CountiesCommissioner County Powers –Whether Commissioner Counties May Provide for a Different Definition of "Newspaper" than Provided in Section 1-113 of The General Provisions Article – Whether a Change in the Definition of "Newspaper" Would Be an "Administrative Act" that Could Be Taken Without a Public Hearing ( 2021 )


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  • Gen. 111]                                                       111
    COUNTIES
    COMMISSIONER COUNTY POWERS – WHETHER COMMISSIONER
    COUNTIES MAY PROVIDE FOR A DIFFERENT DEFINITION
    OF “NEWSPAPER” THAN PROVIDED IN SECTION 1-113 OF
    THE GENERAL PROVISIONS ARTICLE – WHETHER A
    CHANGE IN THE DEFINITION OF “NEWSPAPER” WOULD BE
    AN “ADMINISTRATIVE ACT” THAT COULD BE TAKEN
    WITHOUT A PUBLIC HEARING
    November 5, 2021
    The Honorable James Randy Guy
    President, Board of County Commissioners of St. Mary’s County
    On behalf of the Board of County Commissioners of St.
    Mary’s County, you requested our opinion on two questions
    concerning the County Commissioners’ power to define the terms
    “newspaper” and “newspaper in general circulation.” First, you
    ask whether the County Commissioners may adopt a definition of
    those terms that is less restrictive than the definition in Md. Code
    Ann., Gen. Prov. (“GP”) § 1-113, which applies, “[u]nless
    otherwise provided,” to any “law, resolution, or court order,
    judgment, or decree that refers to publishing a legal advertisement
    or legal notice.” Second, assuming the County Commissioners
    may adopt a different definition of “newspaper” and “newspaper in
    general circulation,” you ask whether that redefinition would be an
    “administrative act” that the County Commissioners may take
    without holding a public hearing under Md. Code Ann., Local
    Gov’t (“LG”) § 9-105.
    As to your first question, we read GP § 1-113 to be exactly
    what it appears to be—a default definition of two terms that often
    appear in Maryland’s general and local laws. Although the
    definition in GP § 1-113 applies “[u]nless otherwise provided,”
    we do not read that phrase as delegating power to local
    governments. Rather, the phrase merely recognizes a general
    principle applicable to statutory definitions—that a particular law
    may supplant a general definition with its own, specific definition.
    Section 1-113’s definition therefore applies to a law that uses the
    term “newspaper” or “newspaper in general circulation” “[u]nless
    otherwise provided” in that law itself, which in turn means that a
    legislative body can change the default definition only if it has
    power to amend that other law. We also do not read § 9-107 of the
    Local Government Article—which grants St. Mary’s County the
    112                                                  [106 Op. Att’y
    authority to “provide for advertising, printing, and publishing
    of . . . laws, ordinances, resolutions, or regulations adopted by the
    county”—as authorizing the County to amend requirements on
    advertising in “newspapers” that are imposed by State law,
    including the criteria in GP § 1-113.
    On that understanding, the St. Mary’s County Commissioners
    may not redefine “newspaper” and “newspaper in general
    circulation” for purposes of laws that the General Assembly has
    enacted, including both public general and public local laws,
    because commissioner counties lack the authority to amend the
    General Assembly’s enactments. The County Commissioners may
    generally redefine those terms for purposes of local ordinances that
    the commissioners themselves have enacted. Even then, however,
    if the local ordinance is based on a State enabling statute that
    mandates notice in a “newspaper” or “newspaper in general
    circulation,” the ordinance must conform to the enabling statute,
    and thus must follow the definition in GP § 1-113 unless the
    particular enabling statute provides otherwise. In other words, if
    the St. Mary’s County Commissioners wish to change the
    definition of “newspaper” or “newspaper in general circulation” in
    a statute enacted by the General Assembly, they must seek action
    from the General Assembly.
    As to your second question, we conclude that a legislative act,
    such as amending an ordinance, cannot be an “administrative act”
    within the meaning of LG § 9-105. Because the definition of
    “newspaper” in GP § 1-113 is incorporated into ordinances unless
    the ordinance “otherwise provide[s],” a change to the definition of
    “newspaper” in a local ordinance would constitute an amendment
    to that ordinance and would therefore be a legislative act subject to
    the public-hearing requirement.
    I
    Background
    A.    Commissioner Counties
    Maryland has three forms of county government: “charter
    home rule” counties are governed by Article XI-A of the
    Constitution, “code home rule” counties are governed by Article
    XI-F, and counties that have not chosen to adopt either form of
    home rule are “commissioner counties,” governed by Article VII.
    St. Mary’s County is among the counties that have chosen to retain
    the traditional “commissioner county” form of government. As the
    name indicates, a commissioner county is governed by an elected
    Gen. 111]                                                       113
    Board of County Commissioners, which has both legislative and
    executive authority. E.g., County Comm’rs for Carroll County v.
    Forty West Builders, Inc., 
    178 Md. App. 328
    , 338-39 (2008).
    In non–home rule counties, the powers and duties of the
    county commissioners “shall be such as now are or may be
    hereafter prescribed by law,” i.e., by the General Assembly. Md.
    Const., Art. VII, § 2. The county commissioners may exercise only
    those powers that the General Assembly has expressly granted by
    statute, along with any implied powers that are necessary to carry
    out their express powers. E.g., 89 Opinions of the Attorney General
    48, 49 (2004). Statutory grants of power to commissioner counties
    are strictly construed. E.g., 89 Opinions of the Attorney General at
    50.
    The General Assembly has delegated a range of powers to
    the St. Mary’s County Commissioners. These include the power to
    impose and collect a property tax, LG § 16-109; the power to define
    violations punishable as misdemeanors or civil infractions, id.
    § 12-804; the power to adopt a zoning code, Md. Code Ann., Land
    Use (“LU”) §§ 4-102, 4-103; and authority over roads in the
    county, LG § 12-503; St. Mary’s County Code, ch. 109. As is
    especially relevant here, the County Commissioners also have the
    power to “provide for advertising, printing, and publishing of . . .
    laws, ordinances, resolutions, or regulations adopted by the
    county.” LG § 9-107(c).
    But because St. Mary’s County is a commissioner county, the
    General Assembly retains plenary authority and may regulate the
    county “in virtually any manner it sees fit.” 76 Opinions of the
    Attorney General 137, 137 (1991) (quoting 62 Opinions of the
    Attorney General 275, 279 (1977)). In addition to enacting “public
    general laws” applicable to the entire State or to multiple
    commissioner counties, the General Assembly may enact “public
    local laws” applicable to a single commissioner county. See, e.g.,
    Cole v. Secretary of State, 
    249 Md. 425
    , 428-29 (1968); see also
    GP § 1-206 (noting that a public local law enacted by the General
    Assembly takes precedence over a public general law in the event
    of a conflict). Public local laws are usually codified in the county
    code rather than the Maryland Code. See St. Mary’s County Code,
    Div. 1. The County Commissioners, in turn, may enact ordinances
    to carry out properly delegated powers and to “implement and
    facilitate and insure the proper execution” of public general laws
    and public local laws enacted by the General Assembly. See Scull
    v. Montgomery Citizens League, 
    249 Md. 271
    , 281-82 (1968). But
    114                                                 [106 Op. Att’y
    a public general or public local law enacted by the General
    Assembly prevails over a local ordinance in the event of a conflict,
    because “County Commissioners may only perform acts expressly
    or impliedly permitted or conferred on them by the General
    Assembly.” 43 Opinions of the Attorney General 138, 138 (1958).
    B.    Notice by Newspaper Publication
    When delegating powers to counties, the General Assembly
    often prescribes procedures for the exercise of those powers. One
    common requirement is that before exercising a particular power,
    a county must publish notice of its proposed action in a
    “newspaper” or “newspaper in general circulation.” For instance,
    the St. Mary’s County Commissioners must annually hold public
    hearings on the proposed county budget and must publish notice of
    those hearings in one or more “newspapers of general circulation.”
    St. Mary’s County Code § 27-5. The County Commissioners must
    also publish newspaper notice before enacting ordinances in the
    exercise of certain delegated powers. LG § 9-105(c)(2). Some
    ordinances adopted by the County Commissioners themselves also
    contain newspaper notice requirements. For example, the St.
    Mary’s County Zoning Ordinance requires notice in a “newspaper
    of general circulation” of a public hearing on any proposed
    amendments to the zoning ordinance. St. Mary’s County Zoning
    Ord. § 21.3.1.
    Section 1-113 of the General Provisions Article defines
    “newspaper” and “newspaper in general circulation” as follows:
    Unless otherwise provided, in a law,
    resolution, or court order, judgment, or decree
    that refers to publishing a legal advertisement
    or legal notice, words such as “newspaper” or
    “newspaper in general circulation” mean a
    publication that:
    (1) has at least four pages;
    (2) habitually contains news items, reports of
    current events, editorial comments,
    advertising matter, and other
    miscellaneous information that is of
    public interest and is found generally in
    an ordinary newspaper;
    (3) has been published and distributed, by
    sale, from an established place of
    business at least once a week for 6
    Gen. 111]                                                         115
    months or more before publication of the
    advertisement or notice;
    (4) has general circulation throughout the
    community where the publication is
    published; and
    (5) qualifies for Periodicals rates for mailing
    through the United States Postal Service.
    GP § 1-113(a). 1
    Governments have traditionally used newspapers to give
    formal public notice of their activities, especially activities that
    could affect private rights. See Lauren A. Rieders, Old Principles,
    New Technology, and the Future of Notice in Newspapers, 38
    Hofstra L. Rev. 1009, 1010 (2010). Maryland, in particular, has a
    long history of newspaper notice requirements. In 1784, for
    example, the General Assembly directed the Baltimore Town
    Commissioners to hold a public hearing on a local matter but only
    after “giving twenty days[’] notice in the Baltimore news-papers.”
    1784 Md. Laws, ch. 46. The early nineteenth century saw the
    General Assembly adopt more general laws providing for
    newspaper notice. See, e.g., 1805 Md. Laws, ch. 110 (newspaper
    notice of insolvency petitions). The Constitution of 1867, as
    originally ratified, contained a variety of newspaper notice
    requirements. Md. Const. (1867) Art. II, § 20 (applications for
    pardons); Art. VI, § 4 (cash balances in the Treasury); Art. XIV,
    § 1 (constitutional amendments).
    Over time, the General Assembly began to impose newspaper
    notice requirements on the counties as well, including St. Mary’s,
    see, e.g., 1904 Md. Laws, ch. 401 (real estate tax sales); 1912 Md.
    Laws, ch. 209 (sale of surplus road construction equipment), but
    the Legislature also tightly controlled counties’ spending on
    newspaper advertising, see, e.g., 1878 Md. Laws, ch. 290
    (authorizing St. Mary’s County to spend up to $700 per year on
    newspaper publication).
    One recurring problem, both in Maryland and elsewhere, was
    how to define a “newspaper” or “newspaper in general circulation”
    given the many print publications available at the time. See Dale
    R. Agthe, Annotation, What Constitutes Newspaper of “General
    1
    As discussed further below, a different definition applies in Prince
    George’s County. GP § 1-113(b).
    116                                                  [106 Op. Att’y
    Circulation” Within Meaning of State Statutes, 
    24 A.L.R.4th 822
    (1983). The stakes could be high: in 1919, Baltimore City’s new
    home rule charter was unsuccessfully challenged on the ground that
    the newspapers where it was published before the election were not
    newspapers of general circulation. Williams v. Broening, 
    135 Md. 226
    , 229 (1919).
    In 1941, therefore, the General Assembly enacted the
    predecessor of today’s GP § 1-113, entitled “an Act . . . defining
    the publications in which legal notices and legal advertising shall
    be inserted.” 1941 Md. Laws, ch. 905. The act added a new section
    to the Code—Article 76, § 8—which provided that “[a]s used in
    any law, ordinance, resolution, decree, or order of court, the term
    ‘paper,’ ‘newspaper,’ ‘newspaper in general circulation,’
    ‘newspaper devoted to the dissemination of general news,’ or terms
    of similar import, shall be defined as a publication having the
    following requirements,” and then listed the five criteria of today’s
    GP § 1-113, which have not changed in substance.
    In 1984, as part of the code revision process that created the
    State Government Article, the definition of “newspaper” was
    moved to Section 28 of Article 1 (“Rules of Interpretation”). 1984
    Md. Laws, ch. 284, § 9. The introductory clause was edited to read:
    In a law, resolution, or court order or decree
    that refers to publishing a legal advertisement
    or legal notice, words such as ‘paper’,
    ‘newspaper’,      ‘newspaper       in    general
    circulation’, or ‘newspaper devoted to the
    dissemination of general news’ mean, unless
    otherwise provided, a publication that . . . .
    Id. The same five criteria followed. Id. The Revisor’s Note
    indicated that these changes were not intended to substantively
    alter the statute’s meaning. Id. (Revisor’s Note to Art. 1, § 28).
    The Revisor’s Note also explained that “the phrase ‘unless
    otherwise provided’ is added to note generally that, e.g., the law
    that requires publication may expressly define ‘newspaper’ to have
    another meaning.” Id.
    The only substantive change came in 2001, when the General
    Assembly provided an alternative definition of “newspaper in
    general circulation” for purposes of public general laws in Prince
    Gen. 111]                                                           117
    George’s County. 2 2001 Md. Laws, ch. 709. While that legislation
    was pending, our Office advised a member of the House of
    Delegates that because Prince George’s County is a charter home
    rule county, an act of the General Assembly would be necessary
    only to change the definition of “newspaper” for purposes of public
    general law, and not for purposes of public local law or local
    ordinances. Letter from Robert A. Zarnoch, Counsel to the General
    Assembly, to Del. Obie Patterson (Mar. 14, 2001) (“Patterson
    Letter”). The advice letter reasoned that the statutory definition of
    “newspaper in general circulation” “does not preempt this area of
    the law” because it “state[s] a rule of construction ‘unless otherwise
    provided,’” and that “implicit in the express powers of the charter
    counties to legislate is the authority to specify notice rules
    governing the administration of its own ordinances.” Id. at 1-2.
    Finally, in 2014, as part of the code revision process that
    created the General Provisions Article, the General Assembly
    transferred the definition to its current location at GP § 1-113, and
    adopted its current wording as set forth above. 2014 Md. Laws, ch.
    94, § 2. The introductory clause was revised somewhat, including
    by moving the phrase “unless otherwise provided” to the
    beginning, but the changes were again intended as non-substantive.
    Id. § 4.
    II
    Analysis
    You have explained that the St. Mary’s County
    Commissioners wish to adopt a definition of “newspaper” that
    would omit the requirement in GP § 1-113(a)(3) that a newspaper
    be distributed “by sale,” such that St. Mary’s County would be able
    2
    Specifically, Chapter 709 of 2001 added what is now GP § 1-113(b),
    which reads: “Subject to subsection (a) of this section and for purposes
    of the public general laws of the State, in Prince George’s County,
    ‘newspaper in general circulation’ includes a newspaper that: (1) is
    designated by the County Council as a newspaper of record; or (2)(i)
    qualifies under subsection (a) of this section with respect to Prince
    George’s County; and (ii) is published by a small business as defined in
    § 14-201 of the State Finance and Procurement Article.” It is our
    understanding that, soon after its enactment, subsection (b) was
    challenged in circuit court as a violation of the dormant Commerce
    Clause of the United States Constitution.             See News World
    Communications, Inc. v. James, Case No. CAL 01-20482 (Prince
    George’s Cir. Ct.). Because subsection (b) is not at issue here, however,
    we need not address its constitutionality.
    118                                                     [106 Op. Att’y
    to publish notices in a free newspaper. With that background, we
    turn to your questions: (1) whether St. Mary’s County may adopt
    its own definition of “newspaper” and “newspaper in general
    circulation” for local purposes, and (2) if so, whether the County
    Commissioners may do so without holding a public hearing.
    Because commissioner counties’ powers derive entirely from
    statute, see 89 Opinions of the Attorney General at 49, the answer
    to both of your questions is a matter of statutory interpretation.
    “The cardinal rule of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and
    effectuate the real and actual intent of the Legislature.” Lockshin
    v. Semsker, 
    412 Md. 257
    , 274 (2010). In ascertaining legislative
    intent, Maryland courts “look first to the language of the statute,
    giving it its natural and ordinary meaning.” Sabisch v. Moyer, 
    466 Md. 327
    , 350 (2019). However, especially when the language of
    the statute is not clear, courts will also consider other “external
    manifestations” of legislative intent, including the statute’s context,
    legislative history, and “other material that fairly bears on the
    fundamental issue of legislative purpose or goal.” Kaczorowski v.
    Mayor & City Council of Baltimore, 
    309 Md. 505
    , 515 (1987).
    Where multiple statutes deal with the same subject, we will attempt
    to harmonize them to the greatest extent possible. Government
    Emps. Ins. Co. v. Insurance Comm’r, 
    332 Md. 124
    , 132 (1993).
    A.       Local Definition of “Newspaper” and “Newspaper in
    General Circulation”
    Your first question requires us to consider the relationship
    between GP § 1-113—the General Assembly’s definition of
    “newspaper” and “newspaper in general circulation”—and the
    delegated powers of St. Mary’s County, a commissioner county
    without home rule. We begin by considering whether St. Mary’s
    County may redefine “newspaper” and “newspaper in general
    circulation” for purposes of statutes enacted by the General
    Assembly, including public general laws and public local laws. We
    then examine whether the County Commissioners may redefine
    those terms for purposes of local ordinances. 3 As we will explain,
    neither GP § 1-113 nor LG § 9-107—which delegates to counties
    the power to “provide for advertising, printing, and publishing” of
    certain materials—authorizes St. Mary’s County to amend the
    General Assembly’s enactments, including the statutory definition
    of “newspaper” incorporated into those enactments. The County
    3
    For the sake of conciseness, in the remainder of this opinion we will
    primarily refer to the word “newspaper,” but the same analysis applies
    to the phrase “newspaper in general circulation” or any other similar
    phrases intended to be covered by the definition in GP § 1-113.
    Gen. 111]                                                         119
    Commissioners may, however, adopt a definition of “newspaper”
    in local ordinances that departs from GP § 1-113’s default, unless
    the local ordinance’s publication requirement implements a State
    statute that itself requires publication in a “newspaper.”
    1.     Local Authority to Redefine “Newspaper” for
    Purposes of State Laws
    We first consider whether St. Mary’s County may redefine the
    term “newspaper” for purposes of laws enacted by the General
    Assembly. Section 1-113 of the General Provisions Article states
    that, “[u]nless otherwise provided,” it governs any “law, resolution,
    or court order, judgment, or decree that refers to publishing a legal
    advertisement or legal notice.” GP § 1-113(a) (emphasis added).
    Both public general laws and public local laws are therefore clearly
    within GP § 1-113’s scope.
    So what effect does GP § 1-113 have on those public general
    and public local laws that use the word “newspaper”? A statutory
    definition like GP § 1-113 is generally understood as establishing
    the default meaning of a term. That is, although the statutory
    definition ordinarily controls the meaning of the term, a specific
    law—even one within the scope of the definitional statute—may
    contain its own definition of the same term that is intended to
    control in that specific context. See, e.g., McDonald v. State, 
    141 Md. App. 371
    , 378-79 (2001) (“The language of [a] specific section
    prevails over the definition . . . in [a] general definitions
    section[.]”); cf. Bostetter v. Fahrney-Keedy Mem’l Home for the
    Aged, Inc., 
    20 Md. App. 234
    , 241-42 (1974) (standing for the
    similar principle that the default statutory definition of a term might
    not apply to a specific statute when the context of that specific
    statute and other indicia of legislative intent suggest that the term
    was intended to have a different meaning); 105 Opinions of the
    Attorney General 3, 28 (2020).
    But the “default” status of the definition in GP § 1-113 does
    not mean local governments have carte blanche to ignore that
    definition when the word “newspaper” appears in a State statute.
    A statutory definition, when it does apply, is more than a mere
    interpretative suggestion; it is part of the law. So when a law uses
    a statutorily defined term, and no legislative intent to adopt a
    different definition can be discerned from that law, see Bostetter,
    20 Md. App. at 241-42, the statutory definition applies and is
    effectively incorporated by reference; it controls the scope of the
    law and binds anyone subject to the law. See, e.g., Bryant v. State,
    120                                                        [106 Op. Att’y
    
    393 Md. 196
    , 206 (2006); F.D.R. Srour P’ship v. Montgomery
    County, 
    179 Md. App. 109
    , 129-30 (2008); Gambo v. Bank of Md.,
    
    102 Md. App. 166
    , 175, 184 (1994); see also, e.g., National
    Farmers Union Prop. & Cas. Co. v. Estate of Mosher, 
    22 P.3d 531
    ,
    533 (Colo. Ct. App. 2000) (“To ignore a definition section is to
    refuse to give legal effect to a part of the statutory law of the
    state.”); 2A Norman J. Singer & Shambie Singer, Sutherland
    Statutory Construction § 47:7 (7th ed. 2020) (explaining that a
    legislature in enacting a statutory definition “exercises its
    legislative power”). 4
    A statutory definition such as GP § 1-113’s definition of
    “newspaper” thus governs “[u]nless otherwise provided” in the law
    that uses the defined term. So, for example, in a statute enacted by
    the General Assembly requiring publication of notice in a
    “newspaper,” such as LG § 9-105(c)(2) (a public general law) or
    Section 27-5 of the St. Mary’s County Code (a public local law),
    we look only to the General Assembly’s enactment to determine
    whether it has overridden the default definition in GP § 1-113. See
    1984 Md. Laws, ch. 284, § 9 (Revisor’s Note to Art. 1, § 28). And
    because statutory definitions are part of the law, a legislative body
    cannot adopt a conflicting definition for purposes of a particular
    law unless it has power to amend that law, i.e., the law that uses the
    defined term. 5 This means, as our Office has previously advised,
    that a home rule county cannot change the definition of a term as it
    is used in public general law. See Patterson Letter, supra, at 1. It
    also means, as relevant here, that a commissioner county cannot
    change a definition in any law enacted by the General Assembly,
    including a public local law, because the County Commissioners
    lack power to amend the General Assembly’s enactments. See 43
    Opinions of the Attorney General 138, 138 (1958) (“Such powers
    as [commissioner counties] have are all delegated and may be
    changed or added to only by the Legislature.”).
    4
    To be clear, the definition itself is also subject to ordinary principles
    of statutory interpretation, including consideration in light of context.
    See Maguire v. State, 
    192 Md. 615
    , 623-24 (1949).
    5
    Administrative agencies are sometimes delegated power to define
    terms in a statute. See Maryland Pennysaver Grp., Inc. v. Comptroller,
    
    323 Md. 697
    , 708 (1991). Even in such cases, however, the agency’s
    definition cannot contradict the statute. See, e.g., Fogle v. H & G
    Restaurant, Inc., 
    337 Md. 441
    , 453 (1995) (“Agency regulations must be
    consistent with the letter and the spirit of the law under which the agency
    acts.”). Nor will courts defer to an agency’s regulation interpreting a
    statute if the agency’s interpretation conflicts with the unambiguous
    terms of the statute. See, e.g., United Parcel Serv., Inc. v. Comptroller,
    
    69 Md. App. 458
    , 472-73 (1986).
    Gen. 111]                                                             121
    GP § 1-113’s qualifying phrase “[u]nless otherwise provided”
    aligns with that understanding. That phrase, which was added to
    the statute during a non-substantive code revision more than forty
    years after its enactment, is best understood as merely recognizing
    this general principle of statutory interpretation—that a specific
    statute may override a general statutory definition—and not as
    delegating new authority to commissioner counties to amend the
    General Assembly’s enactments. See Comptroller v. Blanton, 
    390 Md. 528
    , 538-39 (2006) (changes to statutory wording in code
    revision are presumptively non-substantive); 1984 Md. Laws, ch.
    284, § 9 (Revisor’s Note to Art. 1, § 28) (explaining that “the
    phrase ‘unless otherwise provided’ is added to note generally that,
    e.g., the law that requires publication may expressly define
    ‘newspaper’ to have another meaning” (emphasis added)). GP § 1-
    113 no more authorizes commissioner counties to redefine
    “newspaper” in statutes enacted by the General Assembly than it
    authorizes them to delete a statutory “newspaper” publication
    requirement altogether.
    But that conclusion does not end our analysis, even as to State
    statutes; we must also consider whether LG § 9-107 delegates
    authority that GP § 1-113 does not. As noted above, that statute
    grants the St. Mary’s County Commissioners authority to “provide
    for advertising, printing, and publishing of . . . laws, ordinances,
    resolutions, or regulations adopted by the county.” LG § 9-107(c). 6
    The question, then, is whether LG § 9-107(c) grants the St. Mary’s
    County Commissioners greater power over newspaper notice
    requirements than they would otherwise have, including the power
    to relax notice requirements imposed by the General Assembly.
    Because the statute does not further specify what it means to
    “provide for” advertising and printing, we examine its context and
    history. The General Assembly enacted the predecessor of LG § 9-
    107 in 1947, as part of a new code of delegated powers for the
    commissioner counties. 1947 Md. Laws, ch. 730; see Md.
    Legislative Council, Report to the General Assembly of 1945, pt.
    II, at 37-38; id. pt. III, at 148-50. 7 One reason for Chapter 730’s
    6
    As we will explain later in Part II.B of our opinion, although the
    statute’s text refers only to particular categories of publication, the
    provision is best read as also extending to other categories of publication
    that are not explicitly enumerated, including newspaper notices.
    7
    Numerous counties, including St. Mary’s County, were originally
    excluded from Chapter 730’s grant of powers. 1947 Md. Laws, ch. 730,
    § 1. These exclusions were gradually eliminated, including for St.
    Mary’s County in 1965. 1965 Md. Laws, ch. 228.
    122                                                   [106 Op. Att’y
    enactment was that counties, fearing strict application of the rule
    that all expenditures by the county commissioners require
    legislative authorization, would request at each session a large
    volume of bills authorizing expenditures for particular purposes.
    Md. Legislative Council, The Problem of Local Legislation in
    Maryland 8 (1940); see Peter v. Prettyman, 
    62 Md. 566
    , 571, 576-
    77 (1884) (holding Montgomery County Commissioners could not
    pay Clerk of the Circuit Court for preparing an index of real
    property instruments without legislative authorization). Chapter
    730 therefore delegated to the counties the authority to provide for
    matters of recurring expenditure, see The Problem of Local
    Legislation, supra, at 8, such as newspaper notices, 1947 Md.
    Laws, ch. 730 (enacting Art. 25, § 2A(j)).
    But nothing in the text, context, or history of what would
    become LG § 9-107(c) indicates that the General Assembly meant
    to grant counties authority to alter or relax procedural limitations it
    had imposed on other powers delegated to the counties, such as a
    requirement that notice of certain actions be published in a
    “newspaper” as defined by GP § 1-113. Indeed, we have at least
    three reasons to doubt such a delegation occurred.
    First, a statute enabling commissioner counties to relax or
    repeal statutorily prescribed procedural limitations on their own
    powers—such as the requirement that the county give notice of
    certain actions in a newspaper satisfying all of GP § 1-113’s
    criteria—could raise constitutional concerns. Only the General
    Assembly can increase the powers of the commissioner counties.
    See Md. Const., Art. VII, § 2; 43 Opinions of the Attorney General
    at 138. And only home rule counties have express constitutional
    authority to amend public local laws the Legislature has enacted,
    while no local government has express constitutional authority to
    amend public general laws. See Md. Const., Art. XI-A, § 3; Art.
    XI-F, § 3. A statute authorizing commissioner counties to delete
    procedural restrictions in their own enabling legislation would raise
    questions under both of those principles. When possible, we avoid
    interpreting statutes in a manner that calls their constitutionality
    into doubt. See, e.g., G. Heileman Brewing Co. v. Stroh Brewery
    Co., 
    308 Md. 746
    , 763 (1987).
    Second, interpreting LG § 9-107 as authorizing commissioner
    counties to alter procedural requirements the General Assembly
    has imposed on the counties’ own powers would also run afoul of
    the rule that the delegated powers of commissioner counties should
    be strictly construed. See 89 Opinions of the Attorney General at
    50; cf. 76 Opinions of the Attorney General at 140-41 (concluding
    that the power to impose civil remedies, as a power not normally
    Gen. 111]                                                       123
    delegated to commissioner counties, would not be implied in the
    absence of an express grant from the Legislature); 43 Opinions of
    the Attorney General at 138-39 (same for power to impose
    penalties).
    Third, Chapter 730, when read as a whole, suggests an overall
    intent to preserve the fundamentals of the relationship between the
    State and commissioner counties—allowing such counties to adopt
    and amend ordinances implementing public general and public
    local laws while still requiring them to comply in full with the
    requirements of the enabling laws themselves. See Md. Legislative
    Council, Local Government: A Comparative Study 55 (1944)
    (explaining that the legislative proposal that became Chapter 730
    “would introduce nothing unusual or novel into county
    government” and that the powers it would confer “already are
    conferred upon many counties in Maryland”). Indeed, no other
    provision of Chapter 730 appears to delegate power to loosen legal
    requirements imposed by the Legislature; on the contrary, several
    of the provisions of Chapter 730 were expressly subjected to
    existing public local law. Subsection (c), for example, empowered
    counties “[t]o grant franchises as provided under existing Public
    General or Public Local Laws,” and subsection (d) authorized them
    “[t]o provide for the appointment and removal of all county officers
    and employees except those whose appointment or election is
    provided for by the Constitution or Public General or Public Local
    Laws.” 1947 Md. Laws, ch. 730. For those reasons, we do not read
    LG § 9-107 as delegating power to local jurisdictions to define
    “newspaper” differently from GP § 1-113 for purposes of State
    statutes that follow the default definition.
    In sum, then, when a public general or public local law
    enacted by the General Assembly incorporates GP § 1-113’s
    default definition, the St. Mary’s County Commissioners may not
    alter it. Section 1-113’s “[u]nless otherwise provided” language
    merely recognizes that the State statute itself may define
    “newspaper” differently, and LG § 9-107 does not delegate to
    commissioner counties the authority to amend the Legislature’s
    enactments.
    2.     Local Authority to Redefine “Newspaper” for
    Purposes of Local Ordinances
    We next consider whether the County Commissioners may
    adopt a new definition of “newspaper” for purposes of local
    ordinances that currently use GP § 1-113’s default definition.
    124                                                    [106 Op. Att’y
    Section 1-113’s text does not expressly include local ordinances,
    so the statute is ambiguous as to whether it applies to such
    ordinances by default. But the statute’s history confirms that it
    includes local ordinances as well as General Assembly enactments.
    As originally enacted, the statute explicitly covered “ordinance[s]”
    as well as “law[s].” 1941 Md. Laws, ch. 905. The word
    “ordinance” was deleted during the code revision process, and
    there is no evidence that the deletion was meant to change the
    statute’s meaning. See 1984 Md. Laws, ch. 284, § 9; Blanton, 
    390 Md. at 538-39
    . Although the Revisor’s Note does not explain the
    change, the reasoning may have been that the word “law” already
    encompassed all enactments with the force of law, including valid
    local ordinances. See Herman v. Mayor & City Council of
    Baltimore, 
    189 Md. 191
    , 195 (1947) (“[A]n ordinance passed in
    pursuance of express legislative authority is a law within the
    meaning of the Constitution[.]”); cf. Secretary, Dep’t of Pub. Safety
    & Corr. Servs. v. Demby, 
    390 Md. 580
    , 606-08 (2006) (legislative
    regulations can be “laws” subject to the ex post facto prohibition of
    Article 17 of the Declaration of Rights). 8 The reference to “law[s]”
    in GP § 1-113 is thus best read as including local ordinances.
    However, because the power to define or redefine
    “newspaper” in legislation—to replace the default definition with
    another—flows from the power to amend that legislation, the
    County Commissioners may generally alter the definition of
    “newspaper” for purposes of local ordinances that the County
    Commissioners themselves have passed, assuming that the
    ordinance is otherwise within the County Commissioners’
    delegated authority. See Patterson Letter, supra, at 1; see also
    Letter from Kathryn M. Rowe, Assistant Attorney General, to Del.
    Michael D. Smigiel, Sr., at 3 (July 21, 2011) (“Smigiel Letter”)
    (concluding that GP § 1-113 governs publication requirements in
    local ordinances “unless the local jurisdiction has adopted a
    separate definition”). The St. Mary’s County Commissioners
    undoubtedly have power to amend their own ordinances. See Dal
    Maso v. Board of County Comm’rs of Prince George’s County, 
    182 Md. 200
    , 206-07 (1943). And as we have explained, a particular
    law may adopt a specific definition that varies from the definition
    provided by a more generally applicable definitional statute. See
    McDonald, 141 Md. App. at 378-79; cf. Bostetter, 20 Md. App. at
    241-42; 105 Opinions of the Attorney General at 28.
    8
    But see Police Patrol Sec. Sys., Inc. v. Prince George’s County, 
    378 Md. 702
    , 714-15 (2003) (holding that a local ordinance did not qualify
    as “law” under the Public Information Act given the structure of that
    specific statute).
    Gen. 111]                                                          125
    One might argue that GP § 1-113 sets universal standards for
    legal notice in Maryland, meaning a local government could not
    adopt a different definition even in local legislation it had enacted
    on its own initiative or otherwise had the power to amend. Whether
    GP § 1-113 should be understood this way is a question of
    legislative intent. Cf. Allied Vending, Inc. v. City of Bowie, 
    332 Md. 279
    , 300-01 (1993) (whether State has preempted local
    legislation in a particular field turns on legislative intent).
    In analyzing the intent of GP § 1-113, the first and most
    important consideration is its text: the General Assembly put the
    statute in the form of a definition. On its face, GP § 1-113 only
    defines the specific terms “newspaper” and “newspaper in general
    circulation,” and only when one of those terms appears “in a
    law . . . that refers to publishing a legal advertisement or legal
    notice.” The statute’s form thus suggests that the General
    Assembly’s primary intent was simply to provide a default
    definition of “newspaper” and “newspaper in general circulation,”
    terms that had fostered uncertainty both in Maryland and
    elsewhere. See, e.g., 7 Opinions of the Attorney General 183, 183-
    84 (1922) (concluding that a newspaper that had only recently
    resumed publication after a suspension could still qualify as a
    “newspaper”); 
    24 A.L.R.4th 822
     (collecting cases in other states).
    Reading GP § 1-113 as a universal rule for legal notice would
    also conflict with our prior advice. In 2001, as the Legislature was
    considering amending GP § 1-113 to provide a different definition
    for Prince George’s County, our Office advised that GP § 1-113
    permits a charter home rule county to set its own definition of
    “newspaper” for purposes of local laws, but not public general
    laws. Patterson Letter, supra, at 1. That advice relied on GP § 1-
    113’s use of the phrase “[u]nless otherwise provided,” and on
    charter home rule counties’ implied authority to make procedural
    rules governing the exercise of their powers. Id. 9 To acknowledge
    that distinction, the bill was amended to insert the phrase “for
    9
    The Express Powers Act, which delegates powers to home rule
    counties, also contains a provision similar to LG § 9-107, although the
    letter did not reference it. See LG § 10-308 (“A county may provide for
    advertising, printing, and publishing of county documents[.]”). In
    addition, the Constitution imposes a newspaper-publication requirement
    for proposed and amended “laws and ordinances” in charter home rule
    jurisdictions other than Baltimore City. Md. Const., Art. XI-A, § 3. For
    present purposes, however, we need not interpret LG § 10-308 nor
    decide how GP § 1-113 interacts with the constitutional mandate in
    Article XI-A, § 3.
    126                                                     [106 Op. Att’y
    purposes of the public general laws of the State” into the new,
    Prince George’s County-specific provision.            Amend. No.
    182610/1, H.B. 1189, 2001 Leg., Reg. Sess. A note accompanying
    the amendment, as originally introduced, in the bill file explained
    that “[n]either the amendment nor the bill affects the existing
    authority of the County Council to determine what newspapers are
    used for notice required under county ordinances.” Amend. No.
    723122/1, H.B. 1189, 2001 Leg., Reg. Sess. Then, in 2011, our
    Office advised again—in response to a question regarding Cecil
    County, a commissioner county at the time—that GP § 1-113
    governs local publication requirements “unless the local
    jurisdiction has adopted a separate definition.” Smigiel Letter,
    supra, at 3. Thus, our consistent position has been that, for at least
    some local laws, local governments can set their own definition of
    “newspaper,” GP § 1-113 notwithstanding.
    We recognize that there is some contrary evidence that could
    reflect a legislative intent to establish across-the-board standards
    for legal notice. The statute’s original title was “an Act . . . defining
    the publications in which legal notices and legal advertising shall
    be inserted,” 1941 Md. Laws, ch. 905, rather than a title clearly
    treating the statute as definitional, such as “an Act defining the
    terms ‘newspaper’ and ‘newspaper in general circulation.’” The
    General Assembly also inserted the provision into what was then
    Article 76 of the Code (“Publication of Laws”), rather than Article
    1 (“Rules of Interpretation”). What is more, the statute as
    originally enacted did not contain the qualifying phrase “unless
    otherwise provided”—an omission that might indicate that the
    General Assembly intended the statute to apply across the board.
    Id. And more recently, the Revisor’s Notes for the General
    Provisions Article described the GP § 1-113 definition as “more
    substantive than definitional in nature.” 2014 Md. Laws, ch. 94, § 2.
    But none of these indications is strong enough to overcome
    the clarity of the statute’s text, which has been framed as a
    definition since 1941. Although a statute’s title can be evidence of
    its meaning, we generally do not invoke the title to create ambiguity
    in otherwise clear text. See Tidewater/Havre de Grace, Inc. v.
    Mayor & City Council of Havre de Grace, 
    337 Md. 338
    , 347 n.7
    (1995). The statute’s initial placement in Article 76 also has
    limited significance, because definitional provisions can appear
    anywhere in the Code; in fact, by later moving the provision to
    Article 1 in code revision, the General Assembly confirmed that it
    was intended as definitional in spite of its original placement. 1984
    Md. Laws, ch. 284, § 9 (enacting Art. 1, § 28). The insertion of
    “unless otherwise provided” in code revision is of similarly limited
    Gen. 111]                                                        127
    significance. As we have explained, because this phrase was added
    during non-substantive code revision, 1984 Md. Laws, ch. 284, § 9
    (Revisor’s Note to Art. 1, § 28); Blanton, 
    390 Md. at 538-39
     (code-
    revision changes are ordinarily non-substantive), it is best
    understood as making explicit what is already implicit in a
    definitional statute: the definition it provides can be overridden by
    contrary legislative intent in a particular provision that uses the
    defined term, see McDonald, 141 Md. App. at 378-79. Finally, the
    more recent Revisor’s Note characterizing the provision as “more
    substantive than definitional” during codification of the General
    Provisions Article could merely have been recognizing that the GP
    § 1-113 definition may be narrower than the ordinary meaning of
    “newspaper.” Cf. 7 Opinions of the Attorney General at 183-84
    (prior to the enactment of what is now GP § 1-113, approving
    publication in a “newspaper” that would not appear to qualify
    under the current statute because it had not published and
    distributed any recent issues). In our view, the best understanding
    of the General Assembly’s intent in enacting what is now GP § 1-
    113 is that the Legislature wanted to set a default definition of a
    commonly used term, not to limit local governments’ authority to
    define terms in the local laws they enact themselves.
    A local government’s power to redefine “newspaper” in local
    ordinances does have at least one important limitation, however.
    In some cases, a local ordinance will adopt a newspaper notice
    requirement because State law mandates that one be included. For
    example, before a public hearing on any amendment to the St.
    Mary’s County Zoning Ordinance, the County must give notice in
    a newspaper in general circulation. St. Mary’s County Zoning Ord.
    21.3.1. This provision implements a mandate of public general
    law, which requires public hearings and newspaper notice on
    amendments to zoning regulations, as a condition on the delegation
    of zoning power to counties, see LU § 4-203, and which (as is
    important here) uses the defined phrase “newspaper of general
    circulation,” id. § 4-203(b)(2)(i). When county commissioners
    exercise a delegated power such as zoning, they must comply with
    all procedural limitations that State law imposes on that power.
    See, e.g., Montgomery County v. Revere Nat’l Corp., 
    341 Md. 366
    ,
    391-92 (1996); Walker v. Board of County Comm’rs of Talbot
    County, 
    208 Md. 72
    , 86 (1955); Crozier v. County Comm’rs of
    Prince George’s County, 
    202 Md. 501
    , 506 (1953); see also 2A
    McQuillin, Municipal Corporations § 10:10 (3d ed.) (“[A]
    municipal corporation can exercise the powers expressly conferred
    on it only in the manner prescribed by the statute.”). So when a
    commissioner county adopts an ordinance with a newspaper-
    128                                                      [106 Op. Att’y
    publication requirement in order to comply with a State statute
    mandating “newspaper” publication, the local ordinance must
    comply with the definition of “newspaper” in GP § 1-113. 10
    In sum, although local ordinances that use the word
    “newspaper” incorporate the GP § 1-113 definition by default, the
    County Commissioners may substitute a different definition for
    purposes of any local ordinance’s newspaper publication
    requirement, unless the requirement was adopted to comply with a
    State law that itself mandates publication of notice in a
    “newspaper” or “newspaper in general circulation.”
    B.        Redefining “Newspaper” Without a Public Hearing
    Having concluded that the St. Mary’s County Commissioners
    may adopt their own definition of “newspaper” in some limited
    circumstances, we turn to your second question, which asks
    whether the County Commissioners may do so without holding a
    public hearing under § 9-105 of the Local Government Article.
    Under LG § 9-105, the county commissioners of a
    commissioner county “may not adopt an act, an ordinance, or a
    resolution until 10 days after a public hearing has been held on the
    proposed act, ordinance, or resolution.” LG § 9-105(c)(1). The
    public hearing must be advertised for two weeks in advance of the
    hearing, in a newspaper in general circulation. Id. § 9-105(c)(2).
    These requirements apply only to the exercise of a statutory power
    “that specifically references” section 9-105. Id. § 9-105(b)(1); see
    also Md. Op. Att’y Gen. No. 78-101 (1978) (unpublished). And,
    as relevant here, the requirement specifically exempts “an
    administrative act of the county commissioners of . . . St. Mary’s
    County.” LG § 9-105(b)(2). 11
    10
    Even in such cases, though, a county might be able to adopt an
    additional publication requirement that goes beyond the State-law
    requirement—again assuming the county otherwise has power to
    legislate on the subject. That is, although there is no need to decide this
    question here, when State law requires a county to publish notice of a
    certain action in one “newspaper,” a county might also require itself to
    publish in a second newspaper, which would not necessarily have to
    comply with GP § 1-113. See Letter from Richard E. Israel, Assistant
    Attorney General, to Sen. Frederick C. Malkus, Jr., at 2 (Oct. 13, 1992)
    (“Malkus Letter”); Reed v. President & Comm’rs of Town of North East,
    
    226 Md. 229
    , 249 (1961).
    11
    We understand that the County would adopt any redefinition of
    “newspaper” or “newspaper in general circulation” at an open meeting. See
    Gen. 111]                                                          129
    As a threshold matter, we must consider whether redefining
    “newspaper” for purposes of locally imposed notice requirements
    implicates a delegated power that “specifically references” LG § 9-
    105. In our opinion, the answer is yes: a county’s adoption of a
    newspaper-publication requirement that goes beyond the
    requirements of State law implicates the power delegated by LG
    § 9-107(c) to “provide for advertising, printing, and publishing.”
    To be sure, LG § 9-107(c)’s text is limited to publication of
    “laws, ordinances, resolutions, or regulations adopted by the
    county” as well as the county’s annual financial statements. LG
    § 9-107(c). It does not expressly cover notice of other matters, such
    as upcoming public hearings. But the statute’s purpose and history
    suggest that it was intended to confer power to provide for
    advertising and publishing more generally.
    In its original text (which has since been modified only in
    non-substantive code revision, 2013 Md. Laws, ch. 119), Chapter
    730 granted commissioner counties the power “[t]o provide for
    county advertising, printing and publishing of all laws, ordinances,
    resolutions or regulations, adopted by the County Commissioners
    and the annual statements of receipts and expenditures of the
    County.” 1947 Md. Laws, ch. 730, § 1 (enacting Art. 25, § 2A(j)).
    This original language, in our view, is best read as allowing
    counties to “provide for” three separate categories of publication:
    (1) “county advertising,” (2) “printing and publishing of all laws,
    ordinances, resolutions or regulations, adopted by the County
    Commissioners,” and (3) “the annual statements of receipts and
    expenditures of the County.” Id. 12 We do not think the more
    LG §§ 9-101, 9-512(d). Your question is instead whether that meeting
    would also need to be a “public hearing.” Under the County
    Commissioners’ usual practice, a “public hearing” is apparently
    distinguished from an open meeting in that members of the public are
    given the opportunity to speak at a public hearing. But you have not
    asked us to define “public hearing,” and we need not do so for purposes
    of this opinion.
    12
    A parallel provision for municipalities, enacted two days later,
    supports this reading by more clearly recognizing the three separate
    categories. That parallel provision authorizes municipalities “[t]o
    provide for municipal advertising, for the printing and publication of
    statements of the receipts and expenditures of the municipality, and the
    publication and codification of all laws, ordinances, resolutions, or
    regulations adopted by or affecting the municipality.” 1947 Md. Laws,
    ch. 731, § 1 (enacting Art. 23A, § 2(1)). Additionally, the legislative
    130                                                  [106 Op. Att’y
    recent, non-substantive code revision was intended to change that
    meaning. See Blanton, 
    390 Md. at 538-39
    .
    The statute’s purpose also suggests that it is not limited to
    publication of laws and ordinances. Rather, the General Assembly
    apparently intended to give counties a degree of autonomy with
    respect to printing and advertising generally, see Md. Legislative
    Council, Local Government: A Comparative Study 38-39 (1944),
    replacing the earlier regime under which the Legislature had tightly
    controlled counties’ spending on printing and publishing of all
    kinds, not just of laws and ordinances, see, e.g., 1878 Md. Laws,
    ch. 290 (St. Mary’s County); Prince George’s County Code of
    Public Local Laws § 322 (1930); Cecil County Code of Public
    Local Laws § 138 (1930). We thus read § 9-107(c), in light of its
    history and purpose, as granting commissioner counties general
    authority to provide for printing, publishing, and advertising,
    provided that they remain within the bounds set by other State
    statutes. See Part II.A.1; see Malkus Letter, supra, at 2 (advising
    that LG § 9-107’s predecessor statute authorizes counties to “give
    notice . . . of meetings, procurement, and other activities for which
    State law does not specifically prescribe the notice to be given”).
    We recognize that county commissioners may well have had
    some implied authority to adopt new notice requirements for the
    exercise of their own delegated powers even before LG § 9-107.
    See Scull, 
    249 Md. at 281-82
     (recognizing that even before
    adopting home rule, a county could pass regulations and ordinances
    to “implement and facilitate and insure the proper execution” of the
    General Assembly’s public local laws); cf. Patterson Letter, supra,
    at 1-2 (recognizing charter home rule counties’ implied authority
    to adopt notice rules). But nothing prevents the General Assembly
    from codifying a formerly implicit power of commissioner
    counties and, in doing so, qualifying that power with a new
    procedural limitation, such as a public-hearing requirement. See
    76 Opinions of the Attorney General at 137; Prince George’s
    County Comm’rs v. Mitchell, 
    97 Md. 330
    , 337 (1903) (recognizing
    history indicates that the General Assembly intended to grant
    commissioner counties a power “substantially like” the power conferred
    on charter counties by the original Express Powers Act: “[t]o provide
    for county advertising, printing and publishing, including that of all
    ordinances, by-laws or resolutions adopted by the County Council and
    of annual statements of expenses of the County Government.” 1918 Md.
    Laws, ch. 456 (enacting Art. 25A, § 3(D)) (emphasis added); see Md.
    Legislative Council, Local Government: A Comparative Study 38
    (1944).
    Gen. 111]                                                         131
    that General Assembly may alter or diminish commissioner county
    powers). Because an ordinance or resolution adopted under LG
    § 9-107 is expressly subject to the procedural provisions of LG § 9-
    105, see LG § 9-107(b), the public-hearing requirement would
    apply to such an enactment unless the redefinition of “newspaper”
    qualifies as an “administrative act.” 13
    In determining the meaning of “administrative act” as applied
    here, the history of the exemption in LG § 9-105 for “administrative
    act[s]” is instructive. LG § 9-105’s predecessor originally applied
    to every “act, ordinance or resolution” exercising one of the
    Chapter 730 powers, without exception. 1947 Md. Laws, ch. 730
    (enacting Art. 25, § 2A(r)). In 1965, the General Assembly added
    an exception for an “administrative act or resolution adopted by the
    County Commissioners of Harford County.” 1965 Md. Laws, ch.
    211. The Legislature went on to extend the “administrative act”
    exception to several counties, including St. Mary’s County in 1974.
    1974 Md. Laws, ch. 499.
    At the time the General Assembly first enacted the
    “administrative act” exception in 1965, the Court of Appeals had
    recently established a test for distinguishing between “legislative”
    functions and so-called “administrative” or “executive” functions
    of county governments, Hormes v. Baltimore County, 
    225 Md. 371
    ,
    377-78 (1961)—a distinction that is especially important in
    commissioner counties because the commissioners in such counties
    exercise both legislative and executive functions, see Forty West,
    178 Md. App. at 338-39. The Court explained that “[t]he crucial
    test for determining what is legislative and what is administrative
    has been said to be whether the ordinance is one making a new law
    or one executing a law in existence.” Hormes, 
    225 Md. at 377-78
    (quoting 2 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations § 10:06 (3d ed.)).
    Cases shortly after 1965 reaffirmed that test and the distinction
    between legislative and administrative acts for both home rule and
    13
    This opinion addresses only whether the adoption or amendment of
    a local newspaper-publication requirement is authorized by LG § 9-107
    and thus is subject to the procedural mandate of LG § 9-105. We do not
    consider what procedural requirements may apply to other acts of
    publication. For example, if a commissioner county were to enact an
    ordinance, in compliance with LG § 9-105, authorizing publication of
    documents under certain specified conditions, then individual
    publications under the terms of the ordinance would presumably not
    implicate LG § 9-105 and thus presumably would not require a separate
    hearing.
    132                                                     [106 Op. Att’y
    non–home rule counties, see Scull, 
    249 Md. at 282
     (explaining that
    a measure will ordinarily qualify as legislative if it is “an enactment
    of general application prescribing a new plan or policy”); City of
    Bowie v. County Comm’rs for Prince George’s County, 
    258 Md. 454
    , 463-64 (1970) (same), as have more recent court decisions and
    opinions from our Office, see Queen Anne’s Conservation, Inc. v.
    County Comm’rs of Queen Anne’s County, 
    382 Md. 306
    , 326-27
    (2004); 66 Opinions of the Attorney General 253, 257-58 (1981);
    Md. Op. Att’y Gen. No. 77-001 (1977) (unpublished). 14 So while
    we need not define “administrative act” for all purposes, we can
    conclude that acts that are legislative in nature do not qualify, in
    light of the general legal background in 1965 that recognized the
    “legislative” and “administrative” categories as distinct and
    mutually exclusive.
    Based on that understanding of the statute, it is clear that
    adopting a new definition of “newspaper” that differs from GP § 1-
    113 would not be an “administrative act.” Because a statutory
    definition is a part of a law that uses the defined term, and an
    existing definition cannot be changed without amending the law in
    question, see Part II.A.1, supra, a change to the definition of
    “newspaper” in local ordinances would necessarily be a legislative
    act, not an administrative one. Such an act would alter existing law
    (that is, it would amend earlier legislative acts), rather than merely
    implement existing law. See 6 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations
    § 21:1 (3d ed.) (“Amendment to an ordinance is a legislative act
    and when amending a council is acting in a legislative capacity.”);
    see also Town of New Market v. Milrey, Inc.-FDI P’ship, 
    90 Md. App. 528
    , 541 (1992) (amendment to annexation resolution is
    subject to the same procedural requirements as original resolution);
    accord Margolis v. District Court, 
    638 P.2d 297
    , 303-04 (Colo.
    1981); Arnel Dev. Co. v. City of Costa Mesa, 
    620 P.2d 565
    , 569
    (Cal. 1980). The adoption of a new definition of “newspaper” in a
    particular ordinance would also be legislative in that it would be
    14
    Consistent with that well-understood distinction between legislative
    and administrative acts, when the General Assembly enacted the law that
    extended the “administrative act” exception to St. Mary’s County, the
    Legislature also added a provision to the St. Mary’s County Code which
    established the same procedural requirements as LG § 9-105 but
    affirmatively applied them only to “ordinance[s],” defined as
    “permanent rule[s] of law enacted by the County Commissioners.” 1974
    Md. Laws, ch. 499. This parallel provision was later repealed, possibly
    as superfluous. See 1980 Md. Laws, ch. 235. Read together, these two
    provisions of Chapter 499 contemplated that in St. Mary’s County the
    public-hearing requirement would at a minimum apply to ordinances,
    defined as measures establishing permanent rules of law.
    Gen. 111]                                                         133
    “an enactment of general application prescribing a new plan or
    policy” for notice under the affected ordinance. See, e.g., Queen
    Anne’s Conservation, Inc., 
    382 Md. at 326
     (quoting City of Bowie,
    
    258 Md. at 463
    ). The adoption of a new definition of “newspaper”
    thus would not qualify for the exemption from the public hearing
    requirement in LG § 9-105 for “administrative” acts.
    III
    Conclusion
    In our opinion, the St. Mary’s County Commissioners may
    adopt a definition of “newspaper” and “newspaper in general
    circulation” that differs from the definition in GP § 1-113, but only
    for purposes of local ordinances rather than public general laws or
    public local laws enacted by the General Assembly and, even then,
    only when the local ordinance in question is based on State
    enabling legislation that does not itself require publication of notice
    in a “newspaper” or “newspaper in general circulation.” It is also
    our opinion that, if the St. Mary’s County Commissioners seek to
    amend the definition of “newspaper” or “newspaper in general
    circulation” for purposes of local ordinances, the amendment
    would not be an “administrative act,” and would be subject to the
    procedural requirements of LG § 9-105, including the requirement
    of a public hearing.
    Brian E. Frosh
    Attorney General of Maryland
    Thomas S. Chapman
    Assistant Attorney General
    Patrick B. Hughes
    Chief Counsel, Opinions & Advice