Robert D. Beall, City Attorney City of Leavenworth 117 Cherokee P.O. Box 69 Leavenworth, Kansas 66048
David C. Van Parys Leavenworth County Counselor 300 Walnut Leavenworth, Kansas 66048
Dear Mr. Beall and Mr. Van Parys:
You request our opinion regarding the validity of a petition which seeks to bring a proposed ordinance before the electorate of the City of Leavenworth. Specifically, you ask whether the proposed ordinance set forth in the petition involves an administrative function. You also ask whether a petition authorized under K.S.A.
Electors of the City of Leavenworth drafted and circulated a petition proposing Ordinance No. 7419. The proposed ordinance "provid[ed] for the relocation of Fire Station No. 2 currently at 714 Lawrence Avenue to the southeast corner of 10th and Shawnee or northwest of 13th and Shawnee, whichever is determined by the governing body of the City of Leavenworth, Kansas to provide the best fire safety for the community."1 The signatures on the petition were verified by both the Leavenworth City Clerk and the Leavenworth County Election Officer.
"The initiative and referendum statute, K.S.A.
Guidelines for determining whether an ordinance is administrative or legislative are set forth in City of Wichita v. KansasTaxpayers Network, Inc.4
"1. An ordinance that makes new law is legislative; while an ordinance that executes an existing law is administrative. Permanency and generality are key features of the legislative ordinance.
"2. Acts that declare public purpose and provide ways and means to accomplish that purpose generally may be classified as legislative. Acts that deal with a small segment of an overall policy question generally are administrative.
"3. Decisions that require specialized training and experience in municipal government and intimate knowledge of the fiscal and other affairs of the city in order to make a rational choice may properly be characterized as administrative, even though they may be also said to involve the establishment of a policy.
"4. No one act of a governing body is likely to be solely administrative or legislative, and the operation of the initiative and referendum statute is restricted to measures which are quite clearly and fully legislative and not principally executive or administrative."5
According to information provided, the City of Leavenworth has had an organized fire department since 1855. There are currently three fire stations located in the City with plans to construct a fourth. The location of the proposed fire station was made with consideration given to the growth pattern of the City. Proposed Ordinance No. 7419 would require the city to abandon a fire station scheduled for renovation and to construct a fire station in its place.
The creation of an organized fire safety program is a legislative decision of a city's governing board.6 The location of fire stations and the decision whether to construct new stations or renovate existing stations are means whereby a city is able to accomplish its legislative goal of ensuring fire safety for the city. Proposed Ordinance No. 7419 does not create a fire department or make any broad policy statements about fire safety, but rather attempts to regulate one facet of the fire safety program undertaken by the City of Leavenworth. It deals with a small segment of the overall policy — the location of one fire station. Determining the location of fire stations and whether to renovate existing fire stations or construct new fire stations so as to provide the best fire safety for a city necessarily requires intimate knowledge of the fiscal and other affairs of the city, such as growth patterns and traffic flow. The petition concedes as much by deferring to the Board of Commissioners for the City of Leavenworth to determine which of the two proposed locations "provide[s] the best fire safety for the community."7 All of these factors indicate that proposed Ordinance No. 7419 is administrative in character and thus may not be the subject of a petition under K.S.A.
Five opinions of the Kansas Supreme Court and Kansas Court of Appeals cite K.S.A.
K.S.A.
It has been suggested that a petition authorized under K.S.A.
K.S.A.
"When under the laws of this state a petition is required or authorized as a part of the procedure applicable to the state as a whole or any legislative election district or to any county, city, school district or other municipality, or part thereof, the provisions of [K.S.A.
25-3601 et seq.] shall apply, except as is otherwise specifically provided in the statute providing for such petition." (Emphasis added.)
It has been recognized that the requirements of K.S.A.
"Otherwise" is defined generally as "in a different way or manner . . . under other conditions."13 "Specifically" is defined as "1: in regard to the matter in question: with reference to a quality or condition that is specified or inherent. . . . 2: with exactness or precision: in a definite manner."14
There are instances where a statute authorizing a petition specifically provides requirements which differ from those set forth in K.S.A.
Subsection (b)(1) of K.S.A.
"(b) The ballots used when voting upon the ordinance shall set forth the proposed ordinance in full or submit the proposed ordinance by title generally descriptive of the contents thereof. Each proposed ordinance set forth in full or submitted by title generally descriptive of the contents thereof shall be preceded by the words, `Shall the following be adopted?' If there is more than one proposed ordinance to be voted upon, the different proposed ordinances shall be separately numbered and printed, and the ballots shall conform to the requirements of K.S.A.
25-605 and amendments thereto."
The petition may either set forth the proposed ordinance in its entirety or may include a title generally descriptive of the contents of the proposed ordinance.
K.S.A.
Summarizing, the creation of an organized fire safety program is a legislative decision of a city's governing board. Determining the location of fire stations and whether to renovate existing fire stations or construct new fire stations so as to provide the best fire safety for a city involves administrative decisions of the city governing body. A petition proposing an ordinance which would establish the location of a fire station, therefore, is not authorized under K.S.A.
Very truly yours,
CARLA J. STOVALL Attorney General of Kansas
Richard D. Smith Assistant Attorney General
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