Judges: Charlie Crist, Attorney General
Filed Date: 6/15/2006
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Mr. Holley:
On behalf of the Washington County Board of County Commissioners, you ask substantially the following question:
May a county expend public funds to clean up private rural cemeteries?
According to your letter, some rural counties in Northwest Florida have in the past assisted in cleaning up rural church cemeteries or other rural family cemeteries. Since the cemeteries are not county-owned property, you ask whether the county may expend funds to clean up such cemeteries.
Article
Thus, in order to satisfy Article
For example, in Attorney General Opinion 79-14 this office concluded that the expenditure of public funds by a municipality to repair or maintain private streets in which the municipality has no property rights or interest, and over which the public has no easement or right of use, would appear to contravene the public purpose requirements of Article
This office has recognized that the determination of whether the expenditure of county funds serves a county purpose is one that the board of county commissioners, as the legislative body for the county, must make. However, this office has noted that granting a temporary easement of thirty days to the county does not appear to satisfy the public purpose requirement for the expenditure of public funds if the expenditure of such funds is not otherwise permissible.3
The provisions of the Funeral and Cemetery Services Act, and all rules adopted pursuant to it, apply to all cemeteries in this state with certain exceptions, such as, among others, religious institution cemeteries of less than five acres that provide only single-level ground burial, those owned and operated or dedicated by a religious institution prior to June 23, 1976, and family cemeteries of less than two acres that do not sell burial space or burial merchandise.4 Even though exempt cemetery facilities are not regulated by the Act, all cemeteries are subject to certain statutory provisions, including the maintenance of abandoned cemeteries by a county or municipality.5 Section
"Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, a county or municipality which has within its jurisdiction an abandoned cemetery or a cemetery that has not been reasonably maintained for a period in excess of 6 months may, upon notice to the department, take such action as is necessary and appropriate to provide for maintenance and security of the cemetery. The solicitation of private funds and the expenditure of public funds for the purposes enumerated in this subsection are hereby authorized, provided that no action taken by a county or municipality under this subsection shall establish an ongoing obligation or duty to provide continuous security or maintenance for any cemetery."
Section
Prior to 1988, the statute (then section 497.071, Florida Statutes [1987]), allowed a county or municipality to maintain an abandoned cemetery within its jurisdiction after conducting a search for the owner and, in the event the owner was located, seeking reimbursement from the owner for its services. Concern was raised that in some counties cemeteries had been neglected or abandoned to the point that they had become health hazards or targets for vandals or trespassers and that the county had to wait until the cemetery was abandoned.7 The Legislature amended the statute to allow a county or municipality to provide maintenance or security for any cemetery that had not been reasonably maintained for over six months, provided the county or municipality notified the Department of Banking and Finance (now the Department of Financial Services).
Accordingly, in light of the provisions of section
Sincerely,
Charlie Crist Attorney General
CC/jw
"A problem exists when a cemetery has been neglected or abandoned to the point that it becomes a health hazard or, due to a lack of security, a congregation point for trespassers. . . . The county is also concerned that under the current statute, a cemetery must be considered abandoned before they may step in to correct a potentially dangerous situation."