By this action in the Superior Court, the plaintiffs sought a declaration (1) that a local option statute (G. L. c. 148, § 26C) was not validly accepted by the town of Falmouth (town); (2) that the Board of Fire Prevention Regulations (Board) had no authority under G. L. c. 148, § 26C, to promulgate regulations for the installation, deployment, testing, maintenance and operation of smoke detectors; and (3) that the chief of the Falmouth Fire Department (fire chief) had no authority to order the plaintiffs to comply with those regulations.
A Superior Court judge entered summary judgment, declaring (1) that Falmouth validly accepted § 26G; (2) that the Board had no authority to promulgate regulations concerning smoke or heat detectors; and (3) that the fire chief has discretion to set standards for smoke and heat detectors as well as enforce the provisions of § 26C. The plaintiffs appealed from parts 1 and 3 of the judgment. The Board cross appealed from part 2 of the judgment.
Prior to the town meeting of December 12, 1979, at which the vote on the local option legislation was to occur, a warrant was presented to the town. See G. L. c. 39, § 10. The warrant contained the language of G. L. c. 148, § 26C, as enacted in 1975,
2
but omitted the 1977 amendment to that statute.
3
The provision accepted at the town meeting
1. The plaintiffs assert that because the warrant presented to the town for vote did not contain the exact language of the statute the notice given prior to the meeting was inadequate. We disagree. The notice given was sufficient. The function of the warrant is to give notice as to the time and place of the meeting and the substance of the issue to be presented. See
Coffin
v.
Lawrence,
The only serious question raised is whether the failure of the town meeting members to vote on the statute then in effect invalidated the vote. The plaintiffs contend that the town must present the statute exactly as passed by the Legislature and that any alteration in or addition to the wording of the statute which the town purports to adopt in
2. The judge determined that the Board lacked authority to promulgate the regulations in question here. This was error. “[T]he validity of the . . . regulation^] can be upheld with minimal dependence on various supportive canons of interpretation well settled in this jurisdiction . . . .”
White Dove, Inc.
v.
Director of the Div. of Marine Fisheries,
Pursuant to G. L. c. 22, § 14 (as inserted by St. 1980, c. 462, § 1), the Board is to “promulgate a comprehensive fire safety code.” See now G. L. c. 148, § 28(2) (as appearing in St. 1982, c. 520). “Where an . . . agency is vested with broad authority to effectuate the purposes of an act the validity of a regulation promulgated thereunder will be sustained so long as it is reasonably related to the purposes of the enabling legislation.”
Levy
v.
Board of Registration & Discipline in Medicine,
It is readily apparent that § 26C does not address comprehensively all of the matters that may come within its scope (compare
Boston Teachers Local 66
v.
Boston,
3. We need not reach the question whether the chief of the local fire department “has the discretion to set standards concerning smoke and heat detectors.” General Laws c. 148, § 26C, grants enforcement powers to the fire chief of a city, town or district that accepts the legislation. See note 2,
supra.
Since we have determined that the regulations of the board were valid, the fire chief, in enforcing § 26C, properly could order the plaintiffs to comply with them. Compare
Brooks
v.
Architectural Barriers Bd.,
Parts 2 and 3 of the judgment are vacated, and a new judgment is to be entered consistent with this opinion. The judgment is otherwise affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
The warrant contained the language of the statute, inserted by St. 1975, c. 710.
“Section 26C. In any city or town which accepts this section, hotels, boarding or lodging houses, or family hotels which are not regulated by sections twenty-six A and twenty-six B shall be equipped with an automatic smoke or heat detector in each dwelling unit and each hallway floor.
“The head of the fire department as defined in section one shall enforce the provisions of this section.”
Statute 1977, c. 962, reads as follows:
“Section 26C of chapter 148 of the General Laws, inserted by chapter 710 of the acts of 1975, is hereby amended by inserting after the word ‘section,’ in line 1, the words:- , apartment houses containing six or more dwelling units.”
