Judges: JIM MATTOX, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 10/26/1984
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Mr. Randy M. Lee Executive Director Texas 1986 Sesquicentennial Commission P.O. Box 1986 Austin, Texas 78767
Re: Whether a county or city may contribute funds to a local sesquicentennial committee and related questions
Dear Mr. Lee:
You ask several related questions regarding the status and funding of local sesquicentennial committees. First, you ask whether the local committees are "extensions" of the Texas 1986 Sesquicentennial Commission. You also raise a number of specific issues relating directly to particular city and county contributions to local committees.
With regard to your first question, we conclude that local sesquicentennial committees are "extensions" of the local governing entities which create them; they are not functional extensions of the Texas 1986 Sesquicentennial Commission. Local governing entities create their local sesquicentennial committees, appoint committee members, and approve the committees' master plans prior to submission of the plans to the state commission. Despite some state commission influence, local committees act primarily as agents for the local governing bodies which create them. See Attorney General Opinions
The state commission has specific duties and powers with regard to sesquicentennial activities on the local level, but it does not create the local committees or dictate directly the extent of their authority. Article 6145-11, section 7, indicates, in part, that the commission shall
(1) encourage individuals, private organizations, and local governmental bodies to organize activities celebrating the state's sesquicentennial;
(2) help individuals, private organizations, and local governmental bodies that organize sesquicentennial activities to coordinate the activities;
. . . .
(4) develop standards for sesquicentennial activities organized by individuals, private organizations, and local governmental bodies and sanction activities that comply with the standards. . . . (Emphasis added).
At the local level, the commission's function is to coordinate local activities with other local activities and with state activities. The commission's power over local governing entities is indirect, stemming from the benefit derived by local governing entities from the increased publicity and appeal that result from the commission's promotion of specific local activities. Thus, the authority to develop standards is merely a prerequisite to the commission's official sanction of local activities, rather than a statutory grant of direct control over the activities of local governing entities.
A local governing entity or its local committee is subject to commission control only when, and only to the extent, that the commission expends state funds, including donations accepted on behalf of the state, to encourage, coordinate, and sanction local activities as authorized by section 7 of article 6145-11. See Attorney General Opinions
The status of local committees as "extensions" or agents of local governing entities is also relevant to your inquiry about restrictions on the source of contributions that may be accepted by local committees. Because your letter refers to a city or county "contribution" to its own committee, at the onset it is necessary to emphasize that when a local governing entity makes expenditures through its own agent — its local committee — the action constitutes an expenditure by the local governing entity. It is not a "contribution" in the sense of a "donation" to the local committee.
Your other questions relate to the validity of certain contributions to, or expenditures by, cities and counties. Specifically, you inquire about their expenditures (1) for their own local sesquicentennial committees, (2) for their committees' projects directly, and (3) for joint committees formed with other local governing entities. We conclude that, subject to the following limitations, local governmental entities may expend funds in all three ways for sesquicentennial activities. You do not inquire about the extent to which cities and counties may delegate this expenditure power to local sesquicentennial committees; therefore, we do not address the issue. See Attorney General Opinion
Limits on expenditures by local sesquicentennial committees depend upon the local governmental entities' authority to make certain expenditures. Both grants of authority to make expenditures and limits on its exercise are relevant. Counties and cities possess only the powers expressly or by necessary implication authorized by the Texas Constitution or statutes, or by local charters. Lower Colorado River Authority v. City of San Marcos,
No provision expressly authorizes local governmental entities to engage in local sesquicentennial activities. Nevertheless, by providing that the commission shall encourage and sanction local sesquicentennial activities by local governmental bodies, article 6145-11, section 7, authorizes some local sesquicentennial activities by necessary implication. Moreover, numerous more general statutes expressly authorize counties and cities to engage in local activities of this sort. See, e.g., V.T.C.S. art. 6145.1 (county historical commission); V.T.C.S. art. 2372d-8 (certain counties authorized to make public improvements intended to attract tourists); art. 1269j-4.1 (cities authorized to make public improvements that would be frequented by tourists); V.T.C.S. art. 6081t (joint tourism-related projects); V.T.C.S. art. 1015c-1 (establishment, by counties and cities, singly or jointly, of recreational programs and facilities).
Accordingly, local governmental bodies are impliedly authorized to make reasonable expenditures for local sesquicentennial activities. Again, we emphasize that we do not address the extent to which cities and counties may delegate their sesquicentennial activity authority to local committees. In many instances, the specific statutes cited may prevent delegation of certain powers. See, e.g., Attorney General Opinion
The Texas Constitution expressly prohibits the use by a political subdivision of its public funds or credit for private purposes. Tex. Const. art.
Nevertheless, expenditures for local sesquicentennial activities cannot benefit private individuals and entities in ways so out of proportion to the overall public benefit that they amount to a virtual donation. Attorney General Opinion
Article III, section 52 usually relates to government donations to "private" in the sense of non-governmental entities as individuals; however, the provision also bars a political subdivision from gratuitously granting its funds to another political subdivision. Harris County Flood Control District v. Mann,
Joint county-city local actions of the kind required for local sesquicentennial activities are authorized through other, more general statutes. See V.T.C.S. art. 4413(32c) (Interlocal Cooperation Act: section 3A indicates that celebration-exposition type activities fall within scope of act); see also, V.T.C.S. art. 6081e, § 1 (parks, playgrounds, historic museums and sites); art. 6081t, §§ 2, 2a (recreational facilities); art. 2372d-9 (auditoriums); art. 2372d-5 (museums); art. 1269j-4.5 (civic center authorities); art. 1015c-1 (recreational programs and facilities); art. 969b (acquisition of property). The specific requirements of these statutes would control any joint local sesquicentennial activities. All that article III, section 52 requires in such cases is that each participating local governing body receive a benefit from the joint agreement which provides a quid pro quo for its expenditures. Attorney General Opinions
Very truly yours,
Jim Mattox Attorney General of Texas
Tom Green First Assistant Attorney General
David R. Richards Executive Assistant Attorney General
Rick Gilpin Chairman, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Rick Gilpin Assistant Attorney General