Galvin said she is a “white woman of privilege.” She said that the events of 2017 and the city’s legacy of racism can fuel “righteous anger.”

“What happened in Charlottesville and the legacy of racism generates that righteous anger and outrage and we must respond to it,” she said. “But this was someone who didn’t get her way and it seemed really over the top, out of bounds and harmful.”

Hudson wrote on Facebook on Wednesday that she has been “working hard” for the community.

“Never knew being chaotic for change and equity was a bad thing,” she wrote. “If I have to stroke egos to get what I want I’m not doing it. I have several naysayers and that’s cool. Say whatever you want about me but you can never say I don’t work hard for my people. I personally don’t care who liked my [approach] at city council nothing about what I said was wrong it was ALL facts.”

Meeting conduct was a topic of the council’s July 31 retreat, as well as at a retreat in December.

At December’s all-day meeting, councilors also focused on their relationships with each other and the public. Councilors discussed how to help each other if they see a colleague being attacked. They mentioned signaling to others, but no process was ever determined.