councils continues to rise. As of 2007, it is reported that the number of local governments served by regional councils in North Carolina has increased by 16% since 1994. Throughout this same time period the number of citizens served by regional councils has increased by 35% or approximately 2.3 million. This equates to 92% of local governments and 97% of all North Carolina citizens being represented by regional councils as of July 1, 2007.

Pennsylvania edit

Pennsylvania has 67 counties. With the exception of Philadelphia and Allegheny County, counties are governed by three to seven county commissioners who are elected every four years; the district attorney, county treasurer, sheriff, and certain classes of judge ("judges of election") are also elected separately. Philadelphia has been a consolidated city-county since 1854 and has had a consolidated city-county government since 1952. Allegheny County has had a council/chief executive government since 2001, while still retaining its townships, boroughs and cities.

Each county is divided into municipal corporations, which can be one of four types: cities, boroughs, townships, and incorporated towns. The Commonwealth does not contain any unincorporated land that is not served by a local government. However, the US Postal Service has given names to places within townships that are not incorporated separately. For instance King of Prussia is a census-designated place, having no local government of its own. It is rather contained within Upper Merion Township, governed by Upper Merion's supervisors, and considered to be a part of the township.

Townships are divided into two classes, depending on their population size and density. Townships of the "First Class" have a board made up of five to fifteen commissioners who are elected either at-large or for a particular ward to four-year terms, while those of the "Second Class" have a board of three to five supervisors who are elected at-large to six-year terms. Some townships have adopted a home rule charter which allows them to choose their form of government. One example is Upper Darby Township, in Delaware County, which has chosen to have a "mayor-council" system similar to that of a borough.

Boroughs in Pennsylvania are governed by a "mayor-council" system in which the mayor has only a few powers (usually that of overseeing the municipal police department, if the borough has one), while the borough council has very broad appointment and oversight. The council president, who is elected by the majority party every two years, is equivalent to the leader of a council in the United Kingdom; his or her powers operate within boundaries set by the state constitution and the borough's charter. A small minority of the boroughs have dropped the mayor-council system in favor of the council-manager system, in which the council appoints a borough manager to oversee the day-to-day operations of the borough. As in the case of townships, a number of boroughs have adopted home rule charters; one example is State College, which retains the mayor-council system that it had as a borough.

Bloomsburg is the Commonwealth's only incorporated town; McCandless Township in Allegheny County calls itself a town, but it officially remains a township with a home rule charter.

Cities in Pennsylvania are divided into four classes: Class 1, Class 2, Class 2A, and Class 3. Class 3 cities, which are the smallest, have either a mayor-council system or a council-manager system like that of a borough, although the mayor or city manager has more oversight and duties compared to their borough counterparts. Pittsburgh and Scranton are the state's only Class 2 and Class 2A cities respectively, and have mayors with some veto power, but are otherwise still governed mostly by their city councils.

Philadelphia is the Commonwealth's only Class 1 city. It has a government similar to that of the Commonwealth itself, with a mayor with strong appointment and veto powers and a 17-member city council that has both law-making and confirmation powers. Certain types of legislation that can be passed by the city government require state legislation before coming into force. Unlike the other cities in Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia city government also has oversight of county government, and as such controls the budget for the district attorney, sheriff, and other county offices that have been retained from the county's one-time separate existence; these offices are elected for separately than those for the city government proper.

Texas edit

Texas has 254 counties, the most of any state.

Each county is governed by a five-member Commissioners Court, which consists of a county judge (elected at-large) and four commissioners (elected from single-member precincts). The county judge has no veto authority over the decisions of the court; and has one vote along with the other commissioners. In smaller counties, the county judge also performs judicial functions, while in larger counties the county judge's role is limited to the court. Elections are held on a partisan basis.

Counties have no home rule authority; their authority is strictly limited by the State. They operate in areas which are considered "unincorporated" (those parts not within the territory of a city; Texas does not have townships) unless the city has contracted with the county for essential services. In plain English, Texas counties merely exist to deliver specific types of services at the local level as prescribed by state law, but cannot enact or enforce local ordinances.

As one textbook produced for use in Texas schools has openly acknowledged, Texas counties are prone to inefficient operations and are vulnerable to corruption, for several reasons.[33] First, most of them do not have a merit system but operate on a spoils system, so that many county employees obtain their positions through loyalty to a particular political party and commissioner rather than whether they actually have the skills and experience appropriate to their positions.[33] Second, most counties have not centralized purchasing into a single procurement department which would be able to seek quantity discounts and carefully scrutinize bids and contract awards for unusual patterns.[33] Third, in 90 percent of Texas counties, each commissioner is individually responsible for planning and executing their own road construction and maintenance program for their own precinct, which results in poor coordination and duplicate construction machinery.[33]

All incorporated municipalities are technically considered cities, even though the municipality may refer to itself as a town or village. Cities may be either general law or home rule. Once a city reaches 5,000 in population, it may submit a ballot petition to create a "city charter" and operate under home rule status (they will maintain that status even if the population falls under 5,000) and may choose its own form of government (weak or strong mayor-council, commission, council-manager). Otherwise the city operates under general law; those cities have only those powers authorized by the State. Annexation policies are highly dependent on whether the city is general law (annexation can only occur with the consent of the landowners) or home rule (no consent is required, but if the city fails to provide essential services, the landowners can petition for de-annexation), and city boundaries can cross county ones. The city council can be elected either at-large or from single-member districts (Houston uses a two-layer single-member district structure), or a mixture of the two. Ballots are on a nonpartisan basis (though, generally, the political affiliation of the candidates is commonly known).

With the exception of the Stafford Municipal School District, all 1,000+ school districts in Texas are "independent" school districts. State law requires seven trustees, which can be elected either at-large or from single-member districts. Ballots are non-partisan. Although Texas law allows for home rule school districts, no district has applied to become such. The Texas Education Agency (TEA) has state authority to order closure and consolidation of school districts, generally for repeated failing performance; the former Wilmer-Hutchins Independent School District was an example of a failing district closed by TEA.

In addition, state law allows the creation of special districts, such as hospital districts or water supply districts. All of these districts are governed by state law; there is no home rule option.

Texas does not provide for independent cities nor for consolidated city-county governments. However, local governments are free to enter into "interlocal agreements" with other ones, primarily for efficiency purposes. (A common example is for cities and school districts in a county to contract with the county for property tax collection; thus, each resident receives only one property bill.)

Virginia edit

Virginia is divided into 95 counties and 38 cities. All cities are independent cities, which mean that they are separate from, and independent of, any county they may be near or within. Cities in Virginia thus are the equivalent of counties, as they have no higher local government intervening between them and the state government. The equivalent in Virginia to what would normally be an incorporated city in any other state, e.g. a municipality subordinate to a county, is a town. For example, there is a County of Fairfax as well as a totally independent City of Fairfax, which technically is not part of Fairfax County even though the City of Fairfax is the county seat of Fairfax County. Within Fairfax County, however, is the incorporated town of Vienna, which is part of Fairfax County. Similar names do not necessarily reflect relationships; Franklin County is far from the city of Franklin, while Charles City is an unincorporated community in Charles City County, and there is no city of Charles.

Other states edit

List of city governments edit

US City Councils of the 30 largest Cities
2020 city pop.

rank

City City Council Government Type Total Number of Seats District Elected Seats At-large represented Seats 2020 pop.

estimate

Constituents per Councilmember
1 New York City New York City Council Mayor–council 51 51 8,253,213 161,828
2 Los Angeles Los Angeles City Council Mayor–council 15 15 3,970,219 264,681
3 Chicago Chicago City Council Mayor–council 50 50 2,677,643 53,523
4 Houston Houston City Council Mayor–council 16 11 5 2,316,120 144,758
5 Phoenix Phoenix City Council Council–manager 9 8 1 (Mayor) 1,708,127 189,791
6 Philadelphia Philadelphia City Council Mayor–council 17 10 7 1,578,487 92,852
7 San Antonio San Antonio City Council Council–manager 11 10 1 (Mayor) 1,567,118 142,465
8 San Diego San Diego City Council Mayor–council 9 9 1,422,420 158,047
9 Dallas Dallas City Council Council–manager 15 14 1 (Mayor) 1,343,266 89,551
10 San Jose San Jose City Council Council–manager 11 10 1 (Mayor) 1,013,616 92,147
11 Austin Austin City Council Council–manager 11 10 1 (Mayor) 995,484 90,499
12 Fort Worth Fort Worth City Council Council–manager 9 8 1 (Mayor) 927,720 103,080
13 Jacksonville Jacksonville City Council Mayor–council 19 14 5 920,570 48,451
14 Columbus Columbus City Council Mayor–council 7 7 903,852 129,122
15 Charlotte Charlotte City Council Council–manager 12 7 5 (Mayor +4) 900,350 75,029
16 Indianapolis Indianapolis City-County Council Mayor–council 25 25 877,903 35,116
17 San Francisco San Francisco Board of Supervisors Mayor–council 11 11 866,606 78,782
18 Seattle Seattle City Council Mayor–council 9 7 2 769,714 85,524
19 Denver Denver City Council Mayor–council 13 11 2 735,538 56,580
20 Washington, D.C. Council of the District of Columbia N/A

(District of Columbia Home Rule Act)

13 8 5 712,816 54,832
21 Boston Boston City Council Mayor–council 13 9 4 691,531 53,195
22 El Paso El Paso City Council Council–manager 9 8 1 (Mayor) 681,534 75,726
23 Nashville Metropolitan Council of Nashville and Davidson County Mayor–council 41 35 6 (Vice-Mayor +5) 671,295 16,373
24 Detroit Detroit City Council Mayor–council 9 7 2 665,369 73,930
25 Las Vegas Las Vegas City Council Council–manager 7 6 1 (Mayor) 662,368 94,624
26 Oklahoma City Government of Oklahoma City Council–manager 9 8 1 (Mayor) 662,314 73,590
27 Portland Portland City Council City commission 5 5 (Mayor +4) 656,751 131,350
28 Memphis Memphis City Council Mayor–council 13 13 649,705 49,977
29 Louisville Louisville Metro Council Mayor–council 26 26 618,338 23,782
30 Milwaukee Milwaukee Common Council Mayor–council 15 15 589,067 39,271

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 2002 Census of Governments, Individual State Descriptions (PDF)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g U.S. Census Bureau. 2012 Census of Governments
  3. ^ General law local government, from Ballotpedia
  4. ^ a b "US Census Bureau Geography 2010 FIPS Code Files for Counties and County Equivalent Entities". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved July 7, 2018.
  5. ^ "Chamorro Villages in Guam | Chamorro Culture". www.visitguam.com. Retrieved July 7, 2018.
  6. ^ Legislature of the Virgin Islands Legvi.org. Retrieved July 7, 2018.
  7. ^ "Emergence of Colonial Government". United States History. June 16, 2010. Retrieved June 16, 2010. In all phases of colonial development, a striking feature was the lack of controlling influence by the English government. All colonies except Georgia emerged as companies of shareholders, or as feudal proprietorships stemming from charters granted by the Crown. The fact that the king had transferred his immediate sovereignty over the New World settlements to stock companies and proprietors did not, of course, mean that the colonists in America were necessarily free of outside control. Under the terms of the Virginia Company charter, for example, full governmental authority was vested in the company itself. Nevertheless, the crown expected that the company would be resident in England. Inhabitants of Virginia, then, would have no more voice in their government than if the king himself had retained absolute rule.
  8. ^ Henry William Elson (1904). "Colonial Government". MacMillan Company. Retrieved June 16, 2010. In methods of local government the colonies were much less uniform than in the general government. As stated in our account of Massachusetts, the old parish of England became the town in New England. ...
  9. ^ Henry William Elson (1904). "Colonial Government". MacMillan Company. Retrieved June 16, 2010. In no colony was universal suffrage to be found.
  10. ^ "History of British Colonial America". History World. June 16, 2010. Retrieved June 16, 2010. In 1629 a Puritan group secures from the king a charter to trade with America, as the Massachusetts Bay Company. Led by John Winthrop, a fleet of eleven vessels sets sail for Massachusetts in 1630. The ships carry 700 settlers, 240 cows and 60 horses. Winthrop also has on board the royal charter of the company. The enterprise is to be based in the new world rather than in London. This device is used to justify a claim later passionately maintained by the new colony - that it is an independent political entity, entirely responsible for its own affairs. In 1630 Winthrop selects Boston as the site of the first settlement, and two years later the town is formally declared to be the capital of the colony.
  11. ^ a b "Emergence of Colonial Government". United States History. June 16, 2010. Retrieved June 16, 2010. For their part, the colonies had never thought of themselves as subservient. Rather, they considered themselves chiefly as commonwealths or states, much like England itself, having only a loose association with the authorities in London. In one way or another, exclusive rule from the outside withered away.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Ed Crews (Spring 2007). "Voting in Early America". history.org. Retrieved June 16, 2010. Among the first things the Jamestown voyagers did when they set up English America's first permanent settlement was conduct an election. Nearly as soon as they landed—April 26, 1607, by their calendar—the commanders of the 105 colonists unsealed a box containing a secret list of seven men picked in England to be the colony's council and from among whom the councilors were to pick a president.
  13. ^ Henry William Elson (1904). "Colonial Government". MacMillan Company. Retrieved June 16, 2010. The system of representative government was allowed, but not required, by the early charters. But after it had sprung up spontaneously in various colonies, it was recognized and ratified by the later charters, as in those of Connecticut and Rhode Island, and the second charter of Massachusetts, though it was not mentioned in the New York grant. The franchise came to be restricted by some property qualifications in all the colonies, in most by their own act, as by Virginia in 1670, or by charter, as in Massachusetts, 1691.
  14. ^ Glenn W. Fisher (February 1, 2010). . EH.net (Economic History Association). Archived from the original on June 12, 2010. Retrieved June 16, 2010. The property tax, especially the real estate tax, was ideally suited to such a situation. Real estate had a fixed location, it was visible, and its value was generally well known. Revenue could easily be allocated to the governmental unit in which the property was located.
  15. ^ a b c "Political Dictionary: local government". answers.com. June 16, 2010. Retrieved June 16, 2010. Both county governments and towns were significant, sharing responsibility for local rule. In the middle colonies and in Maryland and Virginia as well, the colonial governors granted municipal charters to the most prominent communities, endowing them with the powers and privileges of a municipal corporation. Although in some of these municipalities the governing council was elected ... By the 1790s the electorate chose the governing council in every American municipality. Moreover, the state legislatures succeeded to the sovereign prerogative of the royal governors and thenceforth granted municipal charters. During the nineteenth century, thousands of communities became municipal corporations. Irritated by the many petitions for incorporation burdening each legislative session, nineteenth-century state legislatures enacted general municipal incorporation laws that permitted communities to incorporate simply by petitioning the county authorities.
  16. ^ a b "Getting a Grip on Zoning Regulations". useful-community-development.org. June 16, 2010. Retrieved June 16, 2010. Zoning is a concept that originated in the United States in the 1920s. State law often gives certain townships, municipal governments, county governments, or groups of governments acting together the power to zone.
  17. ^ Osborne M. Reynolds, Jr., Local Government Law, 3rd ed. (St. Paul: West, 2009), 30.
  18. ^ Reynolds, 24.
  19. ^ Cities 101 -- Consolidations, from National League of Cities
  20. ^ United States Census (1990). "Puerto Rico and the Outlying Areas" (PDF). Retrieved July 20, 2021.
  21. ^ U.S. Census Bureau (2002). 2002 Census of Governments, Vol 1, Number 1, Government Organization, GC02(1)-1 (PDF) (Report). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. vii–viii. Retrieved July 5, 2017.
  22. ^ Reynolds, 31.
  23. ^ Reynolds, 31-32.
  24. ^ Reynolds, 33.
  25. ^ Spencer v. Merced County Office of Education, 59 Cal. App. 4th 1429 (1997).
  26. ^ Reynolds, 53.
  27. ^ Reynolds, 55.
  28. ^ Adrian, Charles R. and Fine, Michael R. (1991) State and Local Politics Lyceum Books/Nelson Hall Publishers, Chicago, page 83, ISBN 0-8304-1285-9
  29. ^ Allen, J. Michael, III and Hinds, Jamison W. (2001) "Alabama Constitutional Reform". Alabama Law Review 53: pp. 1-30, pages 7-8
  30. ^ "The provisions of this Constitution and of any law concerning municipal corporations formed for local government, or concerning counties, shall be liberally construed in their favor. The powers of counties and such municipal corporations shall include not only those granted in express terms but also those of necessary or fair implication, or incident to the powers expressly conferred, or essential thereto, and not inconsistent with or prohibited by this Constitution or by law." Constitution of the State of New Jersey 2009-06-30 at the Wayback Machine, Article IV, Section VII (11).
  31. ^ a b c Warshaw, Christopher (2019). "Local Elections and Representation in the United States". Annual Review of Political Science. 22: 461–479. doi:10.1146/annurev-polisci-050317-071108.
  32. ^ ICMA
  33. ^ a b c d Charldean Newell, David Forrest Prindle, and James W. Riddlesperger, Jr., Texas Politics, 11th ed. (Boston: Cengage Learning, 2011), 376-381.

Further reading edit

  • Jon C. Teaford (2009). "Local Government". In Michael Kazin (ed.). Princeton Encyclopedia of American Political History. Princeton University Press. pp. 488?–491. ISBN 978-1-4008-3356-6.
  • Check list of books and pamphlets on municipal government. Chicago Public Library. 1911.
  • Lockner, Allyn O. "Steps to Local Government Reform: A Guide to Tailoring Local Government Reforms to Fit Regional Governance Communities in Democracies". Bloomington,IN: iUniverse, Inc., 2013. (ISBN 978-1-4620-1818-5)
  • Anzia, Sarah. 2021. "Party and Ideology in American Local Government: An Appraisal." Annual Review of Political Science.

External links edit

  • National Association of Counties
  • National League of Cities
  • National Association of Towns and Townships
  • International City/County Management Association (ICMA)
  • U.S. Census Bureau page for local government
  • American Public Works Association
  • National Association of County Engineers
  • National Association of Development Organizations
  • National Center for Small Communities
  • Municipal Research & Services Center of Washington (MRSC)
  • U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations. State Laws Governing Local Government Structure and Administration
  • U.S. Census Bureau Geographic Areas Reference Manual
  • Fahim, Mayraj (April 25, 2005). "US voters are not convinced that big is better in local government". City Mayors Foundation.
  • Atlas of Historical County Boundaries Project

local, government, united, states, most, states, territories, have, least, tiers, local, government, counties, municipalities, louisiana, uses, term, parish, alaska, uses, term, borough, what, census, bureau, terms, county, equivalents, those, states, civil, t. Most U S states and territories have at least two tiers of local government counties and municipalities Louisiana uses the term parish and Alaska uses the term borough for what the U S Census Bureau terms county equivalents in those states Civil townships or towns are used as subdivisions of a county in 20 states mostly in the Northeast and Midwest 1 The Embodied statue representing justice in the Civic Center neighborhood of Los Angeles California which mostly consists of City of Los Angeles government offices Visible in the background are the Los Angeles City Hall and the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center Population centers may be organized into incorporated municipalities of several types including the city town borough and village The types and nature of these municipal entities vary from state to state In addition to these general purpose local governments states may also create special purpose local governments 2 Depending on the state local governments may operate under their own charters or under general law or a state may have a mix of chartered and general law local governments Generally in a state having both chartered and general law local governments the chartered local governments have more local autonomy and home rule 3 Municipalities are typically subordinate to a county government with some exceptions Certain cities for example have consolidated with their county government as consolidated city counties In Virginia cities are completely independent from the county in which they would otherwise be a part In some states particularly in New England towns form the primary unit of local government below the state level in some cases eliminating the need for county government entirely Many rural areas and even some suburban areas of many states have no municipal government below the county level In addition to counties and municipalities states often create special purpose authorities such as school districts and districts for fire protection sanitary sewer service public transportation public libraries public parks or forests water resource management and conservation districts Such special purpose districts may encompass areas in multiple municipalities or counties According to the US Census Bureau s data collected in 2012 there were 89 004 local government units in the United States This data shows a decline from 89 476 units since the last census of local governments performed in 2007 2 Each of the five permanently inhabited U S territories is also subdivided into smaller entities Puerto Rico has 78 municipalities and the Northern Mariana Islands has four municipalities 4 Guam has villages the U S Virgin Islands has districts and American Samoa has districts and unorganized atolls 4 5 6 Each Indian Reservation is subdivided in various ways For example the Navajo Nation is subdivided into agencies and Chapter houses while the Blackfeet Nation is subdivided into Communities Contents 1 History 2 Types 2 1 County governments 2 2 Town or township governments 2 3 Municipal governments 2 4 Special purpose local governments 2 4 1 School districts 2 4 2 Special districts 3 Councils of governments 4 Dillon s Rule 5 Structure 5 1 Elections 6 Indian reservations 6 1 Chapter Navajo Nation 7 Census of local government 8 Examples in individual states 8 1 Alaska 8 2 California 8 3 District of Columbia 8 4 Georgia 8 5 Hawaii 8 6 Louisiana 8 7 Maryland 8 8 North Carolina 8 9 Pennsylvania 8 10 Texas 8 11 Virginia 8 12 Other states 9 List of city governments 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory editWhen North America was colonized by Europeans from the 17th century onward there was initially little control from governments back in Europe Many settlements began as shareholder or stockholder business enterprises and while the king of Britain had technical sovereignty in most instances full governmental authority was vested in the company itself 7 Settlers had to fend for themselves compact towns sprung up based as legal corporations in what has been described as pure democracy The people owing to the necessity of guarding against the Indians and wild animals and to their desire to attend the same church settled in small compact communities or townships which they called towns The town was a legal corporation was the political unit and was represented in the General Court It was a democracy of the purest type Several times a year the adult males met in town meeting to discuss public questions to lay taxes to make local laws and to elect officers The chief officers were the selectmen from three to nine in number who should have the general management of the public business the town clerk treasurer constables assessors and overseers of the poor To this day the town government continues in a large measure in some parts of New England historian Henry William Elson writing in 1904 8 Propertied men voted in no colonies was there universal suffrage 9 The founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1629 by a group of Puritans led by John Winthrop came with the understanding that the enterprise was to be based in the new world rather than in London 10 The notion of self government became accepted in the colonies although it was not totally free from challenges in the 1670s the Lords of Trade and Plantations a royal committee regulating mercantile trade in the colonies tried to annul the Massachusetts Bay charter but by 1691 the New England colonies had reinstalled their previous governments 11 Voting was established as a precedent early on in fact one of the first things that Jamestown settlers did was conduct an election 12 Typically voters were white males described as property owners aged twenty one and older but sometimes the restrictions were greater and in practice persons able to participate in elections were few 12 Women were prevented from voting although there were a few exceptions and African Americans were excluded 12 The colonists never thought of themselves as subservient but rather as having a loose association with authorities in London 11 Representative government sprung up spontaneously in various colonies and during the colonial years it was recognized and ratified by later charters 13 But the colonial assemblies passed few bills and did not conduct much business but dealt with a narrow range of issues and legislative sessions lasted weeks occasionally longer and most legislators could not afford to neglect work for extended periods so wealthier people tended to predominate in local legislatures 12 Office holders tended to serve from a sense of duty and prestige and not for financial benefit 12 Campaigning by candidates was different from today s There were no mass media or advertising Candidates talked with voters in person walking a line between undue familiarity and aloofness Prospective officeholders were expected to be at the polls on election day and made a point to greet all voters Failure to appear or to be civil to all could be disastrous In some areas candidates offered voters food and drink evenhandedly giving treats to opponents as well as supporters Ed Crews 12 nbsp Rules and orders for the regulation of the corporation when met in Common Council Philadelphia c 1800 1809Taxes were generally based on real estate since it was fixed in place and plainly visible its value was generally well known and revenue could be allocated to the government unit where the property was located 14 After the American Revolution the electorate chose the governing councils in almost every American municipality and state governments began issuing municipal charters 15 During the 19th century many municipalities were granted charters by the state governments and became technically municipal corporations 15 Townships and county governments and city councils shared much of the responsibility for decision making which varied from state to state 15 As the United States grew in size and complexity decision making authority for issues such as business regulation taxation environmental regulation moved to state governments and the national government while local governments retained control over such matters as zoning issues property taxes and public parks citation needed The concept of zoning originated in the U S during the 1920s according to one source in which state law gave certain townships or other local governing bodies authority to decide how land was used a typical zoning ordinance has a map of a parcel of land attached with a statement specifying how that land can be used how buildings can be laid out and so forth 16 Zoning legitimacy was upheld by the Supreme Court in its Euclid v Ambler decision 16 Types editThe Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution makes local government a matter of state rather than federal law with special cases for territories and the District of Columbia As a result the states have adopted a wide variety of systems of local government The United States Census Bureau conducts the Census of Governments every five years to compile statistics on government organization public employment and government finances The categories of local government established in this Census of Governments is a convenient basis for understanding local government in the United States The categories are as follows 2 County Governments Town or Township Governments Municipal Governments Special Purpose Local GovernmentsCounty governments edit Main article County United States County governments are organized local governments authorized in state constitutions and statutes Counties and county equivalents form the first tier administrative division of the states The county equivalents in Louisiana are called parishes while those in Alaska are called boroughs All the states are divided into counties or county equivalents for administrative purposes with most although not all counties or county equivalents having an organized county government County government has been eliminated throughout Connecticut and Rhode Island as well as in parts of Massachusetts The Unorganized Borough in Alaska also does not operate under a county level government The specific governmental powers of counties vary widely between the states In some states mainly in New England they are primarily used as judicial districts In other states counties have broad powers in housing education transportation and recreation In areas lacking a county government services are provided either by lower level townships or municipalities or the state Counties may contain a number of cities towns villages or hamlets Some cities including Philadelphia Honolulu San Francisco Nashville and Denver are consolidated city counties where the municipality and the county have been merged into a unified coterminous jurisdiction that is to say these counties consist in their entirety of a single municipality whose city government also operates as the county government Some counties such as Arlington County Virginia do not have any additional subdivisions Some states contain independent cities that are not part of any county although it may still function as if it was a consolidated city county an independent city was legally separated from any county Some municipalities are in multiple counties New York City is uniquely partitioned into five boroughs that are each coterminous with a county Town or township governments edit Main article Civil township In many states most or all of the land area of counties is divided into townships which may or may not be incorporated In New York Wisconsin and New England county subdivisions are called towns The U S Census divides counties in states not having such subdivisions into other minor civil divisions sometimes using electoral districts The terms township and town are closely related in many historical documents the terms are used interchangeably However the powers granted to townships or towns vary considerably from state to state Many states grant townships some governmental powers making them civil townships either independently or as a part of the county government In others survey townships are non governmental Towns in the six New England states and townships in New Jersey and Pennsylvania are included in this category by the Census Bureau despite the fact that they are legally municipal corporations since their structure has no necessary relation to concentration of population 2 which is typical of municipalities elsewhere in the United States In particular towns in New England have considerably more power than most townships elsewhere and often function as legally equivalent to cities typically exercising the full range of powers that are divided between counties townships and cities in other states 17 In New England towns are a principal form of local municipal government providing many of the functions of counties in other states In California by contrast the pertinent statutes of the Government Code clarify that town is simply another word for city especially a general law city as distinct from a charter city In some states large areas have no general purpose local government below the county level Town or township governments are organized local governments authorized in the state constitutions and statutes of 20 Northeastern and Midwestern states 2 established to provide general government for a defined area generally based on the geographic subdivision of a county An additional dimension that distinguishes township governments from municipalities is the historical circumstance surrounding their formation For example clarification needed towns in New England are also defined by a tradition of local government presided over by town meetings assemblies open to all voters to express their opinions on public policy The term town is also used for a local level of government in New York and Wisconsin The terms town and township are used interchangeably in Minnesota Some townships or other incorporated areas like villages boroughs plantations and hamlets have governments and political power others are simply geographic designations Townships in many states are generally the product of the Public Land Survey System Municipal governments edit Main articles Municipality City Town United States Village United States Borough United States and Plantation Maine Municipal governments are organized local governments authorized in state constitutions and statutes established to provide general government for a defined area generally corresponding to a population center rather than one of a set of areas into which a county is divided The category includes those governments designated as cities boroughs except in Alaska towns except in Minnesota and Wisconsin and villages 18 This concept corresponds roughly to the incorporated places that are recognized in Census Bureau reporting of population and housing statistics although the Census Bureau excludes New England towns from their statistics for this category and the count of municipal governments excludes places that are governmentally inactive Municipalities range in size from the very small e g the village of Monowi Nebraska with only 1 resident to the very large e g New York City with about 8 5 million people and this is reflected in the range of types of municipal governments that exist in different areas There are approximately 30 000 incorporated cities in the United States with varying degrees of self rule In most states county and municipal governments exist side by side There are exceptions to this however In some states a city can either by separating from its county or counties or by merging with one or more counties become independent of any separately functioning county government and function both as a county and as a city Depending on the state such a city is known as either an independent city or a consolidated city county A consolidated city county differs from an independent city in that in a consolidated city county the city and county both nominally exist although they have a consolidated government whereas in an independent city the county does not even nominally exist 19 Such a jurisdiction constitutes a county equivalent and is analogous to a unitary authority in other countries In Connecticut Rhode Island and parts of Massachusetts counties exist only to designate boundaries for such state level functions as park districts or judicial offices Massachusetts In Puerto Rico Guam and Northern Mariana Islands there are municipalities villages in Guam and no counties Municipalities in PR and the NMI are used as county equivalents by the U S Census but Guam is treated as a single county 20 There are no municipal governments in the District of Columbia and the United States Virgin Islands only the district wide and territory wide governments under federal jurisdiction Special purpose local governments edit In addition to general purpose government entities legislating at the state county and city level special purpose areas may exist as well Conservation districts are one such type of special purpose area created for the purpose of conserving land natural scenery flora and fauna There are also numerous special district governments in existence throughout the various states According to the U S Census Bureau such governments are independent special purpose governmental units other than school district governments that exist as separate entities with substantial administrative and fiscal independence from general purpose local governments Special district governments provide specific services that are not being supplied by existing general purpose governments Most perform a single function but in some instances their enabling legislation allows them to provide several usually related types of services The services provided by these districts range from such basic social needs as hospitals and fire protection to the less conspicuous tasks of mosquito abatement and upkeep of cemeteries The Census Bureau classification of special district governments covers a wide variety of entities most of which are officially called districts or authorities 21 Additionally U S courts have ruled that there are smaller areas which are to be considered as fulfilling government functions and should therefore be bound by the same restrictions placed on traditional local government bodies These include homeowners associations determined in Shelley v Kraemer Loren v Sasser Committee for a Better Twin Rivers v Twin Rivers Homeowners Association and company owned towns both for employees and for consumers decided in the USSC case Marsh v Alabama in 1946 Many homeowners and neighborhood associations are considered non profit organizations but have the ability to raise taxes or fees fine members for infractions against association rules and initiate lawsuits The question of civil rights in such communities has not yet been conclusively determined and varies from state to state School districts edit Main article School district School districts are organized local entities providing public elementary and secondary education which under state law have sufficient administrative and fiscal autonomy to qualify as separate governments The category excludes dependent public school systems of county municipal township or state governments e g school divisions Special districts edit Main article Special district United States Special districts are all organized local entities other than the four categories listed above authorized by state law to provide designated functions as established in the district s charter or other founding document and with sufficient administrative and fiscal autonomy to qualify as separate governments 22 known by a variety of titles including districts authorities boards commissions etc as specified in the enabling state legislation A special district may serve areas of multiple states if established by an interstate compact Special districts are widely popular have enjoyed phenomenal growth and nearly tripled in number from 1957 to 2007 23 Councils of governments editMain article Council of governments It is common for residents of major U S metropolitan areas to live under six or more layers of special districts as well as a town or city and a county or township 24 In turn a typical metro area often consists of several counties several dozen towns or cities and a hundred or more special districts In one state California the fragmentation problem became so bad that in 1963 the California Legislature created Local Agency Formation Commissions in 57 of the state s 58 counties that is government agencies to supervise the orderly formation and development of other government agencies One effect of all this complexity is that victims of government negligence occasionally sue the wrong entity and do not realize their error until the statute of limitations has run against them 25 Because efforts at direct consolidation have proven futile U S local government entities often form councils of governments metropolitan regional councils or associations of governments These organizations serve as regional planning agencies and as forums for debating issues of regional importance but are generally powerless relative to their individual members 26 Since the late 1990s a movement frequently called New Regionalism accepts the futility of seeking consolidated regional governments and aims instead for regional structures that do not supplant local governments 27 Dillon s Rule editUnlike the relationship of federalism that exists between the U S government and the states in which power is shared municipal governments have no power except what is granted to them by their states This legal doctrine called Dillon s Rule was established by Judge John Forrest Dillon in 1872 and upheld by the U S Supreme Court in Hunter v Pittsburgh 207 U S 161 1907 which upheld the power of Pennsylvania to consolidate the city of Allegheny into the city of Pittsburgh despite the wishes of the majority of Allegheny residents In effect state governments can place whatever restrictions they choose on their municipalities including merging municipalities controlling them directly or abolishing them outright as long as such rules do not violate the state s constitution However Dillon s Rule does not apply in all states of the United States because some state constitutions provide specific rights for municipalities and counties 28 State constitutions which allow counties or municipalities to enact ordinances without the legislature s permission are said to provide home rule authority 29 New Jersey for example provides for home rule 30 A state which is a Dillon s Rule state but which also allows for home rule in specified circumstances applies Dillon s Rule to matters or governmental units where home rule is not specifically authorized citation needed Structure editThe nature of both county and municipal government varies not only between states but also between different counties and municipalities within them Local voters are generally free to choose the basic framework of government from a selection established by state law 2 In most cases both counties and municipalities have a governing council governing in conjunction with a mayor or president Alternatively the institution may be of the council manager government form run by a city manager under direction of the city council In the past the municipal commission was also common Across the US local governments employ more than ten million people 31 The ICMA has classified local governments into five common forms mayor council council manager commission town meeting and representative town meeting 32 Elections edit In addition to elections for a council or mayor elections are often also held for positions such as local judges the sheriff prosecutors and other offices Local governments across the US consist of hundreds of thousands of elected officials Local elections are often marked by abysmally low voter turnout as these elections are de synchronized from state and federal elections A 2009 study found that less than 40 of registered voters participate in local elections for mayor and city council 31 Turnout is highest among homeowners the elderly and the wealthy 31 Indian reservations editWhile their territory nominally falls within the boundaries of individual states Indian reservations actually function outside of state control The reservation is usually controlled by an elected tribal council which provides local services and some reservations have their own determined subdivisions Chapter Navajo Nation edit Main article Chapter Navajo Nation Navajo Nation is divided into five agencies The most local form of government in the Navajo Nation is the Chapter which deals with local responsibilities expected of a municipal government Census of local government editA census of all local governments in the country is performed every five years by the United States Census Bureau in accordance with 13 USC 161 Governments in the United States 2 not including insular areas Type NumberFederal 1State 50County 3 034Municipal city town village 19 429Township in some states called Town 16 504School district 13 506Special purpose utility fire police library etc 35 052Total 87 576 note Municipalities are any incorporated places such as cities towns villages boroughs etc note New England towns and towns in New York and Wisconsin are classified as civil townships for census purposes Examples in individual states editThe following sections provide details of the operation of local government in a selection of states by way of example of the variety that exists across the country Alaska edit Main article Administrative divisions of Alaska Alaska calls its county equivalents boroughs functioning similarly to counties in the Lower 48 however unlike any other state not all of Alaska is subdivided into county equivalent boroughs Owing to the state s low population density most of the land is contained in what the state terms the Unorganized Borough which as the name implies has no intermediate borough government of its own but is administered directly by the state government Many of Alaska s boroughs are consolidated city borough governments other cities exist both within organized boroughs and the Unorganized Borough California edit Main article Local government in California California has several different and overlapping forms of local government Cities counties and the one consolidated city county can make ordinances local laws including the establishment and enforcement of civil and criminal penalties nbsp A city council meeting in Fullerton CaliforniaThe entire state is subdivided into 58 counties The only type of municipal entity is the city although cities may either operate under general law or a custom drafted charter California has never had villages or townships Some cities call themselves towns but the name town is purely cosmetic with no legal effect As a result California has several towns with large populations in the tens of thousands and several cities that are home to only a few hundred people California cities are granted broad plenary powers under the California Constitution For example Los Angeles runs its own water and power utilities and its own elevator inspection department while many other cities rely upon private utilities and the state elevator inspectors San Francisco is the only consolidated city county in the state The city of Lakewood pioneered the Lakewood Plan a plan under which the city reimburses a county for performing services which are more efficiently performed on a countywide basis Such contracts have become more widespread throughout California as they enable city governments to concentrate on particular local concerns A city that contracts out most of its services is known as a contract city There are also special districts which are areas with a defined territory in which a specific service is provided such as port or fire districts These districts lack plenary power to enact laws but do have the power to promulgate administrative regulations that often carry the force of law within land directly regulated by such districts Many special districts particularly those created to provide public transportation or education have their own police departments District of Columbia edit Main article District of Columbia home rule The District of Columbia is unique within the United States in that it is under the direct authority of the U S Congress rather than forming part of any state Actual government has been delegated under the District of Columbia Home Rule Act to a city council which effectively also has the powers given to county or state governments in other areas Under the act the Council of the District of Columbia has the power to write laws as a state s legislature would moving the bill to the mayor to sign into law Following this the United States Congress has the power to overturn the law Georgia edit The state of Georgia is divided into 159 counties the largest number of any state other than Texas each of which has had home rule since at least 1980 This means that Georgia s counties not only act as units of state government but also in much the same way as municipalities All municipalities are classed as a city regardless of population size For an area to be incorporated as a city special legislation has to be passed by the General Assembly state legislature typically the legislation requires a referendum amongst local voters to approve incorporation to be passed by a simple majority This most recently happened in 2005 and 2006 in several communities near Atlanta Sandy Springs a city of 85 000 bordering the north side of Atlanta incorporated in December 2005 One year later Johns Creek 62 000 and Milton 20 000 incorporated which meant that the entirety of north Fulton County was now municipalized The General Assembly also approved a plan that would potentially establish two new cities in the remaining unincorporated portions of Fulton County south of Atlanta South Fulton and Chattahoochee Hills Chattahoochee Hills voted to incorporate in December 2007 South Fulton voted against incorporation and was the only remaining unincorporated portion of Fulton County until 2017 City charters may be revoked either by the legislature or by a simple majority referendum of the city s residents the latter last happened in 2004 in Lithia Springs Revocation by the legislature last occurred in 1995 when dozens of cities were eliminated en masse for not having active governments or even for not offering at least three municipal services required of all cities New cities may not incorporate land less than 3 miles 4 8 km from an existing city without approval from the General Assembly The body approved all of the recent and upcoming creations of new cities in Fulton County Four areas have a consolidated city county government Columbus since 1971 Athens since 1991 Augusta since 1996 and Macon which was approved by voters in 2012 Hawaii edit Hawaii is the only U S state that has no incorporated municipalities Instead it has five counties generally coextensive with one or more of the islands Most of the state s population resides in the consolidated city county of Honolulu on Oahu All communities are considered to be census designated places with the exact boundaries being decided upon by co operative agreement between the Governor s office and the U S Census Bureau Kalawao County formed exclusively as a leper colony is the second smallest county in the United States by population lacks most government powers and is often considered part of adjoining Maui County Louisiana edit In Louisiana counties are called parishes likewise the county seat is known as the parish seat The difference in nomenclature does not reflect a fundamental difference in the nature of government but is rather a reflection of the state s unique status as a former French and Spanish colony although a small number of other states once had parishes too citation needed Maryland edit Maryland has 23 counties The State Constitution charters the City of Baltimore as an independent city which is the functional equivalent of a county and is separate from any county e g there is also a Baltimore County but its county seat is in Towson not in the City of Baltimore Other than Baltimore all cities are the same and there is no difference between a municipality called a city or a town Cities and towns are chartered by the legislature North Carolina edit Main article North Carolina Councils of Government North Carolina has 100 counties the seventh highest number in the country The North Carolina Councils of Government or the Regional Councils of Government are voluntary associations of county and municipal governments established by the North Carolina General Assembly in 1972 that serve as an avenue for local governments across North Carolina to discuss issues that are particular to their region In banding together at the regional level the voice of one community becomes the voice of many thus providing a better opportunity for those issues to be addressed Today the majority of citizens and local governments in North Carolina are represented by regional councils making them an increasingly important facet of local government operations Today North Carolina calls itself home to 16 regional councils of government Regional councils in North Carolina are committed to working together In 2010 the seventeen regional councils existing at that time signed an inter regional cooperative agreement that established a policy to enhance their value by sharing member resources and capacity to deliver services to the state of North Carolina This agreement also endorses regional councils to carry out activities in regions outside their boundaries with consent when those services are to benefit the region and the state Regional boundaries correspond to county borders with each council being made up of both county and municipal governments Although the number of regional councils in North Carolina has decreased over the years the number of citizens served by the councils continues to rise As of 2007 it is reported that the number of local governments served by regional councils in North Carolina has increased by 16 since 1994 Throughout this same time period the number of citizens served by regional councils has increased by 35 or approximately 2 3 million This equates to 92 of local governments and 97 of all North Carolina citizens being represented by regional councils as of July 1 2007 Pennsylvania edit Main article Local government in Pennsylvania Pennsylvania has 67 counties With the exception of Philadelphia and Allegheny County counties are governed by three to seven county commissioners who are elected every four years the district attorney county treasurer sheriff and certain classes of judge judges of election are also elected separately Philadelphia has been a consolidated city county since 1854 and has had a consolidated city county government since 1952 Allegheny County has had a council chief executive government since 2001 while still retaining its townships boroughs and cities Each county is divided into municipal corporations which can be one of four types cities boroughs townships and incorporated towns The Commonwealth does not contain any unincorporated land that is not served by a local government However the US Postal Service has given names to places within townships that are not incorporated separately For instance King of Prussia is a census designated place having no local government of its own It is rather contained within Upper Merion Township governed by Upper Merion s supervisors and considered to be a part of the township Townships are divided into two classes depending on their population size and density Townships of the First Class have a board made up of five to fifteen commissioners who are elected either at large or for a particular ward to four year terms while those of the Second Class have a board of three to five supervisors who are elected at large to six year terms Some townships have adopted a home rule charter which allows them to choose their form of government One example is Upper Darby Township in Delaware County which has chosen to have a mayor council system similar to that of a borough Boroughs in Pennsylvania are governed by a mayor council system in which the mayor has only a few powers usually that of overseeing the municipal police department if the borough has one while the borough council has very broad appointment and oversight The council president who is elected by the majority party every two years is equivalent to the leader of a council in the United Kingdom his or her powers operate within boundaries set by the state constitution and the borough s charter A small minority of the boroughs have dropped the mayor council system in favor of the council manager system in which the council appoints a borough manager to oversee the day to day operations of the borough As in the case of townships a number of boroughs have adopted home rule charters one example is State College which retains the mayor council system that it had as a borough Bloomsburg is the Commonwealth s only incorporated town McCandless Township in Allegheny County calls itself a town but it officially remains a township with a home rule charter Cities in Pennsylvania are divided into four classes Class 1 Class 2 Class 2A and Class 3 Class 3 cities which are the smallest have either a mayor council system or a council manager system like that of a borough although the mayor or city manager has more oversight and duties compared to their borough counterparts Pittsburgh and Scranton are the state s only Class 2 and Class 2A cities respectively and have mayors with some veto power but are otherwise still governed mostly by their city councils Philadelphia is the Commonwealth s only Class 1 city It has a government similar to that of the Commonwealth itself with a mayor with strong appointment and veto powers and a 17 member city council that has both law making and confirmation powers Certain types of legislation that can be passed by the city government require state legislation before coming into force Unlike the other cities in Pennsylvania the Philadelphia city government also has oversight of county government and as such controls the budget for the district attorney sheriff and other county offices that have been retained from the county s one time separate existence these offices are elected for separately than those for the city government proper Texas edit Main article Administrative divisions of Texas Texas has 254 counties the most of any state Each county is governed by a five member Commissioners Court which consists of a county judge elected at large and four commissioners elected from single member precincts The county judge has no veto authority over the decisions of the court and has one vote along with the other commissioners In smaller counties the county judge also performs judicial functions while in larger counties the county judge s role is limited to the court Elections are held on a partisan basis Counties have no home rule authority their authority is strictly limited by the State They operate in areas which are considered unincorporated those parts not within the territory of a city Texas does not have townships unless the city has contracted with the county for essential services In plain English Texas counties merely exist to deliver specific types of services at the local level as prescribed by state law but cannot enact or enforce local ordinances As one textbook produced for use in Texas schools has openly acknowledged Texas counties are prone to inefficient operations and are vulnerable to corruption for several reasons 33 First most of them do not have a merit system but operate on a spoils system so that many county employees obtain their positions through loyalty to a particular political party and commissioner rather than whether they actually have the skills and experience appropriate to their positions 33 Second most counties have not centralized purchasing into a single procurement department which would be able to seek quantity discounts and carefully scrutinize bids and contract awards for unusual patterns 33 Third in 90 percent of Texas counties each commissioner is individually responsible for planning and executing their own road construction and maintenance program for their own precinct which results in poor coordination and duplicate construction machinery 33 All incorporated municipalities are technically considered cities even though the municipality may refer to itself as a town or village Cities may be either general law or home rule Once a city reaches 5 000 in population it may submit a ballot petition to create a city charter and operate under home rule status they will maintain that status even if the population falls under 5 000 and may choose its own form of government weak or strong mayor council commission council manager Otherwise the city operates under general law those cities have only those powers authorized by the State Annexation policies are highly dependent on whether the city is general law annexation can only occur with the consent of the landowners or home rule no consent is required but if the city fails to provide essential services the landowners can petition for de annexation and city boundaries can cross county ones The city council can be elected either at large or from single member districts Houston uses a two layer single member district structure or a mixture of the two Ballots are on a nonpartisan basis though generally the political affiliation of the candidates is commonly known With the exception of the Stafford Municipal School District all 1 000 school districts in Texas are independent school districts State law requires seven trustees which can be elected either at large or from single member districts Ballots are non partisan Although Texas law allows for home rule school districts no district has applied to become such The Texas Education Agency TEA has state authority to order closure and consolidation of school districts generally for repeated failing performance the former Wilmer Hutchins Independent School District was an example of a failing district closed by TEA In addition state law allows the creation of special districts such as hospital districts or water supply districts All of these districts are governed by state law there is no home rule option Texas does not provide for independent cities nor for consolidated city county governments However local governments are free to enter into interlocal agreements with other ones primarily for efficiency purposes A common example is for cities and school districts in a county to contract with the county for property tax collection thus each resident receives only one property bill Virginia edit Main article Administrative divisions of Virginia Virginia is divided into 95 counties and 38 cities All cities are independent cities which mean that they are separate from and independent of any county they may be near or within Cities in Virginia thus are the equivalent of counties as they have no higher local government intervening between them and the state government The equivalent in Virginia to what would normally be an incorporated city in any other state e g a municipality subordinate to a county is a town For example there is a County of Fairfax as well as a totally independent City of Fairfax which technically is not part of Fairfax County even though the City of Fairfax is the county seat of Fairfax County Within Fairfax County however is the incorporated town of Vienna which is part of Fairfax County Similar names do not necessarily reflect relationships Franklin County is far from the city of Franklin while Charles City is an unincorporated community in Charles City County and there is no city of Charles Other states edit Local government in Connecticut Administrative divisions of Massachusetts Administrative divisions of Michigan Local government in New Hampshire Local government in New Jersey Local government in New Mexico Administrative divisions of New York Administrative divisions of WisconsinList of city governments editFurther information Category City councils in the United States US City Councils of the 30 largest Cities 2020 city pop rank City City Council Government Type Total Number of Seats District Elected Seats At large represented Seats 2020 pop estimate Constituents per Councilmember1 New York City New York City Council Mayor council 51 51 8 253 213 161 8282 Los Angeles Los Angeles City Council Mayor council 15 15 3 970 219 264 6813 Chicago Chicago City Council Mayor council 50 50 2 677 643 53 5234 Houston Houston City Council Mayor council 16 11 5 2 316 120 144 7585 Phoenix Phoenix City Council Council manager 9 8 1 Mayor 1 708 127 189 7916 Philadelphia Philadelphia City Council Mayor council 17 10 7 1 578 487 92 8527 San Antonio San Antonio City Council Council manager 11 10 1 Mayor 1 567 118 142 4658 San Diego San Diego City Council Mayor council 9 9 1 422 420 158 0479 Dallas Dallas City Council Council manager 15 14 1 Mayor 1 343 266 89 55110 San Jose San Jose City Council Council manager 11 10 1 Mayor 1 013 616 92 14711 Austin Austin City Council Council manager 11 10 1 Mayor 995 484 90 49912 Fort Worth Fort Worth City Council Council manager 9 8 1 Mayor 927 720 103 08013 Jacksonville Jacksonville City Council Mayor council 19 14 5 920 570 48 45114 Columbus Columbus City Council Mayor council 7 7 903 852 129 12215 Charlotte Charlotte City Council Council manager 12 7 5 Mayor 4 900 350 75 02916 Indianapolis Indianapolis City County Council Mayor council 25 25 877 903 35 11617 San Francisco San Francisco Board of Supervisors Mayor council 11 11 866 606 78 78218 Seattle Seattle City Council Mayor council 9 7 2 769 714 85 52419 Denver Denver City Council Mayor council 13 11 2 735 538 56 58020 Washington D C Council of the District of Columbia N A District of Columbia Home Rule Act 13 8 5 712 816 54 83221 Boston Boston City Council Mayor council 13 9 4 691 531 53 19522 El Paso El Paso City Council Council manager 9 8 1 Mayor 681 534 75 72623 Nashville Metropolitan Council of Nashville and Davidson County Mayor council 41 35 6 Vice Mayor 5 671 295 16 37324 Detroit Detroit City Council Mayor council 9 7 2 665 369 73 93025 Las Vegas Las Vegas City Council Council manager 7 6 1 Mayor 662 368 94 62426 Oklahoma City Government of Oklahoma City Council manager 9 8 1 Mayor 662 314 73 59027 Portland Portland City Council City commission 5 5 Mayor 4 656 751 131 35028 Memphis Memphis City Council Mayor council 13 13 649 705 49 97729 Louisville Louisville Metro Council Mayor council 26 26 618 338 23 78230 Milwaukee Milwaukee Common Council Mayor council 15 15 589 067 39 271See also editHome rule Partial list of chapter 9 bankruptcies of the United States Urban politics in the United StatesReferences edit 2002 Census of Governments Individual State Descriptions PDF a b c d e f g U S Census Bureau 2012 Census of Governments General law local government from Ballotpedia a b US Census Bureau Geography 2010 FIPS Code Files for Counties and County Equivalent Entities United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 7 2018 Chamorro Villages in Guam Chamorro Culture www visitguam com Retrieved July 7 2018 Legislature of the Virgin Islands Legvi org Retrieved July 7 2018 Emergence of Colonial Government United States History June 16 2010 Retrieved June 16 2010 In all phases of colonial development a striking feature was the lack of controlling influence by the English government All colonies except Georgia emerged as companies of shareholders or as feudal proprietorships stemming from charters granted by the Crown The fact that the king had transferred his immediate sovereignty over the New World settlements to stock companies and proprietors did not of course mean that the colonists in America were necessarily free of outside control Under the terms of the Virginia Company charter for example full governmental authority was vested in the company itself Nevertheless the crown expected that the company would be resident in England Inhabitants of Virginia then would have no more voice in their government than if the king himself had retained absolute rule Henry William Elson 1904 Colonial Government MacMillan Company Retrieved June 16 2010 In methods of local government the colonies were much less uniform than in the general government As stated in our account of Massachusetts the old parish of England became the town in New England Henry William Elson 1904 Colonial Government MacMillan Company Retrieved June 16 2010 In no colony was universal suffrage to be found History of British Colonial America History World June 16 2010 Retrieved June 16 2010 In 1629 a Puritan group secures from the king a charter to trade with America as the Massachusetts Bay Company Led by John Winthrop a fleet of eleven vessels sets sail for Massachusetts in 1630 The ships carry 700 settlers 240 cows and 60 horses Winthrop also has on board the royal charter of the company The enterprise is to be based in the new world rather than in London This device is used to justify a claim later passionately maintained by the new colony that it is an independent political entity entirely responsible for its own affairs In 1630 Winthrop selects Boston as the site of the first settlement and two years later the town is formally declared to be the capital of the colony a b Emergence of Colonial Government United States History June 16 2010 Retrieved June 16 2010 For their part the colonies had never thought of themselves as subservient Rather they considered themselves chiefly as commonwealths or states much like England itself having only a loose association with the authorities in London In one way or another exclusive rule from the outside withered away a b c d e f Ed Crews Spring 2007 Voting in Early America history org Retrieved June 16 2010 Among the first things the Jamestown voyagers did when they set up English America s first permanent settlement was conduct an election Nearly as soon as they landed April 26 1607 by their calendar the commanders of the 105 colonists unsealed a box containing a secret list of seven men picked in England to be the colony s council and from among whom the councilors were to pick a president Henry William Elson 1904 Colonial Government MacMillan Company Retrieved June 16 2010 The system of representative government was allowed but not required by the early charters But after it had sprung up spontaneously in various colonies it was recognized and ratified by the later charters as in those of Connecticut and Rhode Island and the second charter of Massachusetts though it was not mentioned in the New York grant The franchise came to be restricted by some property qualifications in all the colonies in most by their own act as by Virginia in 1670 or by charter as in Massachusetts 1691 Glenn W Fisher February 1 2010 History of Property Taxes in the United States EH net Economic History Association Archived from the original on June 12 2010 Retrieved June 16 2010 The property tax especially the real estate tax was ideally suited to such a situation Real estate had a fixed location it was visible and its value was generally well known Revenue could easily be allocated to the governmental unit in which the property was located a b c Political Dictionary local government answers com June 16 2010 Retrieved June 16 2010 Both county governments and towns were significant sharing responsibility for local rule In the middle colonies and in Maryland and Virginia as well the colonial governors granted municipal charters to the most prominent communities endowing them with the powers and privileges of a municipal corporation Although in some of these municipalities the governing council was elected By the 1790s the electorate chose the governing council in every American municipality Moreover the state legislatures succeeded to the sovereign prerogative of the royal governors and thenceforth granted municipal charters During the nineteenth century thousands of communities became municipal corporations Irritated by the many petitions for incorporation burdening each legislative session nineteenth century state legislatures enacted general municipal incorporation laws that permitted communities to incorporate simply by petitioning the county authorities a b Getting a Grip on Zoning Regulations useful community development org June 16 2010 Retrieved June 16 2010 Zoning is a concept that originated in the United States in the 1920s State law often gives certain townships municipal governments county governments or groups of governments acting together the power to zone Osborne M Reynolds Jr Local Government Law 3rd ed St Paul West 2009 30 Reynolds 24 Cities 101 Consolidations from National League of Cities United States Census 1990 Puerto Rico and the Outlying Areas PDF Retrieved July 20 2021 U S Census Bureau 2002 2002 Census of Governments Vol 1 Number 1 Government Organization GC02 1 1 PDF Report Washington D C U S Government Printing Office pp vii viii Retrieved July 5 2017 Reynolds 31 Reynolds 31 32 Reynolds 33 Spencer v Merced County Office of Education 59 Cal App 4th 1429 1997 Reynolds 53 Reynolds 55 Adrian Charles R and Fine Michael R 1991 State and Local Politics Lyceum Books Nelson Hall Publishers Chicago page 83 ISBN 0 8304 1285 9 Allen J Michael III and Hinds Jamison W 2001 Alabama Constitutional Reform Alabama Law Review 53 pp 1 30 pages 7 8 The provisions of this Constitution and of any law concerning municipal corporations formed for local government or concerning counties shall be liberally construed in their favor The powers of counties and such municipal corporations shall include not only those granted in express terms but also those of necessary or fair implication or incident to the powers expressly conferred or essential thereto and not inconsistent with or prohibited by this Constitution or by law Constitution of the State of New Jersey Archived 2009 06 30 at the Wayback Machine Article IV Section VII 11 a b c Warshaw Christopher 2019 Local Elections and Representation in the United States Annual Review of Political Science 22 461 479 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 050317 071108 ICMA a b c d Charldean Newell David Forrest Prindle and James W Riddlesperger Jr Texas Politics 11th ed Boston Cengage Learning 2011 376 381 Further reading editJon C Teaford 2009 Local Government In Michael Kazin ed Princeton Encyclopedia of American Political History Princeton University Press pp 488 491 ISBN 978 1 4008 3356 6 Check list of books and pamphlets on municipal government Chicago Public Library 1911 Lockner Allyn O Steps to Local Government Reform A Guide to Tailoring Local Government Reforms to Fit Regional Governance Communities in Democracies Bloomington IN iUniverse Inc 2013 ISBN 978 1 4620 1818 5 Anzia Sarah 2021 Party and Ideology in American Local Government An Appraisal Annual Review of Political Science External links editNational Association of Counties National League of Cities National Association of Towns and Townships International City County Management Association ICMA U S Census Bureau page for local government American Public Works Association National Association of County Engineers National Association of Development Organizations National Center for Small Communities Municipal Research amp Services Center of Washington MRSC U S Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations State Laws Governing Local Government Structure and Administration U S Census Bureau Geographic Areas Reference Manual Fahim Mayraj April 25 2005 US voters are not convinced that big is better in local government City Mayors Foundation Atlas of Historical County Boundaries Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Local government in the United States amp oldid 1193106823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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