Honorable Willard F. Croney, Executive Director NYS Soil and Water Conservation Committee
Based upon your letter and a telephone conversation with this office, you ask our opinion whether a county soil and water conservation district ("district") may pay membership dues in the National Association of Conservation Districts ("Association"), a non-profit organization, and contribute money to various programs administered by the Association. You state that the contributions would be used by the Association to defray the expense of its national meeting and to finance, among other things, a legal fund for litigation involving conservation issues, educational programs, including seminars, grants to college students and special awards for teachers, and gifts to officers. It is our understanding that the Association is primarily involved in supporting conservation programs.
A district is created and funded by the county (Soil and Water Conservation Districts Law, §
The legislative policy underlying the enactment of the Soil and Water Conservation Districts Law is "to provide for the conservation of the soil and water resources of this state," among other things (Soil and Water Conservation Districts Law, §
We believe that the foregoing provisions of section 9 are broad enough to permit a district to expend public funds for the payment of membership dues in the Association and for the support of selected programs administered by the Association, provided, however, that such expenditures do not run afoul of the constitutional prohibition against gifts in aid of private organizations.* Included within this prohibition, we believe, would be gifts to the Association, as well as payments to be used by the Association to fund gifts (1971 Op Atty Gen [Inf] 102). Expenditures for other purposes, such as for membership dues or selected programs, would be authorized if the district determines that the benefits to be derived from such activities constitute adequate consideration for those expenditures and that such expenditures further the public policy of soil and water conservation (Soil and Water Conservation Districts Law, §§
We conclude that a soil and water conservation district may expend public funds for the payment of membership dues in the National Association of Conservation Districts and for the support of selected programs administered by the Association, provided such expenditures are supported by adequate consideration.
