REQUESTED BY: Senator Chris Beutler Nebraska Legislature
You have inquired whether the discretion proposed to be afforded the Board would violate art. II, § 1, art. III, § I, or any other provision of the Nebraska Constitution. Your focus appears to be on the cited sections' reservation of legislative power to the Unicameral; and, more specifically, on whether Amendment 2502 is an improper delegation of legislative authority. You also ask whether Amendment 3244 addresses your concerns.
Based on the analysis below, we believe you had good reason to be concerned about the constitutionality of the proposal given the lack of any applicable standards to guide the Board. However, if the legislative proposal is modified in accordance with the approaches taken by Amendments 3244 and 3091, it would substantially reduce any worry about an improper delegation of legislative authority.
Article II, § 1 and art. III, § I of the Nebraska Constitution assign and reserve the exercise of legislative power to the Unicameral. The legislature may delegate to an administrative body the power to make regulations to carry out the legislative will, but the legislature cannot pass on to an administrative body the power to create "law" on a blank slate.
The Legislature does have power to authorize an administrative or executive department to make rules and regulations to carry out an expressed legislative purpose, or for the complete operation and enforcement of a law within designated limitations. . . . The limitations of the power granted and the standards by which the granted powers are to be administered must, however, be clearly and definitely stated in the authorizing act. Bosselman, Inc. v. State,
In the Bosselman case the court went on to quote a portion of its opinion in State ex rel. Douglas v. Nebraska Mortgage Finance Fund,
Thank you for supplementing your opinion request with a letter informing this office about an additional amendment to the bill. You ask whether the new amendment, Amendment 3244, addresses your concerns about improper delegation of legislative authority. This amendment, while not providing any criteria or factors to guide the Board when deciding whether to expand the statutory exemptions, appears to cap or limit the range of the Board's otherwise seemingly unfettered discretion in this area. The amendment would add that any increase of the exemption may not "exceed the Type V, Column B, limitations set forth by the allowable height and building areas table in the state building code adopted in section 71-6403." The state building code is comprised of three separate codes. The referenced table may be Table 503 in the International Building Code (2002). The time we have to respond is limited, so we have not attempted to get into the intricacies of Table 503's many columns and rows. It may be noteworthy, though, that the Table's rows consist of 26 "Groups," which may refer to the type of building being constructed. The allowable number of stories and building area shown in Type V, Column B, vary depending upon the identity of the "Group." In a couple of the Groups, the building area is unlimited, and in one of them the number of stories is, too. We have not explored whether, or how closely, the "Groups" in the table mesh with the categories of construction for which the Table provides the upper limit of the Board's power to afford exemptions from the statutory standards.
Amendment 3244's limitation does not apply to all the increases which the Board may afford under Amendment 2502 to LB 599. The limitation does not apply to the Board's authority to increase the statutory $80,000 project cost demarcation between exempt and non-exempt public works projects. The amendment may leave the Board's authority unconstrained in other areas, too. The name of the referenced table within the building code suggests that the limitation on the Board's new regulatory authority may only apply insofar as qualifying for the exemption hinges solely upon building height or floor area. Where qualifying for the statutory exemption is affected by the building's designed occupancy, the Board's authority to lift that occupancy number may be unlimited. For example, construction of a commercial or industrial building of under 5000 square feet is exempt provided that fewer than twenty persons are to occupy it. Am. 2502 to LB 599, § 3. Since the amendment will permit the Board to "increase" the exemption, arguably the Board could raise the occupancy limit of the proviso a hundredfold while still preserving the exemption. It is difficult to say for sure. It may be that a court would interpret the Board's authority as being limited to altering the area or height restrictions. A building's occupancy level is something that disqualifies an otherwise exemption-eligible building, but it is a factor which may be considered distinct from the exemption, itself. Put another way, the occupancy level relates to the exemption but may be viewed as being separate from it.
Although you did not inquire about it, Amendment 3091, if adopted, should eliminate the concern about a standardless delegation of legislative authority when it comes to increases in the $80,000 limitation. The Amendment raises the dollar amount and provides standards to guide the Board in making future increases to this number.
Although LB 599, Amendment 2502, and the Negotiated Rulemaking Act do not provide standards to guide the Board's discretion, the Engineers and Architects Regulation Act may be a source of guidance to the Board. Neb. Rev. Stat. §
Amendment 3244 does not eliminate these concerns. It proposes to set limits beyond which the regulatory body may not go, but it does not limit the Board's authority to raise the dollar limitation found within the statutory exemption for public works projects. Plus, even where it has set some upper limit to the Board's discretion, it has provided no guiding principles for the Board to use when acting within that range. This office has in the past expressed the opinion that the setting of such caps or upper limits on authority bears upon the question of whether there has been an improper delegation of legislative authority, but the legislation being addressed there included some guidance for the regulatory body; the setting of limits was said to be merely a factor providing greater assurance of constitutionality. Op. Att'y Gen. No. 201 (February 19, 1982).
Because the courts have taken a more liberal view to grants of discretionary authority to administrative agencies and because the discretionary authority in question is fairly narrow in scope — much broader grants of authority have been upheld against challenges of improper delegation of legislative authority, see Board of Regents v. County of Lancaster,
Sincerely,
JON BRUNING Attorney General
Mark D. Starr Assistant Attorney General
Approved:
_____________________________ Attorney General
pc: Patrick O'Donnell Clerk of the Legislature
