Oakland voters may have a chance in November to totally restructure how the city government is run.
Recent years have been tough ones for Oakland. Crime shot up (then came down), a mayor was recalled (then indicted for alleged bribery), and trust in city leadership reached a low. Many people think the city’s government structure — where neither the mayor nor the City Council is really in charge — is to blame for a lot of this dysfunction.
A task force established by Mayor Barbara Lee studied the issue of charter reform and came up with a proposal for a potential 2026 ballot measure. Their proposal concentrates power in the mayor’s office but also bolsters the City Council. One viable alternative, in the group’s view, is making the council much stronger, rather than sticking with the current hybrid system.
In addition, an independent group called the Oakland Charter Reform Project, led by former City Administrator Stephen Falk, has put forward a third option, closer to the council-manager system but retaining some extra power for the mayor. Some members of the public and current councilmembers have expressed interest, while the council president backs Lee’s plan.
With all of these different and competing charter overhauls on the table, it can be confusing for anyone not deeply immersed in local government to keep them straight.
We’ve created a simple table, comparing the most important features of each charter reform proposal. Use this as a tool to follow along with the conversation, as it makes its way through the City Council and possibly onto your ballot.
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Natalie Orenstein is a senior reporter covering City Hall, housing and homelessness for The Oaklandside. Her reporting on a flood of eviction cases following the end of the Alameda County pandemic moratorium won recognition from the Society of Professional Reporters NorCal in 2024. Natalie was previously on staff at Berkeleyside, where she covered education, including extensive, award-winning reporting on the legacy of school desegregation in Berkeley Unified. Natalie lives in Oakland, grew up in Berkeley, and has only left her beloved East Bay once, to attend Pomona College.