(a) The legislative bodies of one (1) or more municipalities (meeting the population and proximity requirements under section 9 of this chapter) and one (1) or more counties may establish, by identical ordinances, a joint district planning and zoning commission. The ordinances must specify the following:
- (1) The legal name of the commission.
- (2) The boundaries of the joint district.
- (3) The duration of the commission.
- (4) Any other information necessary to form the commission.
(b) A municipality having a population of more than three thousand (3,000) but less than fifteen thousand (15,000) may pass an ordinance to establish a joint district for any territory that is located:
- (1) in the municipality; or
- (2) within five (5) miles of the municipality's corporate boundaries.
(c) A municipality having a population of more than twenty-five thousand (25,000) but less than fifty thousand (50,000) may pass an ordinance to establish a joint district for any territory that is located:
- (1) in the municipality; or
- (2) within ten (10) miles of the municipality's corporate boundaries.
- (d) When the boundaries of a proposed joint district include real property lying within the corporate boundaries of a municipality, the municipality is subject to the jurisdiction of the joint district and the provisions of this chapter only if the municipality adopts an ordinance under subsection (a).
- (e) After the boundaries and duration of a joint district have been established under subsection (a), the boundaries and the duration may not be changed.
As added by P.L.300-1989, SEC.2.