Fair Elections Portland, Inc., et al. v. City of Portland , 2023 ME 9 ( 2023 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                           Reporter of Decisions
    Decision: 
    2023 ME 9
    Docket:   Cum-22-91
    Argued:   November 3, 2022
    Decided:  January 26, 2023
    Panel:       STANFILL, C.J., and MEAD, JABAR, HORTON, CONNORS, and LAWRENCE, JJ.
    FAIR ELECTIONS PORTLAND, INC., et al.
    v.
    CITY OF PORTLAND
    JABAR, J.
    [¶1] Fair Elections Portland, Inc., and ten individual voters (collectively,
    FEP) appeal from a Superior Court order (Cumberland County, McKeon, J.)
    denying their M.R. Civ. P. 80B petition for review of the City of Portland’s
    decision to classify their proposed modification to the Portland City Charter,
    which would establish a public financing mechanism for city elections, as a
    “revision” of, instead of an “amendment” to, the charter. We dismiss the appeal
    as moot.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] The classification of a proposed charter modification as a revision
    rather than an amendment is significant because under the Home Rule Act,
    2
    30-A M.R.S. §§ 2101-2109 (2021),1 a proposed amendment must be submitted
    directly to the voters in a municipal election, see 30-A M.R.S. §§ 2104(1)-(2),
    2105(2), whereas a proposed revision can be submitted to the voters only upon
    recommendation of a charter commission, see 30-A M.R.S. §§ 2102(1)-(2),
    2103(5)(D), (6), 2105(1). See Fair Elections Portland, Inc. v. City of Portland
    (FEP I), 
    2021 ME 32
    , ¶ 4, 
    252 A.3d 504
    .
    [¶3] After classifying FEP’s proposed charter modification as a revision,
    the City formed a charter commission to, inter alia, consider the proposed
    mechanism for public campaign financing. The Charter Commission then
    recommended a modification to the City Charter establishing a mechanism for
    public campaign financing that was similar to the one proposed by FEP and that
    was put before voters in November 2022. Voters approved the measure, which
    received 65.3% of the vote. City of Portland, General Municipal Election on
    11/8/2022: Referendum Results, https://content.civicplus.com/api/assets/
    dec12b09-575a-4da0-94bb-db63f30f272d?cache=1800                              [https://perma.cc/
    E95N-RGZS] (last visited Jan. 17, 2023).
    1 Section 2102 of the Home Rule Act has been amended effective after the City Council voted not
    to send the proposed modification to the voters, but the amendments do not affect our analysis here.
    See P.L. 2019, ch. 149, §§ 1-2 (effective Sept. 19, 2019) (codified at 30-A M.R.S. § 2102(3)(B), (5)(A)
    (2021)). For consistency, all citations to the Home Rule Act in this opinion are to the 2021 version of
    the statutes.
    3
    [¶4] FEP’s proposed charter modification reads as follows:
    Section 12. Public Financing of Municipal Elections
    The city council shall establish and fund a mechanism
    providing public campaign funds to qualified candidates for mayor,
    city council, and school board. The mechanism must provide
    sufficient funds to allow candidates who meet qualifying criteria to
    conduct competitive campaigns, must be voluntary, must limit the
    amount of private funds a candidate may raise, must only be
    available to candidates who demonstrate public support, and must
    be limited to candidates who enter into a binding agreement not to
    accept private contributions other than those allowed by the public
    funding program. The mechanism must be available by the
    2021 municipal elections.
    [¶5] The Charter Commission’s proposed modification reads as follows:
    Section 12. Public financing of municipal elections.
    The city council shall establish and fully fund a City of
    Portland Clean Election Fund (hereinafter, the “Clean Election
    Fund” or the “Fund”) to provide public campaign funds to qualified
    candidates for elected municipal offices. The Clean Election Fund
    must be available to candidates in municipal elections beginning in
    FY 2023-2024. Candidate participation in the Clean Election Fund
    shall be voluntary.
    Beginning in FY 2023-2024 to allow for implementation for
    the November 2023 election, the city council shall provide an
    independent allocation from the city’s budget each year to ensure
    the Clean Election Fund is sustained at a level that facilitates
    competitive campaigns for participating candidates who meet
    qualifying criteria. The Clean Election Fund shall be administered
    by the city clerk and the city council shall appropriate sufficient
    funds to ensure there are adequate resources, including paid staff,
    to effectively administer the Fund.
    4
    The city council shall maintain an ordinance directing the
    operation of the Clean Election Fund. The ordinance shall direct
    that the Clean Election Fund must:
    (a)    Limit the amount of private funds a participating
    candidate may raise;
    (b)    Be limited to candidates who
    i.     demonstrate public support;
    ii.    enter into a binding agreement stating that
    the candidate will not accept private
    contributions other than those which are
    permitted by the Clean Election Fund; and
    iii.   agree to participate in at least one (1) city-
    sponsored forum or voter education event.
    (c)    Require that all unused funds from a participating
    candidate’s campaign be returned to the Clean Election
    Fund within one hundred (100) days after the date of
    the election.
    The city council may adopt additional regulations and
    ordinances not inconsistent with this section
    City of Portland, Portland Charter Commission – Final Report: BALLOT
    QUESTION #3—Clean Elections, https://content.civicplus.com/api/assets/
    42c7a724-1d31-4c4b-97aa-712a72400732?cache=1800                [https://perma.cc/
    5USS-NKZ8] (last visited Jan. 17, 2023).         The same ballot question also
    proposed a new section 13 of the charter, which would adopt campaign finance
    rules for all candidates for municipal offices. Id.
    [¶6] After voters approved the modification proposed by the Charter
    Commission (the Clean Election Fund) during the November 2022 election, we
    5
    issued an order requiring FEP to show cause why the matter pending before us
    should not be dismissed as moot. FEP contends that the case is not moot
    because the measure could still be considered by voters and given effect as
    written because the Clean Election Fund, which has now been adopted by
    voters, is not yet “valid and recognizable” and it is not identical to FEP’s
    proposed charter modification. It also contends that even if the matter is moot,
    we should reach the merits under the exceptions to the mootness doctrine
    because the public has an interest in the stable and efficient administration of
    the Home Rule Act by municipal officers statewide, we have not yet conclusively
    resolved this important question of law, and by not reaching the merits of the
    matter the City of Portland’s position will act as precedent that has the potential
    to be applied to other Maine charters and charter modifications.
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶7]   As noted, FEP challenges the actions of the City of Portland
    determining that the voters’ initiative promoted by FEP to establish a public
    financing mechanism for city elections would effectuate a revision to the
    Portland City Charter, rather than an amendment, and therefore declining to
    conduct a referendum vote on the proposed modification.
    6
    A.    Mootness
    [¶8] Because FEP seeks a holding that its proposed charter modification
    was an amendment, rather than a revision, and should therefore be presented
    to the voters, and because in the November 2022 election voters approved a
    question on the ballot establishing a mechanism for public campaign financing
    that was proposed by the Charter Commission—the Clean Election Fund—the
    question of mootness necessarily hinges on the similarities and differences
    between these competing proposals. If the Clean Election Fund is substantially
    similar to FEP’s proposed charter modification, there is no real and substantial
    controversy, and this appeal is moot and therefore not justiciable. See Mainers
    for Fair Bear Hunting v. Dep’t of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife, 
    2016 ME 57
    , ¶¶ 5-6,
    
    136 A.3d 714
     (“An issue is moot when there remains no real and substantial
    controversy, admitting of specific relief through a judgment of conclusive
    character.” (quotation marks omitted)).
    1.    FEP’s Proposed Charter Modification
    [¶9] FEP’s proposed charter modification sought to add, as section 12 of
    the Portland City Charter, a requirement that the City Council “establish and
    fund a mechanism providing public campaign funds to qualified candidates for
    mayor, city council, and school board” that would provide “sufficient funds to
    7
    allow candidates who meet qualifying criteria to conduct competitive
    campaigns.” The “qualifying criteria” required by FEP’s proposed charter
    modification would include that the program: (1) “be voluntary”; (2) “limit the
    amount of private funds a candidate may raise”; (3) “only be available to
    candidates who demonstrate public support”; and (4) “be limited to candidates
    who enter into a binding agreement not to accept private contributions other
    than those allowed by the public funding program.”
    2.    Clean Election Fund
    [¶10] The Clean Election Fund accomplishes all of the same goals as
    FEP’s proposed charter modification, with some additions. The Clean Election
    Fund, added as section 12 of the Portland City Charter, requires that the City
    Council “establish and fully fund a City of Portland Clean Election Fund . . . to
    provide public campaign funds to qualified candidates for elected municipal
    offices.” (Emphasis added.) The Clean Election Fund uses the phrase “elected
    municipal offices,” which broadens the scope of the public funding mechanism
    from the “mayor, city council, and school board” positions proposed by FEP.
    [¶11] The Clean Election Fund also clarifies the language around the
    funding mechanism. Whereas FEP’s proposed charter modification would
    require the public campaign funding mechanism to “provide sufficient funds to
    8
    allow candidates . . . to conduct competitive campaigns,” the Clean Election
    Fund is more specific and comprehensive, requiring that the City Council “fully
    fund” the Clean Election Fund by “provid[ing] an independent allocation from
    the city’s budget each year to ensure the Clean Election Fund is sustained at a
    level that facilitates competitive campaigns for participating candidates” and,
    separately, that the City Council “appropriate sufficient funds to ensure there
    are adequate resources, including paid staff, to effectively administer the Fund.”
    (Emphasis added.)     The difference between fully funding and sufficiently
    funding the program is inconsequential because the outcome is the same—the
    establishment of a public campaign funding program that allows qualifying
    candidates to conduct competitive campaigns.
    [¶12] Regarding qualifying criteria, the Clean Election Fund includes all
    of the same qualifying criteria as FEP’s proposed charter modification: (1) that
    participation “be voluntary,” (2) that “the amount of private funds a
    participating candidate may raise” be limited, (3) that the program be “limited
    to candidates who demonstrate public support,” and (4) that the funds be
    available only to candidates who will “enter into a binding agreement stating
    that the candidate will not accept private contributions other than those which
    are permitted by the Clean Election Fund.” However, the Clean Election Fund
    9
    goes further and requires that qualified candidates “agree to participate in at
    least one (1) city-sponsored forum or voter education event” and that “all
    unused funds . . . be returned to the Clean Election Fund.” Finally, the Clean
    Election Fund includes language that allows the City Council to “adopt
    additional regulations and ordinances not inconsistent with [section 12].”
    [¶13]   In addition to the section 12 language, the ballot question
    approved by the voters added section 13 to the charter, which establishes
    campaign finance rules. City of Portland, Portland Charter Commission – Final
    Report:        BALLOT          QUESTION           #3—Clean           Elections,
    https://content.civicplus.com/api/assets/42c7a724-1d31-4c4b-97aa-
    712a72400732?cache=1800        [https://perma.cc/5USS-NKZ8]      (last   visited
    Jan. 17, 2023). Because these rules govern campaign contributions, spending,
    and reporting for all candidates, and are not exclusive to candidates using the
    Clean Election Fund established by section 12, the provisions of section 13 are
    of no consequence to our analysis.
    B.    Conclusion
    [¶14] Because the Clean Election Fund is substantially similar to FEP’s
    proposed charter modification, with no conflicts, the issue on appeal is moot
    and therefore not justiciable. The requirement that the program be fully funded
    10
    under the Clean Election Fund, as opposed to sufficiently funded under FEP’s
    proposed modification, ensures that the program not only meets but exceeds
    the funding requirements sought by FEP. FEP wanted a public campaign
    financing program for local elections, and it got one. The issue is moot.
    [¶15] Further, there is no reason for us to hold that any of the exceptions
    to the mootness doctrine apply. Exceptions to the mootness doctrine apply
    when
    (1) sufficient collateral consequences will result from the
    determination of the questions presented so as to justify relief;
    (2) the appeal contains questions of great public concern that, in
    the interest of providing future guidance to the bar and public we
    may address; or (3) the issues are capable of repetition but evade
    review because of their fleeting or determinate nature.
    See Mainers for Fair Bear Hunting, 
    2016 ME 57
    , ¶ 7, 
    136 A.3d 714
     (quotation
    marks omitted). In its memorandum in response to the show cause order, FEP
    contends that all three exceptions apply, but it focuses on the public concern
    exception, arguing that we need to give guidance to municipalities regarding a
    standard to determine whether a measure is a revision or an amendment. We
    disagree. In FEP I, we thoroughly discussed the meaning of “revision” and
    “amendment” under the statute. 
    2021 ME 32
    , ¶¶ 28-34, 
    252 A.3d 504
    . We held
    that determining whether a proposed charter modification was an amendment
    11
    or a revision was a mixed question of fact and law, and that framework is more
    than adequate guidance for municipalities. Id. ¶¶ 33-38.
    The entry is:
    Appeal dismissed.
    Benjamin Gaines, Esq. (orally), Gaines Law, LLC, Portland, and John R.
    Brautigam, Esq., John R. Brautigam, Esq., LLC, Falmouth, for appellants Fair
    Elections Portland, Inc., and ten individual voters
    Jen Thompson, Esq., and Amy R. McNally, Esq. (orally), City of Portland,
    Portland, for appellee City of Portland
    Cumberland County Superior Court docket number AP-2021-32
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Cum-22-91

Citation Numbers: 2023 ME 9

Judges: Valerie Stanfill, Andrew M. Mead, Jospeh M. Jabar, Andrew M. Horton, Catherine R. Connors, Rick E. Lawrence

Filed Date: 1/26/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/27/2023