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examination by the public in the Office of the County Clerk, and notice of the <br />availability of said copies shall be published by the Clerk. <br />(h) After enactment, ordinances shall be published once in at least two daily <br />newspapers of general circulation in the County. Such publication shall be by <br />title only and shall specify the ayes and noes. <br />3. Emergency Ordinances (Section 3 -11, Hawai`i County Charter). The County Council <br />may adopt emergency ordinances to meet public emergencies affecting life, health or property. <br />Such ordinances may not be used to levy taxes, authorize the borrowing of money or to grant, <br />renew or extend franchises. Emergency appropriations may be made pursuant to Section 10 -8, <br />Hawai`i County Charter. <br />Emergency ordinances shall be plainly designated as such and shall contain a declaration <br />describing the emergency in clear and specific terms. Any emergency ordinance may be <br />considered and adopted after one reading, with or without amendment, or be rejected at the <br />meeting at which the same is introduced. The affirmative vote of all Council Members present <br />or by two - thirds of the entire membership shall be necessary for adoption of such ordinances. <br />Emergency ordinances shall be published in the same manner prescribed for other adopted <br />ordinances and shall become effective upon approval by the Mayor or at such later time, <br />preceding automatic repeal, as the same may specify. <br />Amendments to any emergency ordinance shall be adopted in the same manner <br />prescribed for adoption of emergency ordinances. <br />Every emergency ordinance, including any amendments made after adoption, shall <br />automatically stand repealed as of the sixty -first day following the date of adoption of the <br />original ordinance. <br />4. Submission of Bills to the Mayor (Section 3 -12, Hawai`i County Charter). Every bill <br />adopted by the Council shall be duly authenticated by the Clerk and the Chairperson and <br />thereupon presented to the Mayor for approval. Such bill shall become effective as an ordinance <br />upon its approval or such later date as specified therein. If the Mayor disapproves a bill, the <br />Mayor shall return the bill together with any objections in writing to the Clerk within ten days <br />(excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) after receipt. If the Mayor does not act <br />within such ten -day period, the bill shall become effective as an ordinance as if the Mayor had <br />approved it. The objections of the Mayor shall be entered in the journal of the Council and the <br />3 <br />