Get AI Briefings, Transcripts & Alerts on Local & National Government Meetings — Forever.
Stockton council approves earlier meeting start after heated public debate
Loading...
Summary
After hours of public comment and council debate about access, staff overtime and closed-session timing, Stockton—s City Council voted to adopt a process to shift regular meeting start times earlier (proposal tied to SB 707) and to implement hybrid participation options beginning July 1. The motion passed unanimously.
The Stockton City Council voted April 28 to approve a change process for regular meeting start times that would move the council—s primary session earlier in the day and expand hybrid, two-way remote public participation under SB 707.
Supporters said earlier starts will reduce late-night sessions, lower staff overtime and allow staff and council members to complete city business more efficiently. "With SB 707 effective July 1, we must adjust our procedures so people can participate from home or work," City Clerk Catherine (speaker 2) told the council, noting new software and queueing features that will notify people when it—s their turn to speak.
Opponents and several residents warned that shifting the start to afternoon hours would cut direct public access for working families and caregivers. Public commenters urged caution, saying evening meetings have been the primary way for people who work 9-to-5 to participate. "Holding meetings in the middle of a work day makes it significantly harder for everyday residents to attend," one Weston Ranch resident said during public comment.
Council members debated multiple alternatives: a full move to a 1 p.m. start, hybrid scheduling that preserves evening public comment windows, or a phased transition. Vice Mayor Lee (speaker 5) and several council members emphasized staff well-being and the logistics of closed sessions, while others pushed for a slower transition or guaranteed evening public comment at a set time.
The council ultimately approved a motion to implement a schedule-change process, instruct staff to finalize hybrid participation details and to pilot the revised schedule with public-notice safeguards; the motion carried 7-0. The City Clerk said a media and public-information push will follow and that the new tools will let callers and online participants join public comment from any location.
