Prop. 1 falling to defeat in a landslide

It looks like Langley will keep its mayor.

It looks like Langley will keep its mayor.

Voters in the Village by the Sea were overwhelmingly rejecting Proposition 1 — a measure that would do away with the city’s position of elected mayor — in the first vote tally announced by the Island County elections workers Tuesday night.

Prop. 1 was falling to defeat with a 76 percent “no” vote.

The actual vote count: 346 against, 109 for Prop. 1.

The proposal to change Langley’s form of government from the “strong mayor” model, where citizens vote to choose their own mayor, to the council-manager form, where a professional city manager oversees the day-to-day operations of city hall, grew out of the battle over the Langley Passage housing development.

Prop. 1 made its way onto the ballot via a citizens’ petition drive that was launched just days after the city council approved the 20-home project in the Edgecliff neighborhood. Many residents in the east end neighborhood were vehemently opposed to the project, and their signatures on petitions calling for an election to change Langley’s form of government were instrumental in getting Prop. 1 on the ballot.

The question itself, to do away with the form of governance that has guided Langley since the town got its start in 1913, was highly divisive.

Robert Gilman’s sole support of the proposal prompted his fellow council members to strip away his title of deputy mayor in June, and Gilman eventually resigned from the council.

Prop. 1 supporters said a change in government to the council-manager model would bring well-needed professional guidance to city hall, and would lead to lower legal bills and better working conditions for Langley employees.

Opponents of Prop. 1 said the vital checks and balances of an elected mayor, one who could veto council legislation, for example, would be lost if the council completely called the shots at city hall. Under the council-manager form of government, the council chooses one of its own to serve as a ceremonial head of the city.

The 2011 Primary Election is turning out to be a low-turnout affair.

Langley has 831 active voters, and just 455 votes were counted Tuesday.