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Council reviews proposed flag, recognition and ceremonial-request policies; asks commission and staff for more work on religion-related language
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Summary
Council discussed staff proposals on the International Wall of Flags, days of recognition, ceremonial requests and a proposed 'key to the city.' Members asked the Community Inclusion and Engagement Commission (CIEC) and staff to refine language—especially about religious recognitions—before formal adoption.
City communications staff and the city secretary presented a package of proposed policies on flag displays, days of recognition, ceremonial recognition types and an optional 'key to the city' honor. Greg Sol, the city’s director of communications, told council the International Wall of Flags was created to reflect Richardson’s designation as an international-business center and staff recommend eligibility tied to significant, ongoing operations (e.g., headquarters, R&D, advanced manufacturing) rather than retail or mailing addresses.
On days of recognition, Sol said staff compiled a list based on federal/state observances and CIEC input and recommended using the list as a ‘toolbox’ of minimum actions (social posts, library programming, department activities) rather than a prescriptive requirement. He explained legal guidance led staff to recommend excluding official city recognition for explicitly religious events to avoid establishment-clause and free-exercise conflicts; the CIEC had recommended excluding religious-based events by a 4–3 vote and to explore non-city alternatives such as an interfaith alliance.
"Government may not promote religion," Sol said while explaining the legal constraints; he and staff emphasized the distinction between elected officials attending community events in their personal capacity and using city resources or staff to promote religious activity. Several councilmembers asked staff to return with clearer written definitions and examples of what the policy would allow or prohibit (for example, the treatment of longstanding community events such as the Christmas parade), and to enumerate specific past practices that would change under the new language.
Amy (city secretary/staff) outlined the ceremonial recognition policy (proclamations, certificates, letters, appearance requests), proposed milestone thresholds for proclamations and a nomination-and-approval pathway for the proposed key-to-the-city honor. Councilmembers requested guardrails on the frequency and cost of any key-to-the-city awards and asked staff to present options for how the key would be produced and presented. Several councilmembers supported giving the CIEC additional time to refine its recommendation and asked staff to return with suggested language and a clearer list of examples of what would and would not be allowed under the proposed policies.
Council did not take a final vote on religion-related recognition language at the meeting; staff were directed to refine policy language and gather more information before a future decision.
