The City of St. Charles challenges the validity of certain amendments to section 99.847, RSMo Supp.2003, pertaining to tax increment financing. In particular, the City contends that the amendments, enacted by the General Assembly in 2002 as part of Senate Bill 1107, violate the prohibition against multiple subjects set out in article III, section 23, of the Missouri Constitution. The circuit court entered judgment in favor of the City. This Court has exclusive jurisdiction of the appeal. Mo. Const, art. V, sec. 3. The judgment is reversed.
The rules for challenges to the constitutional validity of statutes are well established. “An act of the legislature carries a strong presumption of constitutionality.”
Carmack v. Director, Mo. Dept. of Agriculture,
Article III, section 23, the constitutional limitation in this case, states that “No bill shall contain more than one subject which shall be clearly expressed in its title.” The title to S.B.1107 is, “An Act To repeal [certain sections], and to enact in lieu thereof forty-three new sections relating to emergency services, with penalty provisions.” The essence of the City’s challenge, and the basis for the circuit court’s ruling, is that the provisions of S.B. 1107 pertaining to tax increment financing do not “relat[e] to emergency services,” which is the clearly stated subject of S.B. 1107, so that the bill contains more than one subject — sections properly relating to emergency services and sections that do not.
Tax increment financing, in general, is the statutory mechanism for public financing of private redevelopment projects with the goal that the projects will generate tax revenues that exceed the revenues before the redevelopment. Sec. 99.800 et seq., RSMo 2000; see also Josh Reinert, Comment, Tax Increment Financing In Missouri: Is It Time For Blight And But-For To Go?, 45 StL.U.L.J. 1019 (Summer 2001). The amendments in question prohibit new tax increment financing in counties such as St. Charles that have a charter form of government, between 250,000 and 300,000 inhabitants, and an area “designated as flood plain by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.” These amendments (the TIF amendments) added subsections 2 and 3 to section 99.847, which state in full:
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 99.800 to 99.865 to the contrary, no new tax increment financing project shall be authorized in any area which is within an area designated as flood plain by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and which is located in or partly within a county with a charter form of government with greater than two hundred fifty thousand inhabitants but fewer than three hundred thousand inhabitants.
3. This subsection shall not apply to tax increment financing projects or districts approved prior to July 1, 2003, and shall allow the aforementioned tax increment financing projects to modify, amend or expand such projects including redevelopment project costs by not more than forty percent of such project original projected cost including redevelopment project costs [sic] as such projects including redevelopment project costs existed as of June 30, 2003, and shall allow the aforementioned tax increment financing district to modify, amend or expand such districts by not more than five percent as such districts existed as of June 30, 2003.
The test in determining whether a provision of a bill violates the single subject rule is “not whether individual provisions of a bill relate to each other ... [but] whether [the challenged provision] fairly relates to the subject described in the title of the bill, has a natural connection to the subject, or is a means to accomplish the law’s purpose.”
Fust,
In view of these rules, this Court concludes that the TIF amendments are indeed sufficiently related to the subject of the bill — emergency services — to pass constitutional muster. Although in the abstract there seems to be no connection at
The case of
C.C. Dillon Company v. City of Eureka,
For the foregoing reasons, this Court holds that there is no violation of article III, section 23. The judgment is reversed.
