Judges: Bill McCollum, Attorney General
Filed Date: 10/8/2007
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Mr. Jarret:
You have asked for my opinion on substantially the following questions:
1. Whether the Polk County Charter may be amended to limit the power of the county and each of the county's incorporated municipalities to increase the current total residential density allocation?
2. Whether Article
VIII , section4 , Florida Constitution, requires dual referenda conducted by both the county and the individual municipalities to amend the Polk County Charter to provide for countywide uniform land regulation?3. Whether section
100.371 , Florida Statutes, is applicable to amendments to a county charter?
According to your letter, a group of Polk County citizens is collecting signatures to place a charter amendment on the ballot that would create a countywide uniform comprehensive plan relative to the rules and regulations controlling land use and planning activities. You question whether such a countywide provision would be effective in light of the language in section
Question One
Article
"Charter government. Counties operating under county charters shall have all powers of local self-government not inconsistent with general law, or with special law approved by vote of the electors. The governing body of a county operating under a charter may enact county ordinances not inconsistent with general law. The charter shall provide which shall prevail in the event of conflict between county and municipal ordinances."
Thus, charter counties have a direct constitutional grant of broad powers of self-government, which include the power of county citizens to enable their county to enact regulations of county-wide effect which preempt conflicting municipal ordinances.2
Article
Polk County adopted a charter in 1998.4 It is, then, within the scope of the county's powers to adopt a charter provision that controls in the event of a conflict between county ordinances and municipal ordinances. Information supplied with your request indicates that you question whether the citizens' petition would divest the local government of land planning duties and responsibilities and contravene section
Section
It is the responsibility of the local planning agency to prepare the comprehensive plan or plan amendments and to make recommendations to the governing body regarding the adoption or amendment of the plan. As recognized by the statute, "[i] n the case of chartered counties, the planning responsibility between the county and the several municipalities therein shall be as stipulated in the charter."7
Further, section
A recent appellate case, Seminole County v. City of WinterSprings,9 appears to address your questions. Seminole County, a Charter county, adopted a comprehensive plan to protect the rural areas of the county from urban sprawl. However, because the county charter did not provide for county preemption of conflicting municipal land use regulations, the City of Winter Springs was able to continue annexation and encroachment in rural areas of the county. The County adopted a charter amendment giving the County preemptive rights and assuring that the land use designations of the County's comprehensive plan would control the density and intensity of development in the rural area regardless of whether the land was subsequently annexed into a municipality. This amendment was challenged and the trial court entered a final judgment declaring the county charter amendment invalid.10 Seminole County sought review.
The Fifth District Court of Appeal reversed the portion of the trial court's judgment that invalidated the charter amendment but affirmed the judgment in all other respects. The Court discussed the preemption issue at length and addressed the implications of Article VIII, section 1(g) of the Constitution and the voting requirements necessary for this type of charter amendment:
"[T] he electorate of a charter county may preempt a city's land use regulation by charter, without a dual vote of the city's electorate. As held by our Supreme Court in Broward County [v. City of Fort Lauderdale],
480 So. 2d at 635 ``[Article VIII], section 1(g) permits regulatory preemption by counties, while [Article VIII], section 4 requires dual referenda to transfer functions or powers relating to services.' (emphasis in original). Land use regulation is just that — regulation. Therefore, dual referenda are not required. Id. This obvious conclusion is also memorialized in the Act itself, which expressly recognizes that: ``In the case of chartered counties, the county may exercise such authority over municipalities or districts within its boundaries as is provided for in its charter.'"11
As the Court noted:
"Florida's Constitution recognizes that: ``All political power is inherent in the people.' Art.
I s.1 , Fla. Const. When it comes to charter counties and municipalities within those counties, the Constitution expressly grants the electorate a right to determine by charter which government they desire to vest with preemptive regulatory power."12
This case would appear to address substantially the same issues as you have raised in your letter. While Polk County is located outside the jurisdiction of the Fifth District Court of Appeal, it is the rule that decisions of the District Courts of Appeal represent the law of Florida unless and until they are overruled by the Supreme Court.13 A trial court is obligated to follow the decisions of other District Courts of Appeal in the state in the absence of conflicting authority and where an appellate court in its own district has not decided the issue.14 I am aware of no decision conflicting with Seminole County v. City ofWinter Springs and therefore consider the decision therein to represent the law that controls this issue.
In sum, the Polk County Charter can be amended to limit the power of the county and each of the county's incorporated municipalities to increase total residential density. Such a change may be effected through Article
Question Two
Your second question relates to the Florida constitutional referenda requirements for amending the Polk County Charter to provide for countywide uniform land regulation.
Article
"By law or by resolution of the governing bodies of each of the governments affected, any function or power of a county, municipality or special district may be transferred to or contracted to be performed by another county, municipality or special district, after approval by vote of the electors of the transferor and approval by vote of the electors of the transferee, or as otherwise provided by law."
In Broward County v. City of Fort Lauderdale,15 the Florida Supreme Court considered the scope of this constitutional provision and its operation with Article
"[S]ection 1(g) permits regulatory preemption by counties, while section 4 requires dual referenda to transfer functions or powers relating to services. (emphasis in original) A charter county may preempt a municipal regulatory power . . . when county-wide uniformity will best further the ends of government. s.
125.86 (7), Fla. Stat. (1983). Dual referenda are necessary when the preemption goes beyond regulation and intrudes upon a municipality's provision of services."16
The Court delineated a distinction between regulatory preemption, and a transfer of functions and powers relating to services in order to achieve a balance between sections 1(g) and 4.17
According to the information you have supplied to this office, the proposed Polk County charter amendment deals with land regulation. The Florida Supreme Court in Broward County and the District Court of Appeal in Seminole County, supra, have determined that land regulation is regulation within the scope of Article
Thus, based on the holdings in the Broward County and SeminoleCounty cases, it is my opinion that a proposed charter amendment creating a uniform comprehensive plan for land use and planning does not constitute a transfer of powers pursuant to section
Question Three
You have asked whether section
Sincerely,
Bill McCollum
Attorney General
BMC/gh