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the peculiar conditions of the colonial period, it has spread with the population throughout the land. The management of local affairs by the people and their chosen representatives is a sound principle of government which holds a firm place in every part of our country. * * * * * SUPPLEMENTARY QUESTIONS AND REFERENCES. 1. Which type of local government exists in your State? Can you account for its origin? 2. Is the system of local government uniform throughout your State? If so, why is this true? If not, can you account for the lack of uniformity? CHAPTER IV. THE GOVERNMENT OF CITIES. The General Plan of City Government.--The general framework of city government is not very different from that of the other governmental divisions. There are the legislative, executive, and judicial departments, whose organization and functions are stated in the _charter_, or fundamental law of the city. The city legislature is the _council_ or _board of aldermen_. In most cases this body is a single house, though in some cities there are two houses. The members are elected from the wards into which the city is divided. The council may pass ordinances for the government of the city, but it is limited in the extent of its powers by the terms of the city charter. City Charters Granted by Legislatures.--The source of the charter is the State legislature. In most States the constitution provides that the legislature shall pass _general laws_ prescribing the framework of all cities, or of the classes into which the cities of a State may be divided, according to their population. These laws also contain regulations that are safeguards against the abuses of municipal government, such as heavy taxation and the accumulation of debts. The requirement of general laws secures uniformity in the most important features of city government, and it prevents the practice, which is otherwise liable to prevail, of constant interference by State legislatures in the affairs of certain cities. Such _special laws_ should be enacted with great caution, if at all; for when a legislature regulates the affairs of a particular city, it too often does so at the request of persons or corporations having advantages to gain at the expense of the public.[3] [Footnote 3: In some States where the constitutions require general laws applying to classes of cities, single cities have been put in classes by themselves;
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