Carroll, meanwhile, is hoping to enact reforms to the proxy process. If it can be drafted in time and introduced at the meeting Thursday, he said he’d look to introduce two amendments — one would require a warning on proxy votes informing the committee person they are allowing someone else to vote for them and that they would have no control over how that person votes. The second, he said, would say that no one can carry a proxy for another person unless they live in the same district — “so that we no longer have warring factions from two parts of the borough” waging proxy fights.