There are four forms available to municipalities through the Faulkner Act:
Mayor–council The mayor–council form features a mayor with
strong powers and a city council with five to nine members. Municipalities under this plan establish three to ten executive departments, headed by a director appointed by the mayor with the consent of the council. This form of government provides for election of a mayor and five, seven, or nine council members. All council members may be elected at large, or some may be elected by wards; they may be partisan or nonpartisan, and serve four-year concurrent or staggered terms. There may be up to ten administrative departments. Mayors in this system are vested with broad executive power. The following municipalities have adopted mayor–council system under the Faulkner Act:
Council–manager The council–manager plan places complete responsibility for municipal affairs in the council. The council appoints a municipal manager who is the chief executive with broad authority. While the council–manager plan is quite similar to the
1923 Municipal Manager Law, the Faulkner Act version does not provide tenure for the municipal manager, who can be removed by a vote of the council. The council consists of five, seven, or nine members elected either
at-large or a combination of at-large and by wards for four-year terms. The mayor, who is either elected at-large or by council from among its members for a four-year term, chairs the council, but has no appointment or
veto power. •
Allamuchy Township, New Jersey •
Belmar, New Jersey •
Berlin Township, New Jersey •
Bradley Beach, New Jersey •
Chester Township, New Jersey •
Clinton Township, New Jersey •
East Hanover Township, New Jersey •
Egg Harbor City, New Jersey (city website says small municipality, though source says that city form of government is used) •
Estell Manor, New Jersey •
Fairfield Township, Essex County, New Jersey •
Greenwich Township, Gloucester County, New Jersey •
Highlands, New Jersey •
Island Heights, New Jersey •
Lambertville, New Jersey •
Logan Township, New Jersey •
Lopatcong Township, New Jersey •
Pohatcong Township, New Jersey •
Stafford Township, New Jersey •
Woodland Park, New Jersey Mayor–council–administrator The mayor–council–administrator form is largely the
borough form with the addition of an appointed professional administrator. Unlike the three other Faulkner Act plans, the mayor–council–administrator offers no optional variations in structure. Voters elect a mayor and six council members at large for staggered terms with partisan elections. The mayor serves a four-year term; council members serve three-year terms. An organization meeting is held on January 1. The mayor is the chief executive of the municipality, and appoints the positions of municipal clerk, administrator, attorney, tax collector, treasurer and other department heads with approval by the council. The mayor can also dismiss these department heads upon written notice to the council. The mayor also has veto power subject to override by 2/3 of council members, and can vote on council matters in the result of a tie vote. This form of government also includes a municipal administrator who supervises the departments. The following municipalities have adopted the mayor–council–administrator form of government under the Faulkner Act: == Change in form ==