Hon. Clifton R. Wharton, Jr. Chancellor State University of New York
Your University Counsel and Vice Chancellor for Legal Affairs has inquired about the implications of chapter 348 of the Laws of 1985, effective September 1, 1985, conferring full voting rights on the student members of community college boards of trustees. Specifically, he has asked whether the student trustees now are to be considered "local public officers" to be counted for quorum and other voting purposes. Second, if the student members are local public officers, must they be residents of the State and of the community colleges' sponsoring municipalities in order to be eligible for election by the student bodies as trustees? Finally, if students residing outside the sponsoring municipalities are eligible, should their oaths of office be filed with the clerk of the sponsoring municipalities or with the clerks of the students' counties of residence?
In a previous opinion, we dealt with the question whether community college trustees are public officers (1982 Op Atty Gen [Inf] 107). We distinguished a public office from a position of employment (ibid.). A public officer has the authority under law to exercise some portion of the sovereign powers of government (ibid.; Matter of Haller v Carlton,
In our 1982 opinion, we set forth the powers and duties delegated by law to community college trustees. The trustees have the duty (subject to approval by the the State University trustees) to appoint a president of the college (Education Law, §
In 1977 (chapter 164), section
Having decided that student trustees are public officers, the second question is whether they are local officers who must be residents of the sponsoring municipality. Your counsel has pointed out that enrollment at community colleges is available to both residents and non-residents of the sponsoring municipality. Thus, the student bodies of community colleges are not composed exclusively of residents of the sponsor. The question becomes whether non-residents are eligible to serve as trustees.
In our 1982 opinion, we applied section
Under the provisions of the Education Law, however, the student members of community college boards of trustees are "elected by and from among the students of the college" (id., §§ 6306[1], 6310[1]). With the granting of full voting rights to the student trustees, this appointment provision was not modified. Thus, it appears that the Legislature's intent was not to permit any member of the student body, whether or not a resident of the sponsor, to serve as a student trustee. It seems clear that the authorization for student trustees is intended to provide the student body with representation on the board of trustees. The requisite is continued membership on the student body, not residence in a particular location. Residency requirements for public officers are designed to encourage employees to maintain a commitment and involvement with the governmental employer (Mandelkern v City of Buffalo,
Your final question is, assuming that non-residents are eligible to serve as student trustees, whether their oaths of office should be filed with the clerk of the sponsoring municipality or with the clerk of the student's place of residence. All public officers are required to take and file oaths of office (Public Officers Law, §
We conclude that the student members of community college boards of trustees are public officers but need not be residents of the sponsoring municipality. They must file their oaths of office with the clerk of the sponsoring municipality.
