The Honorable Rodney Ellis Chair, Committee on Government Organization Texas State Senate Post Office Box 12068 Austin, Texas 787 11-2068
Re: Whether article
Dear Senator Ellis:
You ask whether article
The United Independent School District ("UISD") employs three of the Laredo City Council members, and Texas AM International University ("TAMIU") employs a fourth. See Request Letter, supra note 2, at 2-3. The City Attorney described the four council members' employments:
*Page 21. Council Member A is employed by the [UISD] . . . as a Registrar and as an Assistant Boys Track Coach. Based on the fact that he is an assistant coach teaching physical education, and that he is not required to be certified as a teacher, similar to substitute teachers, the city pays him for his services as a city council member.
2.Council Member B is also employed by the UISD . . . [as] an administrator, specifically, the Support Services Manager. He is not
paid by the city for his services as a city council member; but he is reimbursed for any actual expenses that he incurs that are related to his service as a member of the council.
Council Member C is also employed by the UISD . . . [as] an administrator, specifically the Director of UISD's Support Services Department. He is not paid by the city for his services as a city council member; but he is reimbursed for any actual expenses that he incurs that are related to his service as a member of the council.
Council Member D is employed by [TAMIU as] a full-time professor teaching marketing and possibly other courses at the University. He is not paid for his services as a city council member; he is only reimbursed for any actual expenses that he incurs that are related to his service as a member of the council.
Id.
II. Article
Article XVI, section 40(b) expressly permits an individual who receives compensation from the State of Texas to serve as a member of the governing body of a local governmental entity but prohibits the individual from receiving a salary for serving on the governing body unless the individual receives compensation from the state for work performed in certain capacities:
State employees or other individuals who receive all or part of their compensation either directly or indirectly from funds of the State of Texas and who are not State officers shall not be barred from serving as members of the governing bodies of school districts, cities, towns, or other local governmental districts. Such State employees or other individuals may not receive a salary for serving as members of such governing bodies, except that:
a schoolteacher . . . or retired school administrator may receive compensation for serving as a member of a governing body of a school district, city, town, or local governmental district . . .; and
a faculty member or retired faculty member of a public institution of higher education may receive compensation for serving as a member of a governing body of a water district. . . .
TEX. CONST, art.
III. Analysis
The City Attorney did not ask about Council Member A, but assumed that his position as a coach renders him a "schoolteacher" for purposes of article XVI, section 40(b)(1). TEX. CONST, art.
A. Whether a coach is a schoolteacher for purposes of article XVI,section 40(b)(1)
The key to resolving this issue is to determine the definition of the term "schoolteacher" for purposes of article XVI, section 40(b)(1). A court presumes that the language of the Texas Constitution has been "carefully selected" and thus construes constitutional terms "as they are generally understood." Spradlin v. Jim Walter Homes, Inc.,
No court has construed the term "schoolteacher" as it is used in article XVI, section 40(b)(1). In Smith v. Alanis, a Texas court concluded, in the context of Education Code chapter 21, that a person hired as head football coach and athletic director, who was a full-time professional employee required to hold a teaching certificate, is subject to the statutory requirement that teachers new to a school district be employed under a probationary contract, but that case is not dispositive here. See Smith v. Alanis, No. 03-01-00713-CV,
This office has considered the meaning of the term "schoolteacher" twice. In 2002 this office determined that the term does not encompass "an instructor or professor at a state university," relying in part on the plain and common meaning of the term as reflected in the dictionary, which describes a schoolteacher as "a person who teaches in a school below the college level." Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
Thus, under
Although, as
In our opinion, whether a particular individual who receives compensation from the State of Texas is a schoolteacher for purposes of article
Whether a particular state employee, such as Council Member A, is employed to instruct students in a school setting as a result of which the students may receive credit, and thus whether Council Member A is a schoolteacher for purposes of article XVI, section 40 is a question of fact that cannot be determined in the opinion process. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
B. Whether certain expenses may be reimbursed without constitutingsalary for purposes of article XVI, section 40(b)(1)
The City Attorney also asked about reimbursing those council members who may not constitutionally receive a salary for their city council service. See Request Letter, supra note 2, at 3-4. The Laredo City Charter entitles city council members to "reimbursement for their actual and necessary expenses incurred in" performing their official duties.See LAREDO, TEX., CITY CHARTER, *Page 6
art. II, § 2.02 (City Council, Compensation; Expenses), availableat http://www.cityoflaredo.com/ mayor-council/city-charter/charterl.htm (last visited Mar. 7, 2007). "[A] mere reimbursement of expenses does not constitute" salary for purposes of article XVI, section 40(b)(1). Tex. Att'y Gen. LO-93-033, at 1; see also In re Carlisle,
The City Attorney asked whether the city may reimburse city council members for certain specific items:
a. . . . expenses for meals consumed by council members and their constituents at times when the council members meet with them to discuss city issues . . .[;]
b. . . . membership fees of a civic organization, such as Kiwanis, . . . if [the member] submits claims stating that he attended such meetings as a representative of the city[;]
c. . . . expenses incurred by a council member for maintenance of a home office (as defined and qualified under Internal Revenue Services rules), to the extent such home office is used for city business, including pro-rated rent or mortgage and electricity consumed. . . . For example, council member X uses 10% of his home for a certain amount of time to study the council agenda; [and]
d. . . . annual leave earned at the place of employment. . . used by a council member in order to attend to city business . . . at [the] actual workplace daily pay rate.
Request Letter, supra note 2, at 3-4. He further asked whether governing bodies of home-rule municipalities may "draft and enact their own ordinances setting policies for what is or is not reimbursable as actual expenses as well as set maximum amounts reimbursable per member without violating any state statute or the Texas Constitution." Id. at 4.
Whether a particular expense is reimbursable and not salary for purposes of article XVI, section 40(b)(1) is a question of fact that cannot be resolved in the opinion process. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
As the final question suggests, a home-rule municipality may adopt reasonable ordinances delimiting expenses for which the municipality may reimburse city council members. "Home-rule cities do not depend on the legislature for specific grants of authority but, instead, have a constitutional right of self-government and look to the legislature only for specific limitations on their power." City of Laredo v. WebbCounty, No. 03-05-00168-CV,
Whether a particular state employee is a schoolteacher for purposes of articleXVI , section40 of the Texas Constitution depends upon whether the employee is employed to instruct students in a school setting, which may include an athletic facility, as a result of which participants receive credit toward fulfilling their curriculum requirements.A home-rule municipality may adopt reasonable ordinances delimiting expenses for which the municipality may reimburse city council members consistently with article XVI, section 40(b)(1). To the extent that reimbursement for various expenses constitutes a gift or grant of public funds for purely private purposes, it would contravene article
III , section52 of the Texas Constitution.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
KENT C. SULLIVAN First Assistant Attorney General
ELLEN L. WITT Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
KYMBERLY K. OLTROGGE Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
