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name called last. Councilmembers shall not give explanations for their vote during roll <br /> call. <br /> If a motion does not receive the necessary majority vote for passage, the Mayor may <br /> solicit additional discussion and another motion for further deliberation and voting. If <br /> further discussion and deliberation does not result in a motion receiving a majority vote <br /> necessary to pass a motion, the Mayor may declare that "no action has been taken" and <br /> proceed with the remainder of the agenda. In the event of a tie vote, the procedures in <br /> section 14.2 Tie Votes, shall control. <br /> If a Councilmember is present at the meeting but abstains from voting on a motion or is <br /> silent during the vote on the motion, then the rules in section 14.3 Abstentions and Silence <br /> shall govern how the Councilmember's silence or abstention is tabulated. <br /> 14.2 Tie Votes <br /> Generally, a motion fails if there is a tie vote. After a tie vote, the Mayor may solicit <br /> additional discussion and another motion in an attempt to break the tie. If the tie vote <br /> occurs during a Councilmember absence, and the absent Councilmember does not have <br /> a conflict of interest related to the item being voted on, the City Council may continue the <br /> item to a subsequent City Council meeting when the absent Councilmember is expected <br /> to be present in an effort to resolve the tie. If the tie vote is not resolved, the motion shall <br /> fail and the Mayor may declare that "no action has been taken" and proceed with the <br /> remainder of the agenda. <br /> 14.3 Abstentions and Silence <br /> The City Council strongly discourages abstentions since abstentions without legal conflict <br /> may impede the City Council's actions, for example by causing a tie vote. Abstentions <br /> also deprive Pleasanton residents of one vote of five, or representation of their district, <br /> and may diminish accountability of Councilmembers on items of legitimate concern. At <br /> the same time, it is not the City Council's intention to impede any individual <br /> Councilmember's right to choose not to speak or vote on an item. A Councilmember <br /> should publicly state the reason for an abstention. <br /> The City Council adopts the rule for counting votes as "those present and voting" as <br /> described in Rosenberg's Rules of Order (see pages 5 and 6). Under this rule, a <br /> Councilmember who abstains or is silent counts as "present" for determining a quorum, <br /> but when counting votes is treated as if the Councilmember is not voting. <br /> 14.4 Protests <br /> Any Councilmember shall have the right to enter into public record reasons for dissent or <br /> protests against any motion carried by the majority. <br /> 23 <br />