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- NATION, Page 27American NotesNEW YORK CITYRuling Out The Board
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- Hard-pressed New Yorkers have long maintained that there ought
- to be a law against their local government. Last week the U.S.
- Supreme Court agreed, ruling that the powerful eight-member board
- of estimate violates the constitutional principle of one person,
- one vote. The decision technically leaves the nation's largest city
- without a legally constituted government.
-
- Wielding considerably more authority than the city council,
- the board votes on the budget and controls such matters as zoning,
- municipal contracts, and water and sewer rates. Three elected
- officials (the mayor, comptroller and city-council president) and
- the president of each of the city's five boroughs sit on the panel.
- But the boroughs have widely varying populations. The member
- representing Staten Island's 377,600 residents has the same voting
- power as the one representing the 2,309,600 people of Brooklyn, the
- most populous borough.
-
- A Charter Revision Commission is expected to propose a new form
- of government in time for a voter referendum in November.