87-EE (2)RESOLUTION NO. 87-~-~-'
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COMMISSION OF
THE CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH SUPPORTING
THE FLORIDA LEAGUE OF CITIES LEGISLATIVE
PROGRAM.
WHEREAS, the City of Boynton Beach is, and has been for some time,
a member of the Florida League of Cities; and
WHEREAS, through Boynton Beach representatives the City does
participate in the development of the Annual Legislative Program for the
Florida League of Cities; and
WHEREAS, the City of Boynton Beach is concerned about the actions
taken by the Legislature in regard to the ability of Florida municipalities
to carry out their responsibilities in an effective, efficient and meaningfu
manner, which is the aim of the Legislative Program of the Florida League of
Cities.
NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA:
Section 1. The City of Boynton Beach does support the Legislative
Program of the Florida League of Cities and specifically and strongly
supports the 1987 Legislative Priorities relating to:
A. One Cent Local Option Sales Tax
B. Sanitary Sewers Disposal Faci~lities
C. Sunshine Law/Attorney-Client Privilege
D. Tort Liability
E. Eminent Domain
F. Annexation
a summary of which is attached and made a part of this Resolution and
resolve that this Resolution be forwarded to Governor Martinez and the
Members of the Palm Beach County Legislative Delegation.
PASSED AND ADOPTED THIS _./~;~Z~U~ay of_ ~¢/ 1987.
ATTEST:
(Corporate Seal)
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
Vi ..,~v, - - .....
1987
Legislative
Priorities
ri~i~ l~a~u~ ~[ Ci~ 201 W. Park Avenue, Po~ Office Box 1757, Tallahass~e, FL 32302; (904} 222-9684,1-(800) 342-8112, 282-5010
One-Cent Local Option Sales Tax
The State Constiturion requires that cities only levy taxes that the Legislature has au-
thorized by general law.'Even; source of tax revenue available to a municipality is either
capped or frozen. The federal government has abolished general revenue sharing and all
other federal support is in jeopardy. Growth has put tremendous strains on our infrastructure
needs. The state has mandated that dries develop and fund five-pear capital improvement
pro~arns before development can occur. We will be asking the state Legislature to give local
officials the authority to raise dollars locally.
The Florida Lea~e of Cities fully supports and has offidally endorsed the Local Gov-
ernment Section of the State Plan Committee Report We believe the Legislature should au-
thorize the county to impose a local option sales tax that would be shared with the dries based
on an interlocal agreement Our program calls for.
· A one-cent local oprion sales tax allowed in one-quarter cent increments.
· The tax could be levied bp majority vote of the county commission.
° The tax would apply only to the first $10,000 of any purchase.
· The money could be used for any capital expenditure and also could be used for debt
retirement.
· The tax would be bondable.
· The money raised would be divided between the county and the dries in the county
based on an intedocal agreement Cities representing a majority of the county's municipal
population could determine the dries' share.
· Absent an interlocal agreement, the money would be divided based on a formula.
i:lorida League of Cities, 201 W. Park Avenue, Post Office Box 1757, Tallahassee, FL 32302; (904) 222-9684, 1-(800) 342-8112, 282-5010
Sanitary Sewage Disposal Facilities
~.,e, ~,m~,'~i,~", ....... ~,~ ~h'llity'a,'~n the state's DeDartment~, of Environmental Regulatiqn .... (DER) permitting
procedures ~ promote the construction and operation of environmentally souna sanitary sewer dis-
posal fa 'cflities and will help ease the finandal burden facing the rate payers of these services.
PERMITTING BY DEl{ - A city' s ability to plan for its future wastewater treatment and disposal needs
relies heavily on the certainty and stabili~ of the state's permitting procedures. P. resen, t l.aw li.m!ts
operating permits to five years. We believe.that five-year o. pe,ratin, g pe ,rmits,~.e not a, clequ~te,},~o_
city:in managing.and funding present and future wasmwater a'eatmem and disposa~ needs.
p~h'nits should ~nore properlY reflect a period of time that coincides with the u~eful life of a facility and
· e term of its bondec{ indebtedness. W~ believe the department should be given the authority to adopt
criteria delineating the circumstances in which it. will i~ue. ope.rati.n,g permits for durations of up to 25
years. Then a city could use the criteria to plan for its facilities for the future.
CONSTRUCTION PERMITS - Current law requires DER to receive a detailed engineering plan
from a to issue a construction permitfor a wastewater facility. DER has determined, and we
permit is issued. Shoul.d this pro-
s~ve money by not paying for the development of construc-
tion plans until they know what is approved by DEI~
RECLASSIFICATION OF WA _'I~_R BODIES - Water bodies in the s,mte th~at h..a~.ve, b, een cla~ew~ tbeYr
default should :be Sought out by DER and reviewed: The. re are a num.o..er ? amn~ai, iy c,reate,a a
bodies like sewage disposal drainage canals :and ditches that were specificafly created to nanole recy-
cled water and ~ese v~ater bodies should be classified accordingly ....
TREATMENT - Wastewater can be treated so that almost all of the pollutants are
In some cases, discharged water can actually improve the quality of
a city should be allowed m discharge high quality recycled
: that body fails to meet water quality standards for reasons unrelated
to the city's discharge of effluent.
By the 21st century our population is expected to increase by approximately 50 percent, as is the
numbei of gallons of wastewater per day that will have to be treated and disposed of by city govern-
ments. Fror~ both a'financial and planning perspective, an additional one-half billion gallons of waste-
water per day is just one of the major challenges facing city officials as they attempt to responsibly plan
for the future.
Florida League of Cities, 201 W. Park Avenue, Post Office Box 1757. Tallahassee. FL 32302; (904) 222-9684, 1-(800.[342-8112. 282-5010
Sunshine Law
Attorney-Client Privilege
The importance of communication between clients and lawyers in proper representa-
tion is universally recognized. The Florida Supreme Court has stated, "The confidential re-
lationship of an attorney and client is a sacred one tha~s indispensible to the administration of
justice."
The importance of this communication was further recognized in the Lav, nders Code of
Professional Responsibility:
Both the fiduciary relationship existing between lavader and client
and the proper functioning of the legal system require the preserva-
tion by {he lawyer of confidences and secrets of one who has em-
ployed or sought to employ him. A client must feel free to discuss
.whateve.r he wishes with his lawyer and a laWYer must be equally
free to obtain information beyond that volunteered by his Client. A
lawyer should be fully informed of all facts of the matter he is han-
dling in order for his client to obtain the full advantage of our legal
system.
Cities in Florida, however, are denied the basic attorney-client privilege because of the
application of the Sunshine Law which has been interpreted to mean that these discussions
take place in a public meeting. Open discussion between an attorney and the governmental
body regarding pending litigation is not in the best interest of 'the public. To adequately in-
form his client, a lawyer must discuss strengths and weaknesses of the case, legal conclusions,
strate!~ry and alternative methods of proceeding. If these matters, are discussed at a public
meeting, an adversary may misuse this information for the benefit of a private individual to
the detriment of the general public.
We believe there should be a process whereby a cit-,d council and its §ovemmental at-
torney could meet in private to discuss pending litigation if:
· The government is presently a party to litigation or litigation is eminent;
· The attorney advises the government that he desires advice concerning above men-
tioned litigation;
· The SUbject matter of the meeting is related solely to settlement negotiations or strate-
gy sessions related to the determination of what litigation expenditures should be incurred;
· ,A:tape recording is made of the entire meeting and filed with the government
agency s ctefk immediately following the meeting; and
· The tape recording is made part of the public record upon conclusion of the litigation
and exhaustio~,l of all appellate remedies.
Florida League of Cities, 201 W. Park Avenue, Post Office Box 1757, Tallahassee, FL 32302; (904) 222-9684,1-(800) 342-8112, 282-5010
Tort Liabili
Until July of this past year, govem,,ments gene~!!y could not be subjected to liability for
injury or damages resulting from their discretionary decisions. Discretionary decisions in-
clude, for example, the decision to 4-lane rather than 2-lane a highway, to design a road with
a 6S-degree curve rather than a 7S-degree curve, to install a traffic light rather than a stop sign
or to locate a school bus stop at one location rather than another. If, however, this type of de-
cision created a known dangerous condition that was not readily apparent to someone who
could be injured, the local government had a duty to warn persons of this danger orto avert it.
Failure to wam of or avert the danger could subject the local government to liability. The
reasoning for this type of immunity was grounded upon a concept of separation of powers
which would not permit a judge or jury to second-guess the reasonableness of the planning
decision made by the governmental body. ~
Additionally, the law placed a cap on the collectibility of judgrnents: $100,000 per per-
son or $200,000 per incident. Any excess amount would be reported to the Legislature and
paid by the local government after the Legislature passed a claims bill.
In July 1986, the Florida Supreme Court held that the purchase of liability insurance
a~ves a local government s ~mmumty for all decas~ons ~ncludlng,discretionary deci.s~ons up to
the coverage limits of the policy. In other words, the purchase of insurance, in and of itself, ex-
pancls the local government's liability to a greater degree than if it had not purchased insur-
ance in the first place. '
Until this decision, governments had a relatively stable body of case law from which to
gauge the actuarial risk associated with performing various services. Governments could
develop adequate risk management programs to minimize potential liability and insurers
were in a better position to measure the actuarial risk of insuring governments against liability.
The effect of this decision has been to thrust the case law governing local government
tort'liability into a state of disarray. We believe a concept which subjects the prudent govern-
ment who purchases liability insurance to a greater degree of liability than the government
that does not, is unsound.
Florida League of Cities, 201 W. Park Avenue, Post Office Box 1757, Tallahassee, FL 32302; (904) 222-9684, 1-(800)342-8112, 282-5010
Eminent Domain
City govemments often find it necessary to use their power of eminent do-
main to acquire land for public purposes such as roads, public buildings and facili-
ties, downtown redevelopment and the preservation of natural resources. How-
ever, city government's exercise of this power is often frustrated by the prohibited
costs associated with eminent domain actions.
Current law says that a city government must fund not only its own legal rep-
resentation, court costs, appraisal and engineer services, but also those of the prop-
erty owner in question. Even if the city offers a reasonable price for the property,
the property owner is under no obligation to accept the offer. And in fact, he can re-
ject the offer, the parties can go to trial, a jury can decide the just value of the prop-
erty in an amount less than that which the city originally offered and the city must
still pay for the prope~txj owner's court costs and legal fees. Therefore, there is no in-
centive for the property owner to settle the claim and no risk on the property owner
for refusing a legitimate offer.
We believe there should be changes that call for a reasonable "offer of judg-
ment" procedure. Under this proposal a city could offer to pay the property owner
a fair price for this property and if the property owner rejects the offer and a jury
later places a value on the property less than the offer by the city, then the property
owner would be responsible for his attorney's fees and court costs incurred after the
offer was made by the city.
Florida Lea~e of Cities, 201 W. Park Avenue, Post Office Box 1757, Tallahassee, FL 32302; (904) 222.9684, 1-(800) 342-8112, 282-5010
Annexation
To implement an effective grow
make a reasonable determination of th,
tincture. Any such determination must
terns and a reasonable and effective me
Florida has one of the most restric
tute requires a dual referendum (a sepal
~h management policy, it is necessary to
; most effective means of providing infras-
take into consideration urban growth pat-
· hod of determining municipal boundaries.
~ive annexation laws in the nation. The sta-
ate vote in the city and in the area to be an-
hexed) if there is one person in the area to be annexed who objects. This is a cum-
bersome and expensive process which f, fils to recognize the overriding state interest
in effective provision of services and planned urban growth. The policy has fostered
needless duplication of services and resulted in the creation of numerous enclaves
which cannot be effectively served.
We believe that c,,hahges should Occur that would allow for municipalities to
waive "in-city elections' for annexations by referendum, and allow ciries to annex
enclaves (unincorporated areas totally ~urr'ounded by one city) by ordinance.
Florida League of Cities, 201 W. Park Avenue, Post Office Box 1757, Tallahassee. FL 32302; (904) 222-9684, 1-(800) 342-8112, 282-5010