Judges: WINSTON BRYANT, Attorney General
Filed Date: 4/14/1997
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable David Malone State Senator P.O. Box 1048 Fayetteville, Arkansas 72702-1048
Dear Senator Malone:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on whether the provisions of A.C.A. §
By way of background, you have stated that:
1. Fayetteville (the City), formerly under a city manager form of government, is currently governed under the mayor-council form of government.
2. The City is divided into four (4) wards and chose by ordinance that all of its eight (8) aldermen be elected by ward and voted upon by the qualified electors of the ward from which the person is a candidate (pursuant to A.C.A. §
14-43-307 (b)(1)(A)).3. The City's Aldermen are currently elected to two year terms at each regular general election.
4. The Mayor is currently serving a four (4) year term which expires at the end of 1998.
5. The City Attorney and City Clerk are currently serving four (4) years terms which expire at the end of 1998.
6. The Municipal Judge is currently serving a four (4) year term which expires at the end of 2000.
You pose the following questions relative to these facts:
Assuming the special census certifies in 1997 that Fayetteville has a population of 50,000 persons or more:
1. Is a special census the ``latest federal census' for purposes of A.C.A. §
14-43-303 (a)(1)(A)?
If so, please also address the following questions:
1. Under A.C.A. §
14-43-303 the mayor is to be elected in the general election in the year 1960 and every 4 years thereafter. This would require the mayor to be elected to a four (4) year term in the general election in the year 2000. How should Fayetteville's mayor comply with this requirement? Should Fayetteville's mayor run for a two (2) year term in 1998 and in 2000 for a four (4) year term, or is some other method required?2. Under A.C.A. §
14-43-303 one (1) alderman from each ward is elected every four (4) years after 1960 and 1 alderman from each ward is elected every four (4) years after 1962. How should Fayetteville's aldermen comply with this requirement? Should one (1) alderman from each ward run for a two year term in 1998 and 1 alderman from each ward run for a four (4) year term in 1998, or is some other method required? If one (1) alderman in each ward must run for a two year term, how is that alderman to be selected?3. Under A.C.A. §
14-43-303 , the municipal judge is to be elected in the general election in the year 1962 and every four (4) years thereafter. How should Fayetteville's municipal judge comply with this requirement? Should Fayetteville's municipal judge serve out his present term expiring in 2000, run for a two (2) year term in 2000, and then run for a four (4) year term in 2002, or is some other method required?4. Under A.C.A. §
14-43-303 , the city clerk is to be elected in the general election in the year 1960 and every four (4) years thereafter. This would require the city clerk to be elected to a four (4) year term in the year 2000. How should Fayetteville's city clerk comply with this requirement? Should Fayetteville's city clerk run for a two (2) year term in 1998 and in 2000 for a four (4) year term, or is some other method required?5. A.C.A. §
14-43-303 (b) states that all qualified electors residing in these cities and entitled to vote in the elections shall have the right to vote at their several voting precincts for each and every candidate so to be nominated or elected. Fayetteville chose by ordinance enacted pursuant to A.C.A. §14-43-307 to have each alderman voted upon only by the qualified electors of the ward from which the person is a candidate. Does A.C.A. §14-43-303 allow this or does it require city wide elections for aldermen in cities of 50,000 or more even though they run from wards?
It is my opinion that the answer to your first question is "no," and that an answer to your remaining questions is therefore unnecessary.
As you have noted, the language used in the Arkansas Code Annotated §
Neither the legislature, nor the Code Revision Commission's language refers to the "federal Decennial census," which is the general census taken every ten years at the end of each decade. The legislature refers, rather, to "the Federal Census," and the Code compilers to "the latest federal census." The question presented is whether these references should be construed to include a "special census." Although it is not indicated in your request, I assume that the special census being conducted is also undertaken in some way under the auspices of the federal government or the "Bureau of the Census." See
In my opinion the language of the original act is helpful in ascertaining and giving effect to the legislative intent, which is the guidepost of all attempts at statutory construction. See, e.g., Henson v. FleetMortgage Co.,
It is therefore my opinion that the answer to your first question is "no." Answers to your remaining questions are therefore unnecessary.
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Deputy Attorney General Elana C. Wills.
Sincerely,
WINSTON BRYANT Attorney General
WB:ECW/cyh
Sproul v. State , 153 Fla. 892 ( 1944 )
McClanahan v. Woodward Construction Co. , 77 Wyo. 362 ( 1957 )
People v. Enlow , 135 Colo. 249 ( 1957 )
Henson v. Fleet Mortgage Co. , 319 Ark. 491 ( 1995 )
Harp v. Abrahamson , 248 Iowa 222 ( 1957 )