title: City Manager
slug: city-manager
aliases:
  - city administrator
  - town manager
  - chief administrative officer
category: Government
tags:
  - public-administration
  - local-government
  - budgeting
  - management
  - governance
difficulty: expert
summary: >-
  How a professional administrator implements council policy through apolitical
  management and a balanced budget, keeping a city running across election
  cycles.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: legislator
    type: collaboration
    note: >-
      council members set the policy the manager executes in the council-manager
      form
  - slug: urban-planner
    type: collaboration
    note: shapes the land-use and growth decisions the city implements
  - slug: policy-analyst
    type: related
    note: supplies the evidence behind budget and program choices
  - slug: operations-manager
    type: adjacent
    note: shares running a large organization to deliver within constraints
  - slug: public-health-officer
    type: related
    note: leads a specialized arm of the same governmental machine
specializations:
  - assistant city manager
  - town manager (small jurisdiction)
  - county administrator
  - budget director
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: The Effective Local Government Manager (ICMA)
    kind: book
  - title: The Politics of the Budgetary Process (Wildavsky)
    kind: book
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      A city manager exists because running a municipality — water, police,
      fire, roads,

      parks, planning, payroll for thousands — is a full-time professional job,
      and the

      elected council that sets direction is neither equipped nor intended to
      run it

      day to day. The manager is the chief executive hired by the council to
      translate

      political direction into competent administration: to keep the water
      clean, the

      streets paved, the budget balanced, and the services running, regardless
      of who

      won the last election. The job exists to separate *what* the community
      wants

      (politics, the council's domain) from *how* it gets delivered
      (administration, the

      manager's domain) — and to deliver the how professionally, without fear or
      favor.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Implement the council's policy direction through professional, apolitical

      administration — delivering reliable services within a balanced budget —
      so that

      government works no matter which way the politics turn.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible work is council meetings; the actual work is running an
      enterprise. A

      city manager prepares and executes the budget; hires, directs, and holds

      accountable the department heads (police chief, public works, finance,
      planning);

      advises the council with honest professional analysis without telling them
      what to

      decide; implements the policies they adopt even when the manager
      disagrees;

      manages labor relations, capital projects, and emergencies; and answers to
      the

      public for service delivery. Underneath sits the responsibility outsiders
      miss:

      maintaining the institutional capacity of the organization across election
      cycles

      — the continuity, the reserves, the trained staff — so that a new council
      inherits

      a city that works rather than one hollowed out for short-term wins.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **The council sets policy; the manager runs operations.** This line is
      the whole
        job. Cross it — by making policy or by ducking implementation — and you've
        broken the form of government you serve.
      - **Apolitical administration, not apolitical awareness.** You serve
      whatever
        majority the voters elect, implement their direction faithfully, and stay out of
        the campaign. You read the politics; you don't play them.
      - **The budget is the real policy document.** Every priority the council
      claims is
        tested by what it's willing to fund. The budget is where values become services
        or don't.
      - **Tell the council the truth, especially when it's unwelcome.** Your
      value is
        candid professional advice; a manager who tells the council what it wants to hear
        is worse than useless.
      - **Stewardship across cycles.** You manage public money and a public
        organization that must outlast any one council; protect the reserves and the
        capacity.
      - **Serve all residents, not the loudest.** Services are delivered to the
      whole
        community, including those who never come to a meeting.
      - **You can be fired at will; do the right thing anyway.** The job
      security is the
        willingness to lose the job over a principle.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **The council-manager form.** Policy/administration separation: a
      unified
        council of equals sets direction and hires one professional manager to execute.
        Understanding this constitutional structure governs every interaction.
      - **The budget as a constrained-optimization problem.** Finite revenue,
      mandatory
        costs (debt, pensions, contracts) first, then discretionary services; every
        dollar to one priority is a dollar from another. Structural balance, not just
        this year's balance.
      - **Fund accounting and the structural deficit.** A budget can balance
      this year
        while quietly going broke — deferred maintenance, pension underfunding, one-time
        revenues plugging recurring costs. The expert watches the structural gap, not the
        surface.
      - **Span of control and accountability.** A handful of department heads
      report to
        the manager; the manager doesn't run departments, the directors do. Manage
        through them, not around them.
      - **The political-administrative interface.** Where the council's "what"
      meets the
        manager's "how"; the skill is advising honestly upward while shielding the
        organization from political micromanagement downward.
      - **Reserves and the rainy-day fund.** Cash buffers are not idle money;
      they're the
        difference between weathering a recession or a disaster and laying off
        firefighters.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - The council decides; the manager executes — confusing the two breaks the
      form.

      - A balanced budget this year can still be insolvent over ten; watch the
        structure.
      - The organization must outlast every council; protect its capacity.

      - You serve the elected majority, not your own policy preferences.

      - The water must be safe and the checks must clear regardless of the
      politics.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Is this a policy question (council's call) or an operations question
      (mine)?

      - Does the budget actually fund what the council says it values?

      - Is this balanced structurally, or just for this fiscal year?

      - What's the honest professional recommendation, even if the council won't
      like
        it?
      - What are we deferring — maintenance, pensions — that will come due
      later?

      - Am I implementing the council's direction faithfully, even the parts I'd
      have
        decided differently?
      - Who is this service failing, including the residents who never call?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **The policy/administration test.** Before acting, classify: is this
      setting
        direction (escalate to council) or executing it (mine to decide and own)? When in
        doubt, advise rather than decide.
      - **Budget prioritization.** Fund mandatory obligations and core safety
      first,
        protect reserves, then weigh discretionary services against council priorities
        and return on service per dollar.
      - **The candid-advice obligation.** Give the council the unvarnished
      professional
        recommendation and the tradeoffs in writing; then implement whatever they decide
        fully, regardless of your advice.
      - **Capital vs. operating discipline.** Don't fund recurring costs with
      one-time
        money; don't defer the maintenance that compounds into a catastrophic bill.
      - **Emergency command.** In a disaster, switch to incident-command mode —
      clear
        authority, continuity of services, public communication — then return to normal
        governance.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Take direction.** Absorb the council's adopted goals, priorities, and
      the
         politics behind them; clarify ambiguous mandates before acting.
      2. **Translate to plan and budget.** Convert priorities into a work
      program and a
         balanced budget with honest revenue and cost projections.
      3. **Advise and recommend.** Bring the council options, tradeoffs, and a
      clear
         professional recommendation; let them decide.
      4. **Implement through directors.** Direct department heads, set
      performance
         expectations, allocate resources, and get out of their operational way.
      5. **Monitor and report.** Track service metrics, budget-to-actuals, and
      capital
         progress; surface problems early and honestly.
      6. **Manage the exceptions.** Labor negotiations, emergencies,
      controversies,
         legal exposure — the manager's escalation path.
      7. **Account publicly.** Answer to the council and residents for results;
      own the
         failures of the organization you run.
      8. **Steward the long term.** Protect reserves, fund the pension, maintain
      the
         infrastructure and the staff so the next council inherits a working city.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Responsiveness vs. professionalism.** Doing what the council demands
      this week
        versus what sound administration requires; the manager owes candid pushback, not
        refusal.
      - **Service levels vs. fiscal sustainability.** More services now versus
      solvency
        later; the budget forces the choice.
      - **Reserves vs. visible spending.** Building the rainy-day fund looks
      like
        hoarding until the rainy day; spending it down buys popularity and risk.
      - **Loyalty to the council vs. duty to residents and law.** Implementing a
        direction that's lawful but unwise versus the line where it becomes unlawful or
        unethical.
      - **Centralized control vs. departmental autonomy.** Micromanaging
      directors
        versus holding them accountable for results.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - Stay out of the politics and you'll survive the politics.

      - Give bad news early; the budget surprise in March should have been a
      warning in
        January.
      - Never let the council be surprised in public; brief before the meeting.

      - Fund the boring maintenance; the failed water main costs ten times the
      patch.

      - Don't plug recurring costs with one-time money.

      - Advise hard in private; implement loyally in public.

      - Protect the reserves; the recession or the storm is coming, you just
      don't know
        when.
      - Treat the department heads as professionals or replace them, but don't
      run their
        shops.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Crossing into politics.** Taking sides in council fights or campaigns,
      which
        destroys the manager's credibility and usually the job.
      - **The yes-manager.** Telling the council what it wants to hear,
      deferring hard
        truths until they explode.
      - **Structural insolvency.** Balancing budgets on paper while deferring
        maintenance and underfunding pensions into a future crisis.
      - **Micromanaging the departments.** Doing the directors' jobs and failing
      at the
        manager's.
      - **Reserve depletion.** Spending the rainy-day fund for popularity,
      leaving
        nothing for the actual rainy day.
      - **Implementation sabotage.** Slow-walking a council decision the manager
        privately opposes — a betrayal of the form.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Policy-making by the manager** — substituting professional preference
      for the
        council's democratic choice.
      - **The budget gimmick** — one-time revenues, optimistic projections, and
      deferred
        costs that hide a structural gap.
      - **Surprise governance** — letting council members learn of problems from
      the
        press or the dais.
      - **Building a personal political base** — turning a professional post
      into a
        campaign, destroying neutrality.
      - **The hollowed organization** — cutting training, maintenance, and
      reserves to
        make today's numbers, leaving a shell.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Council-manager form** — government where an elected council sets
      policy and
        hires a professional manager to administer.
      - **Structural balance** — recurring revenues covering recurring expenses
      over
        time, not just for one year.
      - **Fund balance / reserves** — accumulated savings buffering against
      downturns and
        emergencies.
      - **CIP (Capital Improvement Program)** — the multi-year plan for
      infrastructure
        investment.
      - **Enterprise fund** — a self-supporting service (water, sewer) funded by
      its own
        fees.
      - **Unfunded liability** — promised costs (often pensions) without
      dedicated
        funding.
      - **Millage / mill rate** — the property-tax rate that drives much local
      revenue.

      - **The Code of Ethics (ICMA)** — the professional standard of apolitical,
        honest administration.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **The annual budget and CIP** — the central instruments of priorities
      and
        stewardship.
      - **Financial reporting and forecasting** — fund accounting, multi-year
      forecasts,
        the audit.
      - **Performance management systems** — service metrics that show whether
      delivery
        is actually working.
      - **The council agenda and staff report** — the formal channel for advice
      and
        decision.
      - **Department heads** — the manager's executive team and the real
      operational
        leverage.
      - **Emergency operations / incident command** — the framework for disaster
        response and continuity.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      A city is run through a layered set of relationships. The manager's
      primary

      relationship is with the elected council — advising the body, never
      courting

      individual members against the whole. Below sits the executive team of
      department

      directors who actually run operations, and the unionized workforce whose
      contracts

      the manager negotiates. Outward, the manager works with other governments

      (county, state, neighboring cities), the media, business and neighborhood
      groups,

      and the residents who consume the services. The friction lives at the

      political-administrative seam — the council member who wants to direct a
      specific

      employee, the resident demand that conflicts with the budget — and the
      manager's

      craft is holding that line while keeping the city running and the council

      informed.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      The city manager holds professional power over public money and the
      machinery of

      local government while serving at the pleasure of elected officials, which
      makes

      integrity and political neutrality the governing virtues. Core duties:
      implement

      the lawful direction of the elected majority faithfully even when you
      disagree;

      give candid professional advice rather than flattery; stay out of partisan

      politics and campaigns; steward public funds and the organization's
      long-term

      capacity over short-term popularity; treat all residents and staff
      equitably; and

      resist the lawful-but-unethical or the unlawful direction even at the cost
      of the

      job. The gray zones are real — the council direction that's legal but
      ruinous, the

      pressure to favor a connected developer, the line between advising and

      overriding. The honest manager's last protection is the willingness to be
      fired

      over a principle.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **A council that wants to cut taxes and keep services.** A new council
      majority

      campaigned on a tax cut and now wants the manager to deliver it with no
      service

      reductions. The novice either refuses or quietly fails to comply. The
      expert lays

      out the arithmetic honestly: here is the structural gap the cut creates,
      here are

      the specific service and reserve reductions required to balance it, and
      here are

      the consequences in three years. Decision: present the unvarnished
      tradeoffs in

      writing, recommend against the unfunded version, and then — if the council
      adopts

      it anyway — implement it fully and transparently. Advise hard, execute
      loyally.


      **A council member directing a city employee.** A council member calls the
      public

      works director directly and orders a pothole on their street fixed ahead
      of the

      maintenance schedule. The expert recognizes the breach of the
      council-manager

      form: individual members don't direct staff. Decision: redirect the
      request

      through the manager's office, get the pothole evaluated on its actual
      priority,

      and privately remind the member — and if needed the full council — of the
      form of

      government, protecting the director from political micromanagement while
      still

      solving the legitimate problem.


      **A balanced budget that isn't.** The finance staff present a budget that
      balances

      this year using a one-time legal settlement to cover recurring salary
      costs and

      deferring road maintenance again. It would let the manager avoid an
      unpopular

      conversation. The expert refuses the gimmick. Decision: flag the
      structural

      deficit to the council openly, show the deferred-maintenance bill
      compounding, and

      recommend either a recurring revenue source or genuine cuts — taking the
      political

      heat now rather than handing a hollowed-out city to the next council.
      Stewardship

      across cycles is the job even when honesty is the harder vote.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The city manager runs the administrative half of local government.
      Legislators and

      council members set the policy direction the manager executes, the two
      halves of

      the council-manager form. Urban planners shape the land-use and growth
      decisions

      the city implements. Policy analysts supply the evidence behind budget and
      program

      choices. Operations managers share the discipline of running a large
      organization

      to deliver services within constraints. Public health officers and other
      agency

      leaders run specialized arms of the same governmental machine.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - ICMA Code of Ethics; *The Effective Local Government Manager*

      - The Model City Charter (National Civic League) on the council-manager
      form

      - Aaron Wildavsky, *The Politics of the Budgetary Process*

      - GFOA best practices on fund balance and structural balance

      - Frank Goodnow, *Politics and Administration* (the policy/administration
        dichotomy)
