Westfield City Council approves term limits despite legal concerns

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The Westfield City Council on Monday night voted to impose term limits on elected city officials despite concerns from some councilors that the decison could result in lawsuits being filed against the city.

The council voted 5-2 in favor of the ordinance proposed by Councilor Troy Patton. The ordinance limits the mayor and city council members to two consecutive four-year terms and the clerk-treasurer to three consecutive four-year terms.

“I think there’s a lot of smart people in Westfield, and I think it’s good to have different opinions and to get the public more engaged in local community and politics,” Patton said.

The requirements are scheduled to take effect with elected terms beginning in January 2024, according to the ordinance. Time in office before 2024 would not count toward the term limits.

Council members Joe Edwards, Scott Frei, Jake Gilbert, Mike Johns and Patton voted in favor of the ordinance, while Cindy Spoljaric and Scott Willis voted against it.

“I think it’s a good way to get the old roosters out of the henhouse, and I think we need to do that,” Edwards said. “It’s not natural selection, but it’s a way that you can shift your leadership.”

Both Spoljaric and Willis said they support term limits, but they worry about the legality of the ordinance and fear the city will face lawsuits and increased attorney fees. Willis noted that the Indiana State Board of Elections told the city, “One, you can’t do it, and two, you will get sued.”

“I just see this being full of landmines that we’re going to have to navigate, and from a fiscal conservative standpoint, I don’t think this is a good use of taxpayer dollars to fight something that we’re being told by people who run the elections board that we can’t do it,” Willis said.

City attorney Manny Herceg, who works with the Indianapolis office of Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP, told the council he does not think Westfield’s term limits ordinance passes “legal muster” and eventually will be overturned in court.

“I think, ultimately, it would be a significant enough issue that would make it to the Supreme Court,” Herceg said.

However, the majority of councilors were willing to risk whatever fallout comes from the decision.

“Our founding fathers bet their lives on what they believed in, so I think we should do whatever we believe is right,” Johns said.

Westfield Mayor Andy Cook was elected in 2008. In October, Cook said he thinks term limits are “worth much thought, not at a city council’s whim.”

Cook has not publicly announced if he plans to run for a fifth term in 2023. Clerk-treasurer Cindy Gossard was appointed in 2001 and has been elected to five terms since 2003.

Five members of the Westfield City Council—Frei, Gilbert, Johns, Patton and Willis are serving their first terms. Spoljaric is serving her fourth term on the council, while Edwards is in his third. All seven seats on the council will be on the ballot in next year’s municipal election.

Gilbert and Willis announced this year they will run for mayor in 2023. Edwards and Spoljaric do not plan to run for reelection.

Evansville was the most recent Indiana community to consider term limits for some of its elected officials. However, the Evansville City Council in 2018 voted 5-4 against an ordinance that would have limited the city’s mayor, council and clerk to three terms.

The mayor of Indianapolis was limited to two terms until legislation in 1982 ended term limits for the position. The new rule allowed former Mayor William Hudnut to run for a third term in 1983. Hudnut, the city’s longest-serving mayor, eventually served four terms in office.

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7 thoughts on “Westfield City Council approves term limits despite legal concerns

  1. About time!! This is a start. 5-2 in favor by the people most affected by the limits. It seems that too many people want to get into politics to eat from the long-term trough and there are plenty that want to feed them…for a favor or two or three. McConnel, Pelosi, Cook et al. get so entrenched in a world that is not real that they lose track of what they are supposed to do for us and end up focusing on themselves. And, the real crooked ones make a mess and feel like they stay forever. It happens at every level and I am glad so see these councilors recognize that and give Westfield a chance to start something for the good. More minds are better than fewer and term limits let new eyes see things that old eyes miss or forget.

  2. Term limits should be enacted at all levels of state government to keep new ideas flowing.
    No more than 8years for the vast majority — that being any position equal to or less than 4years (voted either every 4ys or 2yrs)
    No more than 2 terms for those positions that are 6yrs in duration.

    Across the nation we have WAY to many people who are allowed to stay and stagnate the government and do damn near nothing–or make it worse by actively keeping things from proceeding. It’s WAY beyond time to get change moving across the system…not just in Westfield.

  3. While I support term limits in principle for all of the obvious reasons, I am always struck by the fact that voters who have the ultimate power to enforce term limits don’t vote in new people. Why do the same people get elected over and over again if the majority of people want change?

    1. +1. Why not ask the Legislature to pass a law? They love to pass laws that apply to people other than themselves.

      Everyone complains about incumbents but they always get re-elected by north of 90% of voters.

  4. Move this on to all levels of political positions from local to state to federal. The lack of term limits is killing the common folk.

    Next step: full/complete transparency of tax returns and net worth (both the politician, spouse and family members)!!

    1. Again, voters can vote them out. Why don’t they? Andre Carson or Greg Pence could have all been sent home just a few weeks ago.

      They both won by 36%. if you could tell me what either does for anyone, go ahead.

  5. So Westfield has spend over $1M is legal costs over the Mayor and City Clerk both basically despising each other.

    Now this new initiative is being called “likely illegal” but they appear to be moving ahead anyway. So makes out? Law firms. Who gets the short end AGAIN? Taxpayers.

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