The Honorable Clay Aurand State Representative,109th District 2136 30 Road Courtland, Kansas 66939
Dear Representative Aurand:
As Chairman of the House Education Committee, you request our opinion whether 2007 House Bill No. 2368 (HB 2368)1 contains more than one subject and, therefore, violates Section
K.S.A. 2006 Supp.
Our task is to determine whether placement of this LOB amendment in an appropriations bill violates the constitutional provision prohibiting a bill from containing more than one subject.
Article
"No bill shall contain more than one subject, except appropriation bills and bills for revision or codification of statutes. The subject of each bill shall be expressed in its title. . . . The provisions of this section shall be liberally construed to effectuate the acts of the legislature."
The purpose of this constitutional provision is to prevent a matter of legislative merit from being tied to an unworthy matter, the prevention of hodge-podge or log-rolling legislation, and the lessening of improper influences which may result from intermixing objects of legislation in the same act which have no relation to each other.5
A court's standard of review on this issue was restated most recently in Harding v. K.C. Wall Products, Inc.6 Quoting State v.Reeves,7 the court in Harding stated:
"Art.
2 , §16 , of the Kansas Constitution should not be construed narrowly or technically to invalidate proper and needful legislation, and where the subject of the legislation is germane to other provisions, the act is not objectionable as containing more than one subject or as containing matter not expressed in the title. This provision is violated only where an act embraces two or more dissimilar and discordant subjects that cannot reasonably be considered as having any legitimate connection with or relationship to each other."8
HB 2368 outlines appropriations for fiscal years ending June 30, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012. It directs funding for state boards, offices, agencies, institutions and universities. For example, the bill directs funding for the Kansas State School for the Deaf, Kansas State School for the Blind and the State Board of Regents. In short, "it amends earlier appropriation bills, extends or modifies expenditure limitations, authorizes the transfer of moneys from one fund to another and is the major appropriation bill for all of the state universities."9
The legislative history regarding how the LOB amendment made its way into HB 2368 is instructive. The State's share for the LOB is paid through supplemental general state aid.10 The Governor recommended, in her fiscal year 2008 budget, increasing a school district's local option budget authority from 31% to 33% for school year 2007-2008 and thereafter.11 If enacted, the State Department of Education estimated that an additional $13.8 million from the State general fund would be needed to fund the 2% increase for fiscal year 2008.12
The Governor's LOB recommendation appeared in 2007 Senate Bill 35713 and 2007 House Bill 2542.14 The Senate Ways Means Committee concurred in its subcommittee's recommendation that this provision be deleted.15 The House Appropriations Committee initially decided likewise to delete the provision but the provision was later added back into the bill with a decrease from the Governor's request of 33% to 32%.16
A conference committee concurred with the House Appropriations Committee LOB percentage decrease.17 Eventually, both bills were merged into a "mega" appropriations bill, 2007 HB 2368.18 Concerned that the LOB provision would not pass muster under Article
We recognize that while the law often accepts a broad interpretation of what is proper in an appropriation bill, Kansas courts have concluded that the Legislature is not free to include any subject in an appropriation bill.21 For an appropriation provision to be deemed valid, the Legislature must set forth specific amounts of money and state a specific purpose for that money.22 House Bill No. 2368 is lengthy as, it allocates funds to various individuals and agencies. Section 206 amends the local option budget provision of the School District Finance and Quality Performance Act. Essentially, section 206 of HB 2368 authorizes a 1% increase in the maximum amount of a LOB. What is important to our analysis is that section 206 addresses when a school board may pass an LOB, directions for doing so, and how to handle surplus money. Notably, it does not address the allocation of state funds.
To support your position that HB 2368 violates the one-subject rule, you cite State ex rel. Stephan v. Carlin23 for the proposition that appropriation bills cannot include subjects wholly foreign and unrelated to their primary purpose which is authorizing the expenditure of specific sums of money for specific purposes. You suggest thatCarlin is analogous to the situation at hand and, therefore, applicable.24
In Carlin, the Kansas Supreme Court addressed the School District Equalization Act as it related to the omnibus appropriations bill. In its decision, the Court explained that the Act limited school district budgets and expenditures for school years after 1980. The Court provided:
"Subsection (b) of Section 77 of this bill is a budget limitation on school districts for the next school year and as such provides the legal and express authority from the Legislature for school boards to pay from public monies a specific sum of public money for education purposes. The result of this appropriation is that school districts which in the previous year have budgeted amounts below the median will not be able to adequately improve the quality of education even if the facts in a particular district indicate a dire need to do so."25
The Court in Carlin concluded that the Legislature improperly attempted to place limits upon the budgets which school districts may adopt. The Court reasoned that the amendment in question did not establish expenditure limitations on state funds and it did not authorize the transfer of state moneys from one fund to another. Even though the amendment established budget limitations for school districts, the amendment bore no more relationship to the appropriation of state funds than statutes fixing the budget limitations of cities, counties, or other taxing districts, or various other statutes which could be cited. The Court stated that such an amendment clearly added a second subject to the bill and violated the Kansas Constitution.26
We find your argument and authority persuasive. The Carlin decision, while examining a different amendment, appears to be analogous to the situation here. Again, HB 2368 is an appropriations bill. Section 206 of that bill is an amendment to the LOB provision. The amendment is not related to the primary purpose of the appropriations bill. It does not concern the handling of state funds. The amendment simply authorizes local option budgets and the maximum amount a school board may seek. The Kansas Supreme Court's statements in Carlin are appropriate here. The amendment does not "establish expenditure limitations on state funds; it does not authorize the transfer of state moneys from one fund to another." "It bears no more relationship to the appropriation of state funds than do statutes fixing the budget limitations of cities, counties, or other taxing districts, or various other statutes which could be cited. Clearly, it adds a second subject to the bill."27
Our conclusion is further supported by the fact that the subject of this bill, as expressed through its title,28 is appropriations, not school district financing. Article
While it is our opinion that placement of the LOB amendment in the appropriations bill violates Article
"If any provision or clause of this act or application thereof to any person or circumstances is held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications of the act which can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this act are declared to be severable."
We also note that K.S.A. 2006 Supp.
Summarizing, it is our opinion that the placement of an amendment to the local option budget statute, K.S.A. 2006 Supp.
bill contains a severability provision, the offending portion of the bill can be excised without affecting the remaining provisions of the bill.
Sincerely,
Paul J. Morrison Attorney General
Rebecca E. Rand Assistant Attorney General
PJM:MF:RER:jm
http://skyways.lib.ks.us/ksleg/KLRD/2007SessionSubcommitteeReports/FY2008_SR_Education.pdf
http://skyways.lib.ks.us/ksleg/KLRD/2007SessionSubcommitteeReports/FY2008_SR_Education.pdf
http://skyways.lib.ks.us/ksleg/KLRD/2007SessionSubcommitteeReports/FY2008_SR_Education.pdf
http://skyways.lib.ks.us/ksleg/KLRD/Publications/AppropConfDocs/ConferenceComparisonRept.pdf
