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The Department Head Qualifications. These are a number of relatively minor <br />changes, just trying to beef up the professional standards for Department Heads, In <br />addition, the way the Charter reads right now is all the Department Heads' <br />qualifications do not appear in that section. There's a kind of a catchall section in the <br />back of the Charter that deals with a bunch of Department Head qualifications, and we <br />are going to clean that up, and have those qualifications appear in the Charter with the <br />Departments. It's kind of confusing the way it is right now. <br />Police Department/Police Commission. What we did there is we really liked the <br />language that we got out of City and County of Honolulu from the Fire Commission, so <br />the bulk of the proposed changes here are really just lifting some of that descriptive <br />language about the Commission's standards, how it functions, from the Fire <br />Commission. So, if you look at that, it's just similar language to that that we liked. And <br />then the other two additions, (6) and (7), just have to do with reviewing the <br />department's operations and evaluating, at least annually, the performance of the <br />Police Chief, and submitting a report to the Mayor and the County Council, so requiring <br />an annual review. It is no change whatsoever in regard to the authority of the Police <br />Commission, and we looked at that one very closely because of all the controversy <br />going on, and our strong legal opinion was that the Police Commission is adequately <br />empowered under the present Charter, that perhaps they just haven't exercised that <br />power for various reasons, but that they are adequately empowered. <br />41111 <br />Water Commission. A couple of changes here. Right now, there's a kind of a broad <br />geographical requirement in terms of the representation of the Commission members, <br />and what that allows, as in our existing Police Commission, is to have the number of <br />Commissioners heavily weighted towards one side of the island vs. the other. So this <br />would require that the residents come from each Council district. And that brings up an <br />interesting discussion. What happens if we eliminate the nine Council districts. And at <br />first, we thought that that meant that we might have to eliminate the Boards or <br />Commissions attached to those districts, but I think we've figured out a way to still keep <br />those functioning with those geographical descriptions, and just get around it by <br />referring to - If those districts were eliminated, the districts as existed in the year so and <br />so, or whatever, but not go to a 6-3 or a change from the geographic residency <br />requirement for those Boards and Commissions. So, the Department of Water Supply <br />nine members would be tied to the nine Council Districts. And as I mentioned earlier, <br />the Head of the Water Department would also - This is separate but the same <br />department, not be required to be a registered engineer and that is a transition - <br />BOWLES: May I ask a question, John, just on consistency? In that second <br />paragraph there, in referring to the Commission, it talks about the Chief Engineer, in <br />the first paragraph there. <br />RAY: Yes, right, so that would have to be changed. That's good. <br />BOWLES: So in the consistency of the language change, that would also be <br />altered to the manager of the department? <br />