Filed Date: 6/3/1982
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Paul A. Argentieri, Esq. City Attorney, Hornell
We acknowledge receipt of your letter stating that the City of Hornell has invoked a residence requirement providing that members of the police department must live either in the city or within a ten mile radius thereof. In a subsequent telephone conversation with this office, you stated that the city has in fact passed a local law establishing this residence requirement and that the police department consists of fewer than two hundred full-time members. You inquire whether the existing residence statute is valid and request clarification of the relationship between Public Officers Law, §
We enclose copies of our informal opinions 1974 Op Atty Gen 252 and 330. In those opinions we pointed out that Public Officers Law, §
An applicant for appointment to the police department must reside in the areas specified in Public Officers Law, §
If the police force consists of fewer than two hundred full-time members, members of such force, other than those specified in Public Officers Law, §
We conclude that the local law passed by the City of Hornell requiring members of the police department to reside either in the city or within a ten mile radius thereof is valid insofar as it pertains only to police force members other than those specified in Public Officers Law, §
The Attorney General renders formal opinions only to officers and departments of the State government. This perforce is an informal and unofficial expression of views of this office