Commentary: Managers are given two-year terms so that the Board can review that decision regularly. It may be necessary, to induce someone to leave another position, to provide some contractual protection, as provided in § C704. The Manager can be removed at any time, but that removal may trigger severance pay. However, the Board cannot reduce a Manager's pay to drive him out. The Manager is the one township official who should be as insulated from political affairs as possible.
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Commentary: Section C703 permits severance compensation for the Manager on removal or nonrenewal. This is at the Board's discretion. Although the Board must and does have an unlimited right to remove him, a Manager can assume that he will usually complete his term. To encourage that result and provide inducement to accept or retain the position, § C704 permits but does not require a contract which can stipulate severance compensation on removal (presumably without cause, although this is left for contract negotiation). A removed Manager can receive more severance compensation under a contract than would otherwise be permitted under § C703. If the contract gives him less, then the Board may authorize a payment which brings aggregate severance compensation up to the maximum § C703 permits. The Board is given the right to pay severance compensation on nonrenewal to provide for those rare situations where a Manager might reasonably have expected renewal, made no other arrangements and then been disappointed by a sudden turn of events.
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