LEXINGTON, Ky. — The Lexington-Fayette Urban County Council approved recommendations from Lexington’s first Civic Assembly on Tuesday, advancing proposals that could reshape how the city governs itself and compensates elected officials.
The council voted 12-2 to accept recommendations from CivicLex, a local nonprofit that organized the assembly of 36 randomly selected residents who deliberated on charter reforms over seven sessions in March. The assembly’s three proposals, each backed by more than 80% of members, addressed council compensation, accountability, and charter review processes.
The most significant recommendation would increase annual pay for council members to $59,987 — the average annual wage in Lexington — adjusted annually for inflation starting in 2031 if voters approve. Assembly members cited a need to broaden the candidate pool and make council service financially feasible for more residents, including teachers and other professionals currently unable to afford part-time work.
The second proposal would mandate charter reviews every eight years through a standing committee that would form a citizen commission of 36 residents selected by lottery. The assembly emphasized the need for regular public review to keep local government structures responsive to constituent needs over time.
A third recommendation would require the council to create and publicly display attendance and accountability expectations for members. The assembly believed voters needed more information about councilmember performance and reliability to make informed electoral decisions.
Any charter changes must be approved by local voters through a referendum. The council can vote whether to place the proposals on the November ballot, where they would require a simple majority to pass. CivicLex organized and funded the assembly independently with no government support.
Seven citizens spoke during Tuesday’s public comment period in support of the recommendations, praising the assembly process for engaging residents in governmental decision-making. The June 4 council meeting will include a public hearing on the proposals, followed by potential placement on the ballot.
This article was generated by AI (claude-haiku-4-5-20251001) based on source material from LFUCG Meeting Archive, enriched with 2 web searches. The original source is available at https://meetings.lexingtonky.news/meeting/6788.


