A substantial policy initiative - like a living wage - should be debated thoroughly on the basis of full background papers on its implications for the broader council finances.
Brown has said implementing a living wage will be "fair" to 1600 council staff currently earning less than the proposed $18.40 an hour.
Estimates bandied about suggest the policy will cost $3.75 million to implement, which the mayor wants found from savings elsewhere in council and phased in over three years, starting next year.
But budget committee members say the decision was made without an expected report from Auckland Council chief executive Doug McKay on the implications of bringing in such a policy. They hope for greater scrutiny when the full council gets to ratify the plan on December 19.
This is not good governance.
Further, there is a suspicion that the mayor's office is now charging ahead with too many initiatives simply to take the heat off Brown on other fronts.
But what should concern John Key's Government - which established the new Auckland governance structure more than three years ago - is the mayor's move to curtail the power of council-controlled organisations (CCOs).
Brown pledged he would order a review of the seven CCOs during his second term as mayor.
The CCOs include: Auckland Transport, Watercare, Auckland Council Investments, Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development (Ateed), Regional Facilities Auckland, Auckland Council Property and the Auckland Waterfront Development Agency.
There is always room for efficiencies in any organisation or business. But the big issue is whether the intent of the CCO review is at its heart political - whether Brown simply wants to bring the organisations more directly under the control of the council/mayor, rather than produce greater cost-effectiveness and efficiencies.
Judging by a mayoral letter which went to CCOs this month, the control imperative factors high up in Brown's thinking.
The CCOs were given the message that it was not appropriate for them to make formal submissions on the Unitary Plan.
For an organisation such as Watercare - required to plan, invest in and deliver water and take care of sewage for Auckland - this is plainly ridiculous.
It is entirely appropriate that such a CCO does make its own submissions and not fall into council group-think.
Ports of Auckland has also come in for criticism because it has hired legal assistance in its own issue with the council over its expansion plan which the company believes was a strategic leak.
Also at issue is the fact that CCOs have been told they will have to find savings over the next three years.
The council CCOs are independent bodies. Council appoints the directors and the CCOs are accountable through statements of intent which set performance measures. At issue is whether the budget process and governance channels are being short-circuited.
Unfortunately Auckland Councillors appear to have had a collective brain bypass during this period when the mayor's credibility has been sorely tested through the many revelations over his affair with a previous member of the council's ethnic advisory panel.
Yesterday Councillor Cameron Brewer again broke ranks on the EY (previously Ernst & Young) inquiry into Brown's actions in relation to his affair with Bevan Chuang, saying he wanted it expanded to cover Brown's Hong Kong trip, which was not disclosed in the usual fashion when it took place last January.
Council chief executive Doug McKay - who ordered the inquiry - said he had reviewed the trip and found no improper use of council resources. Hong Kong Government contacts confirmed to me yesterday that Brown took part in their Government-funded visitors programme.
The EY inquiry should have reported by now. Sources suggest McKay has brought in a top outside lawyer to advise him in his dealings with the mayor's office.
The big issue is the freebies Chuang alleges Brown received from Auckland hotels (Langham, Hilton and Sky) where they conducted their trysts. EY needs to ask the questions of the hotels. And the mayor's office needs to give the hotels clearance to spell out whether or not they did. If the inquiry does not move into this fraught area it will have no credibility.
Then there are the donations. When Brown was first elected in 2010 he declared donations totalling $581,900.95, of which $499,000 was to the New Auckland Council Trust. Such trusts enable donors to hide their identities.
As Brown moves to take more power off the CCOs and centralise it in the mayor's office, it is time to question whether he should ensure greater transparency over the identities of his political backers.