Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1998 )


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  •                                   @ffice of tlje Rlttornep QSeneral
    iState of ZBexa8
    DAN MORALES
    ATTORNEY
    GENERAL                                      December 21,199s
    Mr. James D. Goerke                                         Opinion No. DM-494
    Executive Director, Advisory Commission
    on State Emergency Communications                         Re: Whether an emergency communications
    333 Guadalupe Street, Suite 2-212                           district may unilaterally           withdraw    from
    Austin, Texas 78701-3942                                    participation in a regional 9-l - 1 plan under Health
    and Safety Code chapter 77 1 and related questions
    (RQ-1021)
    Dear Mr. Goerke:
    You request an opinion from this office regarding the provisions of chapter 771 of the Health
    and Safety Code (the “act”). You first ask whether an emergency communications district as defined
    by section 771.001(3)(A) of the act that elected to participate in a regional 9-l-l service’ plan may
    unilaterally withdraw from the plan. Because the act expressly provides that a district’s participation
    in a regional plan is optional, we conclude that it may so withdraw. You next ask whether the
    district or the Advisory Commission on State Emergency Communications (the “advisory
    commission”) determines when the withdrawal is effective. Based on our prior answer, we conclude
    that the withdrawal is effective on the date determined by the district. Finally, you ask whether the
    advisory commission must distribute a portion of the wireless 9-l-l emergency service fee
    authorized by section 771.071 l(a) of the act to a district that withdraws from a regional plan.
    Because the act requires distribution of a portion of the fee to a district that does not participate in
    a regional plan, we conclude the advisory commission must distribute a portion of the fee to a
    district that withdraws from a plan.
    Before discussing your specific questions, we briefly review the relevant parts ofthe act. The
    legislature adopted the act in 1987 to implement a statewide 9-l-l emergency telephone number
    service.* The act requires the advisory commission to administer implementation of the statewide
    9-l-l service. The advisory commission is directed, among other things, to approve regional plans
    “I ‘9-1-I service’ means a telecommunication   service that provides the user of the public telephone system the
    ability to reach a public safety answering point by dialing the digits 9-l-l.”   Health & Safety Code $ 771.001(6).
    ?SeeActofMayZl,     1987,70thLeg.,  RX, ch. 236,1987Tex.       Gen. Laws 1541,1546;HouseComm.           onState
    Affairs, Bill Analysis, H.B. 911,7Oth Leg. (1987) (Purpose).
    Mr. JamesD. Goerke - Page 2                                          (DM-494)
    for establishing and operating a 9-l-l service, and to allocate money to prepare and operate the
    regional plan~.~
    An emergency communications district (“district”),4 may choose to participate in a regional
    plan for 9-l-l service for the region in which the district is located on approval of the advisory
    commission.5 A regional plan is developed and submitted for the advisory commission’s approval
    by each regional planning commission established under Local Government Code chapter 391 (the
    “regional commission”)6 for the region the regional planning commission serves.’ Participation in
    the plan does not affect the organization or operation of the district except that the district may not
    collect an emergency communication or other special fee for 9-l-l service unless permitted by the
    act.*
    The act authorizes the advisory commission to impose certain fees to finance the regional
    9-l-l service plans. The advisory commission may impose a 9-l-l emergency service fee
    on each local exchange access line or equivalent local exchange access line.’ The emergency fee is
    ‘Health&Safety       Code $ 771.051(a)(l),   (3), (5)
    ‘Health and Safety Code section 771.001(3)        states that   an “[e]mergencycommunicationdistrict”means:
    (A) a public agency OI group of public agencies acting jointly that provided 9-l-l
    service before September 1,1987, OI that had voted or contracted before that date to provide
    that service; 01
    (B) a district created under Subchapter           B, C, or D, Chapter    772 [of the Local
    Government Code]. [Footnotes omitted.]
    Section 771.001(7)     states fhat “public agency,” in turn, means:
    the state, a municipality, a county, an emergency comnnmication district, a regional planning
    commission, an appraisal district, or any other political subdivision or district that provides,
    participates in the provision of, 01 has authority to provide fire-fighting, law enforcement,
    ambulance, medical, 9-l-1, 01 other emergency services.
    ‘Health & Safety Code 5 771.058(b).
    41d. 5 771.001( 10) (definition   of regional planning    commission).
    ‘
    Id. 5 77
    1.055,
    81d. 5 771.058(c).
    91d. 5 77 1.07 l(a). These fees are delivered to the regional planning commissions        and distributed   to public
    agencies   in the county for use in providing 9-l-l service. 
    Id. 5 771.071(e),
    (0.
    P.     2814
    Mr. James D. Goerke - Page 3                                   (DM-494)
    not applicable to and may not be imposed in a non-participating district.“’ In addition to the 9-l-l
    emergency service fee, the advisory commission may impose a 9- I- 1 equalization surcharge on each
    customer receiving intrastate long-distance service, including customers served by a non-
    participating district.” Finally, in this past legislative session, the legislature authorized the advisory
    commission to impose a 9-l-l emergency service fee on each wireless telecommunications
    comtection.‘2 Moneys collected pursuant to this authorization are distributed by the advisory
    commission to each regional planning commission and district in proportion to the population served
    by the commission or district and may be used only for services related to providing 9-l -1 service.”
    Having reviewed the relevant portions of the act, we turn back to your specific questions.
    We understand from briefs submitted by the advisory commission and the City of Corpus Christi
    (the “city”) that the circumstances giving rise to your questions are as follows: The city has provided
    9-l-l service throughout the municipality since November 1985, and is therefore an emergency
    communication district described in section 771.001(3)(A) of the act, which is not required to, but
    may, participate in a regional plan to provide 9-l-l service. The city chose to participate in a
    regional plan developed by the Coastal Bend Council of Governments (“CBCOG”) for the Coastal
    Bend Region (the “Coastal plan”) by a resolution adopted on July 7, 1988. The advisory
    commission approved the Coastal plan, which included the city, on January 10,199O. On July 31,
    1990, the city entered into an Interlocal Cooperation Agreement with CBCOG (the “interlocal
    agreement”), extending initially through December 31, 1995, “to provide for the administration of
    9-l-l service in the CBCOG region as authorized by Article 1432(f) [,] Sec. S(b) [Health and Safety
    Code section 771.055(b)] and Article 4413(32c) [Government Code chapter 7911 V.T.C.S.“‘4 The
    city now desires to withdraw from participation in the Coastal plan effective January 1, 1998, and
    has requested that the advisory commission cease collecting the 9- I- 1 emergency service fee within
    the city effective June 1, 1998.
    Because the act does not specifically authorize a district to terminate its participation in a
    regional plan, you first ask whether the city as an emergency communication district that elected to
    participate in a regional 9-l-l plan may later unilaterally withdraw from the plan. No Texas case
    or attorney general opinion has addressed this question. Several principles, however, guide us in
    answering this question of first impression. Our ultimate purpose must be to effect the legislature’s
    “Id. $ 771.071(a),(d)
    “Id. g 77 1.072(a). A portion of the equalization surcharges collected is allocated by the advisory commission
    to the Texas Department of Health and to each planning commission or its designated public agency to carry out the
    regional plans. Id, $771.072(d), (e). The balance of the surcharge is appropriated to the advisory commission to fund
    approved regional plans and regional poison control centers and to carry out its duties under the act. 
    Id. 5 77
    1.072(f).
    ‘*Zd. 5 771.0711(a).
    “
    Id. 5 77
    1.0711(c)
    “Interlocal   Cooperation   Agreement   at 1, July 3 1, 1990
    p.     2815
    Mr. James D. Goerke - Page 4                                (DM-494)
    intent.15 The primary indicator of legislative intent is the statute’s literal language because it best
    indicates the legislature’s intent at the time it adopted the statute. I6 The existence or nonexistence
    of the particular intent of a statute may be inferred from the fact that the statute does not contain a
    certain provision. ” Lastly the consequences of a particular construction may be considered in
    construing a statute. I* Apilication of these principles leads us to conclude that the legislature
    intended a district’s participation in a regional plan to be optional, which necessarily implies that
    that a district may withdraw from a regional plan when it no longer desires to participate.
    Looking at the literal language of the act, we observe that the act expressly provides for a
    district’s optional participation in a regional plan. Section 771.058(a) provides that a county of a
    population of 120,000 or less or another public agency located in the county is not required to
    participate in a regional plan but may choose to do so. Similarly subsection (b) provides that a
    district may choose to participate in the regional plan. By definition, optional participation implies
    the authority not to participate in a regional plan if a district does not so desire.19
    A district does not lose its authority to choose not to participate in a regional plan by its
    initial participation in theplan. Section 771.058(c) expressly provides thatparticipationin aregional
    plan does not affect the organization or operation of a district except that it may not collect the
    emergency communication fee or other special fee for 9-l-l service not permitted by the act.
    Participation in a regional plan does not change a district’s identity or authority. The only express
    limitation on a district’s authority resulting Tom the participation is that the district may not collect
    9-l-l service fees not permitted by the act. There are no other limitations. Thus, a district’s
    authority to choose not to participate in a plan does not change by its participation.
    Significantly, there is no provision expressly prohibiting a district from terminating its
    participation in a regional plan or stating that participation in a plan is perpetual. If the legislature
    intended a district’s participation to be perpetual, we believe it would have so provided and made
    that intention clear.20 It has not done so and we cannot read into the act such an onerous restriction
    ‘5Texas Water Comm’n Y Brushy CreekMun.        Util. D&t,, 917 S.W.Zd 19,21 (Tex. 1996).
    ‘bEldridge Y. State, 940 S.W.Zd 646,652   (Tex. Grim. App. 1996),
    “State v. Kaiser, 822 S.W.Zd 697,700 (Tex. App.--Fort Worth 1991, tit         ref d); see also State v. Broaddus,
    952 S.W.Zd 598, 601 n.4 (Tex. App.--Houston  [14th Dist.] 1997, no writ).
    ‘“Gov’t Code 5 311.023(5)
    ?See Gov’t Code 5 3 11 .Ol l(a) (“Words and phrases shall be read in context and construed according to rules
    of grammar and cmnnmn usage.“); WEBSTER’S NINTH NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY 829 (deftig                     “optional” as
    “involving an option” and “not compulsory”); 
    id. (defining “option”
    as “an act of choosing,” “the power or right to
    choose: freedom of choice”).
    Yiee Eldridge, 940 S.W.Zd at 652 (primary indicator of legislative   intent is stahlte’s literal language); Kaiser,
    (continued...)
    p.   2816
    Mr. James D. Goerke - Page 5                                    (DM-494)
    based on the legislature’s failure to expressly provide that a district may unilaterally withdraw from
    a regional plan as the advisory commission argues. Construing the act to prohibit a district from
    withdrawing from a regional plan would require adistrict to continue participating when it no longer
    desires or considers it beneficial to its residents to do so. *’ If the legislature had intended such a
    result, it would have expressly so provided.
    Given our conclusion that the act impliedly authorizes a district to withdraw from a regional
    plan, we do not address the city’s arguments that its participation in and withdrawal from the Coastal
    plan is governed by the interlocal agreement with CBCO@* or by the city’s status as a home rule
    city.
    You next ask whether the advisory commission or a district determines the effective date of
    a district’s withdrawal from a regional plan given the act’s silence on the subject. Based on our
    conclusion above that optional participation means that a district may terminate its participation in
    a regional plan when it no longer desires to participate in the plan, it follows that the effective date
    of its withdrawal must be the date determined by the district. Determination by any other entity
    would allow that entity to dictate the duration of a district’s participation. This result would render
    meaningless the statutory provision for a district’s optional participation.             Presumably, a
    withdrawing district will designate an effective withdrawal date after conferring with the advisory
    commission and the regional commission that allows the parties to responsibly address those matters
    impacting on emergency 9-l-l service in the region and in the state.
    Finally, you ask whether the advisory commission must distribute a portion of the wireless
    9-l-l service fees to an emergency communication district, “which once participated in a regional
    plan but is no longer participating in a regional plan[.]” Because the statute expressly requires it,
    we conclude in the affirmative.
    Section 771.071 I(c) provides that within 15 days of the date of collection of the wireless 9-
    l-l service fees
    the advisory commission shall distribute to each regional planning
    commission and emergency communication district a portion of the 
    money 822 S.W.2d at 700
    (existence   01 nonexistence   ofparticular   intent may be inferred from fact that statute does not contain
    certain provision).
    “See Gov’t Code 5 311.023(5)     (court may consider consequence        of a particular   construction),
    %I any case, this offke does not construe 01 interpret contxxts. See, e.g., Attorney General Opinions DM- 192
    (1992) at 10, JM-697 (1987) at 6. We note, however, that the interlocal contract plainly states that the contract is for
    the administration  of and not for participation in the Coastal plan. See Interlocal Contract Agreement at 1; Health &
    Safety Code § 771. 055(b) (regional plan may be administered by emergency communication            district, municipality,
    county, or combination of these, or by other means as determined by regional commission).
    D.   2817
    Mr. James D. Goerke - Page 6                          (DM-494)
    that bears the same proportion to the total amount collected that the
    population of the area served by the commission or district bears to the total
    combined population of the areas served by a commission or district.
    Unlike the emergency service fee that the advisory commission may only impose in geographical
    areas participating in a regional ~lan,*~the advisory commission is authorized to collect the wireless
    9-l-l service fee statewide.z4 However, the advisory commission must remit to the regional
    commissions and the districts an amount proportional to the population served by the regional
    commission and the districts. Population of a district that is no longer participating in a regional
    plan is, of course, no longer served by the regional commission but by the district. Therefore, by
    terms of the statute, the district is entitled to that portion of the moneys collected that is proportional
    to the population the district serves.
    z3.SeeHealth & Safety Code § 771.071(a)
    *‘Seeid. $771.0711(a).
    p.   2818
    (DM-494)
    Mr. James D. Goerke - Page 7
    SUMMARY
    Chapter 771 of the Health and Safety Code impliedly authorizes an
    emergency communication district that elected to participate in a regional
    plan for 9-l-l service to unilaterally withdraw from the plan. Withdrawal
    from a plan is effective on the date determined by the district. The Advisory
    Commission on State Emergency Communications must distribute a portion
    ofthe wireless 9-l-l emergency fees collected to the district that withdraws.
    DAN MORALES
    Attorney General of Texas
    JORGE VEGA
    First Assistant Attorney General
    SARAH .I. SHIRLEY
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    p. 2819
    

Document Info

Docket Number: DM-494

Judges: Dan Morales

Filed Date: 7/2/1998

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017