James Kaup, Counsel Marion County Board of Commissioners 700 Jackson Street Topeka, Kansas 66603
Dear Mr. Kaup:
As legal counsel for the Marion County Board of Commissioners, you inquire whether the Board can establish a recycling program and impose a charge for that service. Specifically, you inquire whether such a program is authorized by the Solid and Hazardous Waste Act, K.S.A.
Your edited queries are as follows:
1. Does the Solid and Hazardous Waste Act authorize the county toimpose a charge for a recycling program pursuant to K.S.A.
The Solid and Hazardous Waste Act (Act) is designed to protect the health and welfare of the citizens of Kansas by requiring the safe and sanitary disposal of solid wastes by establishing cooperative state and local programs for solid waste management, utilizing private enterprises in solid waste management programs, requiring permits for the operation of solid waste processing and encouraging "the wise use of resources through development of strategies that reduce, reuse and recycle materials."1
"Solid waste" is defined at K.S.A. 1999 Supp.
K.S.A.
K.S.A.
2. If K.S.A.
You indicate that the Marion County Board of Commissioners would like to enact a resolution establishing a recycling program and imposing a fee similar to the fee for solid waste authorized by K.S.A.
A county's home rule powers are set forth in K.S.A. 1999 Supp.
"(a) The board of county commissioners may transact all county business and perform all powers of local legislation and administration it deems appropriate, subject only to the following limitations, restrictions or prohibitions:
"(1) Counties shall be subject to all acts of the legislature which apply uniformly to all counties.
"(b) Counties shall apply the powers of local legislation granted in subsection (a) by resolution of the board of county commissioners. If no statutory authority exists for such local legislation other than that set forth in subsection (a) and the local legislation is not contrary to any act of the legislature, such local legislation shall become effective upon passage of a resolution of the board and publication in the official county newspaper."
Other than the requirement in the Solid and Hazardous Waste Act that counties include a provision in their solid waste management plans to reduce waste through recycling, there are no statutes that address county recycling. Therefore, because legislative silence on a subject no longer prevents local government action,5 it is our opinion that a county may use its home rule power to enact a resolution establishing a recycling program.
Insofar as the imposition of a recycling charge is concerned, you inquire whether a county must utilize K.S.A.
"(a) Where the board of county commissioners of any county by resolution proposes to levy for revenue purposes any tax, excise, fee, charge or other exaction other than permit fees or license fees for regulatory purposes, a procedure for the levy of which is not otherwise prescribed by enactment of the legislature, such resolution shall require a two-thirds (2/3) vote of the members of the board and shall be published once each week for two (2) consecutive weeks in the official county newspaper.
"No such resolution shall take effect until sixty (60) days after its final publication, and if within sixty (60) days of its final publication a petition signed by not less than five percent (5%) of the qualified electors of the county shall be filed with the county election officer demanding that such resolution be submitted to a vote of the electors, it shall not take effect until submitted to a referendum and approved by a majority of the electors voting thereon. The board of county commissioners of any county may submit any resolution providing for such levy to a referendum without petition. Resolutions authorizing such levies submitted to referendum without petition may be passed by a majority vote of the board of county commissioners and shall be published once in the official county newspaper . . . "
Prior to the decision in Blevins v. Hiebert,6 the appropriate analysis for determining whether a county was required to comply with a particular statute rather than locally legislating alternative procedures was whether the Legislature, by enacting a uniform statute, intended to preempt a county's ability to act without complying with the statute:
"Counties are prohibited, however, from passing any legislation which is contrary to or in conflict with any act of the state legislature which is of uniform application to all counties throughout the state. K.S.A.
19-101a (a) ."The legislature may reserve exclusive jurisdiction to regulate in a particular area when an intent is clearly manifested by state law to pre-empt a particular field by uniform laws made applicable throughout the state.
"The rule denying power to a local body when the state has pre-empted the field is a rule of necessity based upon the need to prevent dual regulation which would result in uncertainty and confusion; and whether the state has pre-empted the field to the exclusion of local legislation depends not only on the language of the statutes, but upon the purpose and scope of the legislative scheme." (Emphasis added).7
In the absence of specific preemptive language, it was sometimes difficult to determine whether the Legislature intended to preempt the field so as to preclude cities and counties from legislating in an area that the state regulated:
"The legislature with some frequency has pre-empted home rule by passage of uniform laws that also contain preemptive language. Some uniform laws, however, do not need to contain any pre-emptive language because, by simply prohibiting actions like the levy of certain types of tax or the licensure or regulation of certain activities, they expressly forbid local action in the area. The primary areas where preemption exists are in the levy of taxes, excises, fees, charges and other exactions, and in the area of licensing and regulatory activities."8 (Emphasis added.)
In Jennings v. Walsh,9 the Court concluded that the Water Pollution Act10 preempted the field in the area of sewer charges because there were "specific uniform statutes [that occupied] the subject field."11 In Missouri Pacific Railroad v. Board of Greeley County Comm'rs12 the Court invalidated a resolution on the grounds that it conflicted with a uniform statute and because the state "[had] evidenced a purpose and design to occupy the field so as to prohibit additional regulation by local authorities in the same area."13
The Blevins decision concluded that uniformly applicable statutes that authorize municipalities to perform certain acts are preemptive without the use of express preemptive language, but that a municipality could nevertheless legislate in the area if exercising its police power in a way that does not conflict with a statute that "pertains to police power regulation." However, the Legislature could prevent a municipality from exercising its police power if it expressly preempted the field:
Blevins concluded that if a statute authorizes all cities or all counties to perform certain acts, such statute is uniformly applicable and impliedly preempts the field, precluding a municipality from legislating [except in accordance with the statute] unless the statute pertains to the police power. If the enabling statute "pertains to the police power," then the municipality may enact non-conflicting ordinances or resolutions. The Legislature may prohibit a municipality's exercise of its police power only by expressly preempting the field.15"An enabling act is uniformly applicable to all cities or counties if it authorizes all cities or counties to perform certain acts. Such statutes are state law and preempt the field of their application without the use of preemptive language unless there are express exceptions in the statutes or unless the statutes pertain to police power regulations."14 (Emphasis added.)
In Blevins, Leslie Blevins sued Douglas County and the City of Lawrence to prevent further expenditure of bond funds for construction of a by-pass highway unless the proposal was first submitted to the voters pursuant to the requirements of the Arterial Highway Act. This Act specifically authorized the issuance of bonds subject to an election. The Kansas Court of Appeals held that the Arterial Highway Act was permissive and did not preclude the County from using its home rule power to utilize a different method for constructing the highway.
Blevins argued that the County was bound by the Act and that voter approval was required before the bonds could be issued. He contended that since the county resolution conflicted with the Act, the County should have chartered out of the nonuniform Act. The Kansas Supreme Court agreed and concluded that a municipality cannot exercise ordinary home rule in a non-police power context if there is enabling legislation that applies to all cities or counties.
Cases decided subsequent to Blevins have not consistently followed its conclusions on implied preemption.16 In Dillon Stores v. Lovelady,17 taxpayers argued that the State had preempted the area of property tax through the adoption of uniform laws thus precluding a county from retaining an accounting firm to assist the county appraiser in analyzing reported amounts of tangible personal property. The Court, citing pre-Blevins cases, concluded that legislative intent to reserve exclusive jurisdiction had to be "manifested clearly by statute before it can be held that the state has withdrawn . . . the power to regulate"18 and that the State had not expressly prohibited counties from receiving assistance from accounting firms concerning unreported personal property.
In Executive Aircraft Consulting, Inc., v. The City of Newton,19 the Court concluded that "a city or county ordinance should be permitted to stand unless an actual conflict exists between the ordinance and a statute, or unless the legislature has clearly preempted the field so as to preclude local . . . action."20 The Court found that a uniform statute prohibiting municipalities from imposing an aviation fuel tax evidenced "a strong legislative intent to preempt local units of government from collecting [such] revenue" thus precluding a municipality from imposing a fuel flowage fee.
We note that regardless whether a Court would apply a Blevins
preemption analysis or a pre/post-Blevins preemption analysis to Marion County's recycling fee, it is our opinion that the result under either analysis would require the County to follow the procedures established in K.S.A.
K.S.A.
The Blevins police power/express preemption analysis arguably applies if K.S.A.
If a court, applying a Blevins analysis, determined that K.S.A.
If a court selected a pre/post Blevins preemption analysis, we believe the court would find that K.S.A.
You also inquire whether delinquent recycling fees may be assessed against real property and collected in the same manner as ad valorem taxes.
Our research detected no statutes that address a county placing delinquent recycling fees on the property tax rolls and, therefore, a county is free to use its home rule power to enact a resolution that establishes a recycling fee pursuant to K.S.A.
We note also that K.S.A.
"(a) For the purposes of this section, taxes shall include ad valorem property taxes, local gross earnings taxes, special assessments and all other taxes and fees collected with or at the same time as ad valorem property taxes." (Emphasis added.)
In Attorney General Opinion No. 84-105, Attorney General Robert T. Stephan concluded that K.S.A.
3. Can a county use its police power to impose a fee for a countywiderecycling service?
As we indicated previously, even assuming that a resolution imposing a recyling fee is an exercise of the police power and that police power is a source of authority independent of home rule, it is our opinion that a county must follow the procedure set forth in K.S.A.
Summarizing, it is our opinion that the Solid and Hazardous Waste Act, K.S.A.
Very truly yours,
CARLA J. STOVALL Attorney General of Kansas
Mary Feighny Assistant Attorney General
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