SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO.com) -- The TenHaken Administration and Sioux Falls City Council are working on a compromise to solve the public input controversy.
Councilor Marshall Selberg tells Kelo.com News that it's an effort to "meet in the middle."
One of the tentative ideas under discussion, he confirms, is to keep public input at the beginning of the meeting, but limit the total time period to 30 minutes.
All that a spokesman for Mayor TenHaken will say is "We’re always a proponent of compromise and uniting the council when the end result serves the public well." More later, we're told.
Selberg had proposed moving public input to toward the end of Council meetings, in part to try to cut down on disruptive behavior.
This is a developing story.