About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

22 Minnesota Attorney General Reports and Opinions 1 (1989)

handle is hein.sag/sagmn0026 and id is 1 raw text is: JANU1 ARY 1989

Minnesota Legal Register
(Attorney General Opinions Issue)

Opinions of the
Attorney General
Hubert H. Humphrey, III
CITIES: PUBLIC WORKS: WATERWORKS: FIRE PRO-
TECTION CHARGE: Min. Stat. § 444. 075 (1988) does not
authorize city to impose fire protection charge on improved
structures in city based on size or assessed valuation to pay
for portion of waterworks improvement and enlargement
project related to providing municipal fire protection. Munic-
ipality itself is chargeable for use and availability of water-
works facilities for fire protection and costs applicable
thereto are payable from taxes levied upon all taxable
property in municipality.
Fire protection charge, under facts herein, not within
prohibition of Minn. Stat. § 444.25 (1988) relating to water
availability or standby charges.
Mr. Kerry B. Olson                      January 5, 1989
City Attorney                                  59-b-13
City of Glencoe                        Cr. ref. to 624-d
1017 Hennepin Ave.
Glencoe, MN 55336
In your letter to Attorney General Hubert H. Humph-
rey, III, you submit substantially the following:
FACTS
The city of Glencoe, a home rule charter city of the
fourth class, operates a waterworks. At the present time it is
necessary for the city to improve and enlarge its waterworks,
not only to meet state health department regulations, but
also to provide adequate water supply to citizens of the
community and to provide reasonable fire fighting capacity.
The city's consulting engineer has determined that approxi-
mately 3 of the cost of the construction of the project will
be related to providing adequate water supplies for general
consumption and about 3 of the cost will be related to
providing adequate fire fighting protection.
It appears that under Minn. Stat. § 444.075, subd. 2
(1988), relating to the financing of waterworks facilities,
some form of user fee must be established to repay any
bonds which may be issued to finance this project rather
than relying upon real estate taxes for this purpose. It
appears to the city that user fees based only upon water
consumption are unfair because a large portion of the cost of
the project is related to fire protection and unrelated to
actual water use. For example, the city has determined that a
significant number of structures exist in the community, such
as commercial, industrial and institutional buildings
(churches, schools, government buildings), which require
extra capacity for fire fighting. However, the use of these
structures presently results in the consumption of a very
small amount of water and, hence, the owners of these
struLures receive small bills based on a gallonage use system.
It may, therefore, be the intention of the city to impose,
in addition to gallonage charges, a fire protection charge on
all improved structures in the city on a graduated classifica-
tion system in relation to their size, or, in the alternative,
according to their assessed valuation, with the larger or more
valuable structures paying more than the smaller structures.
However, we note that Minn. Stat. § 444.25 (1988) appears
to prohibit the imposition of water availability or standby

In This Issue...
Subject
CITIES: Public Works:
Waterworks: Fire
Protection Charge:

Op. No.    Dated
59-b-13    1/5/89

PEACE OFFICERS:
Wearing Uniform or
Badge Off-Duty
While Engaged in
Services As A Pro-
tective Agent               785-L
(Cr. Ref. to 605a-2, 876)
CONTRACTS: Directors,
Inspectors, Principals
and Superintendents:
Salary and Benefits:        166b-4
(Cr. Ref. 161b-4
161b-12, 622k)
SCHOOL BOARD
POWERS: Superintendent:
Salary and Benefits:       161b-12
Cr. Ref. 161b-4,
174-e)

1/17/89
1/24/89
1/24/89

charges upon the owners of structures equipped with fire
protection systems.
You ask substantially the following questions:
QUESTION ONE
Does Minn. Stat. § 444.075 (1988) authorize the city to
impose the proposed fire protection charge on improved
structures within its corporate limits in addition to gallonage
charges for the water actually consumed?
OPINION
In our opinion this question should be answered in the
negative since the statute evinces an intent that the portion of
the cost of a municipal waterworks system related to provid-
ing municipal fire protection be recovered by taxes levied on
taxable property generally rather than by charges on particu-
lar structures as proposed.
Section 444.075, supra, empowers a municipality, as
therein defined, to construct, operate and pay for water-
works and sewer systems. Subdivision 3 of this section deals
with the imposition of charges and provides in part:
To pay for the construction, reconstruction, repair,
enlargement, improvement, or other obtainment and the
maintenance, operation and use of the facilities, the
governing body of a municipality or county may impose
just and equitable charges for the use and for the availabil-
ity of the facilities and for connections with them and
make contracts for the charges as provided in this section.
Payment for the use and availability of these facilities for fire
protection is specifically addressed later in this same subdivi-
sion:
The governing body may fix and levy taxes for the
payment of reasonable charges to the municipality or
county itself for the use and availability of the facilities for
fire protection, for maintaining sanitary conditions, and
for proper storm water drainage in and for public build-
ings, parks, streets, and other public places.

Page 1

TANITIAIDV 10510

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most