Lakewood Informer

Resident generated news about Lakewood, Colorado

Lakewood Informer

Resident generated news about Lakewood, Colorado

Cartoon of a King with "Rules for Thee, not for Me"

Lakewood Council Enables Personal Advocacy For Themselves

Lakewood City Council Members gave themselves the right to use their official position as a personal platform, while at the same time further limiting the voice of the residents. New City Council Policies and Procedures were adopted April 24, 2026.

Personal Platforms

A new policy was added, Policy 05.17, that allows Council to use their City Council platform for providing “their personal position on matters not directly impacting the establishment of policy for the City.”

"44 POLICY 05.17 PERSONAL DECLARATION POLICY A statement of personal declaration is intended to provide a platform for members of the City Council to provide their personal position on matters not directly impacting the establishment of policy for the City. City staff will not be used to support development of personal declarations although a member of the City Council may seek legal advice from the City Attorney regarding compliance with the Open Meetings Law. Any size group of members of the City Council may work together to develop a statement of “personal declaration.” A personal declaration will in no way bind the City, create policy, direct staff or signal a future policy decision has been pre-decided. AUTHORITY PROCEDURE A personal declaration will be read aloud during that portion of the agenda reserved for City Council reports and a written copy will be provided to the City Clerk for inclusion in the City’s records. Other members of the City Council who wish to join in such personal declaration after it is read into the record may either make a statement of personal support or may indicate their support of the personal declaration in another manner as indicated by the mayor, including calling for a vote of support."
Lakewood City Council Policies and Procedures - Revised March 2026

Misuse of Position

There is no explanation as to why City resources should be used to advance a personal agenda that does not benefit the city.

Historically, using government positions to advance personal agendas in what may give the appearance of governmental sanction was known as a misuse of power. The new policy allows a vote of support so that other Council Members can add their personal declaration, which would show City Council support for something that doesn’t affect Lakewood.

This situation was discussed during the Gaza War in 2023. Most Council Members wanted to show support for Palestine. Then-Councilor Rich Olver supported Israel and endured considerable blowback.

Previous Changes

The majority of the 2026 Lakewood City Council have been involved in other changes to increase personal advocacy of Council Members.

Previously, they gave themselves the power to take advocacy positions on an issue. As resident S St writes on LakewoodSpeaks, “change clearly allows electioneering by the council and cannot be allowed, we saw this with the Council’s “resolution” of a NO vote for rezoning. Council should NEVER be allowed a personal or group opinion on a matter of public/citizen authority. I would encourage everyone to read, and read between the lines, of these proposed changes to policy.”

Council has also increased the use of proclamations that did not result in policy changes, especially in 2025.

Exempt from Open Meetings Law

Personal declarations can be developed as a group, and voted on by all of Council. However, per this new policy, such meetings of multiple Council Members will be allowed because they claim it is personal. 

Normally, any meeting of three or more City Councilors is subject to Open Meetings Law.  

Limiting Public Comment

In contrast, since the election of Mayor Wendi Strom and Mayor Pro Tem Jeslin Shahrezaei, opportunity for public comment has been reduced:

  1. Most of public comment has moved to the end of the meeting
  2. Candidates can no longer say they are candidates (they never could make campaign speeches)
  3. Residents can discuss issues but not urge a specific vote the way Council did
  4. The ability to comment remotely via zoom or phone call has been removed
  5. Online submission of comments is encouraged rather than in-person comments during city business times (section 05.8)
  6. And now, online submissions are limited to one comment per agenda item (pg 31)

As Lenore Herskovitz writes on LakewoodSpeaks, “It is unfortunate that you have decided to limit the public to 1 in person comment and 1 comment on Lakewoodspeaks per agenda item. Many comments on Lakewoodspeaks are submitted before Council discussion and votes. Lakewoodspeaks is open until 10 a.m. the following morning. If you have further comment on council action after the meeting ends, this rule prohibits you from expressing it. The post meeting comment certainly doesn’t deprive the Council of any of the time needed to conduct city business so what is the point of the rule?”

Rules for Thee

Resident Alexei Fernandez sums up the changes with “Rules from me but not for thee.”

" Alexei Fernandez ∙ Apr 27, 2026 ∙ 8:41pm I will run against the mayor, I wonder what will or will not be considering campaigning. Rules for me but not for thee. Civil disobedience it is... 7 / 11 Councilors have viewed this comment "
LakewoodSpeaks comment
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