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HomeMy WebLinkAbout06-City Attorney c! . j o-i:l5 , \ ~ - ,', . -,~ -:- l~ ; ~ -1.r::J.r t 4- '.RY 25--..... rU, ~ ...... ..J .~ ~1 , '...... RALPH H. PRINCE 'LSON ~. w: City Attorney y Attorney , Cit Emergency Ordinances, Facts and Law No. 85-14 Opn. 1, 670.2 , 700. e ~ 1,,- --~ ~ QUESTION What are the facts and law relating to the promulgc f emergency and urgency ordinances? FACTS You have requested A Ww or---' .'}.. f'-'r'hr <1 Th- OR e~inioa en-urgency ordinances~ f~s ..Cl1"'\(1 '1~ --.. "'....::. . ANALYSIS The designation of an ordinance as an urgency or emergency ordinance determines the effective date of said ordinance. Whereas a regular ordinance takes effect thirty days after final passage, an ordinance designated as an emergency or urgency ordinance takes effect immediately. By designating an ordinance as an emergency or urgency ordinance, that ordinance is removed from challenge by the referendum process. An ordinance which is found to be inappropriately deSignated as an urgency or emergency ordinance is not made ~ c c :J ,) (invalid thereby. moved to a point thirty-one days following the date of final C.~;J ( 7'7 jV ~ passagl;!. 1~yr'Z:;J t, ~~ " The power to adopt emergency ordinances is to be used _~ reserved ly. ,/ The effective date of the ordinance is The ncrmal ordinance adoption procedures contain important safeguards against common error in judgment made by legiSlatures.~The emergency adoption power, which specifically circumvents these safeguards, is designed to be used where immediate action is needed to ": ,...';... ~'-',.}- ~V, -<'">_~",, , I_~' ,,- I')'" ' t;i resolve a crisis during a time of difficulty or danger, where the short term resolution of the problem outweighs the benefits of deliberation~ Article XI Section 5(a) of the California Constitution provides: "It shall be competent in any city charter to provide that the city governed thereunder may make and enforce all ordinances and regulations with respect to municipal affairs, subject only to restrictions and limitations provided in their several charters and in respect to other matters they shall be subject to general laws. . . ." Section 121 of the San Bernardino City Charter sets forth 6~ the scheme for the referendum process which is a part of the restrictions and limita~ns imposed with respect to the ordinance adoption procedure. The section states: c o o :) ../ "No ordinance passed by the Common Council , .- (except when otherwise required by the )<_r'~ - general laws of the State, or by the ,l,Kl provisions of this C,harter, res"p,ecting street/ improvements and excegt an_Qrdinance for the immediate, prese.rvatign of t;he PUblic':-,pe~ce, './ ,-,11./ healtg, or. s~fe~y, which contains ~~t~~em~nt tI~ of' i t;,:l, urgency" aM, iE passed by a two-thirds (2/3) vO!~ of, the Council, . . .) shall go into effect before thirty (30) days from the time of its final passage and its approval by the Mayor; and if during said thirty days a petition signed by electors of the City equal in number to at least thirty percent (30%) of the entire vote cast for all candidates for Mayor at the last preceding City election at which time a ~ayor was elected, protesting against the passage of such ordinance, be presented to the Council, the same shall thereupon be suspended from going into operation, . . ." Pursuant to this Charter section, the adoption of an ordinance for "the immediate preservation of the public peace, health or safety, . ." cuts off the referendum rights granted by this section. California courts have found that even in instances where the cutoff of this referendum right was the avowed purpose of an "urgency" ordinance, that said ordinance was not made invalid thereby. "Appellants argue that the ordinance could net have become effective on the same day that it was introduced because 'the city ,~~I~ council trumpeted its objective of avoiding recourse to the instrumentality prescribed by the California Constitution under article XIIIA, section 4, i.e., submission of the c c o :J ordinance to a vote of the People. This was the avowed predicate of this alleged "urgency" ordinance.' However, even if that had been the council's secret intent rather than its express intent, it would be irrelevant if the council had the power to ehact it at the time that it did. ~ 'The motives of a city's legislative body in passing an ordinance will not ordinarily be considered in determining its validity, in the absence of a showing of fraud, at least where nothing on the face of the ordinance shows that it wcs passed for improper motives, or where its passage for improper motives is not inferatle from its operation or effect under circumstances of which judicial notice may be taken. There is a presumption that the legislative body acted from proper motives.'" National Independent J Business Alliance v. City of Beverly Hills ''fi' (l91Sl) IllS Ca1.App.3d 13, 11SU Ca1.Rptr. 59, 64. ". r '/~ addition to cutting off any referendum right available ../ to the voting population, the effect of declaring an ordinance to be an emergency or urgency ordinance, is to avoid the usual waiting period specified in the law. Section 36934 of the California Government Code applicable to general law cities provides in pertinent part: "Ordinances shall not be passed within five days of their introduction, nor at other than a regular meeting or at an adjourned regular meeting. However, an urgency ordinance may be passed immediately upon introduction and either at a regular or special meeting." (}tU This section has been interpreted to mean that an ordinance passed in violation of this provision is invalid and ineffective regardless of its subject matter. (National Independent Business v. City of Bevery Hills [1982], supra. Pursuant to this interpretation, an ordinance invalidly c:ft.. o c o :> enacted under emergency provisions would be deemed to have been passed in violation of thiSS~~i~ ~d therefore invalid. However, it has bee~ furthe~found that if the '--..--.-.- -- - -,~-- same emergency ordinance is otherwise valid and is given a second reading under Government Code Section 36937, the ordinance is not invalid but becomes effective thirty days after it is adopted. (rd.) Government Code Section 36937 provides: "Ordinances take effect 30 days after their final passage. An ordinance takes effect immediately, if it is an ordinance: 1\ ~ ',A 1"';; ",( tl/ (a) Relating to an election. (b) For the immediate preservation of the------ public peace, health or safety~ntain~a ..r...(t~ declaration of the facts constit~1ng ~ e " V urgency, and is passed by a four-fifths vote of the city council. . . ." When an ordinance is first introduced and adopted not less than five days thereafter, the ". . . effect of declaring an urgency when there was none is not to avoid the ordinance, but merely to postpone the taking effect thereof until the period of 30 days has elapsed." (Michelson v. City of (!Uc: Sacramento [1916] 173 Ca1. 108, 159 P. 431, 432.) The word "emergency" has been defined in other jurisdictions, e.g.: "An 'emergency' has been defined to be an rJfL. o o o ~ ~ p(,... , ' / ""l. ~1Ol- '1 ~'i' ' 't- unforeseen occurrence or condition calling for immediate action; an exigency; a crisis; or a time of difficulty or danger. The purpose of emergency legislation is to enable the legislative body to provide immediate action in order to prevent or remedy a condition or situation which is of such a nature that it dema~attention, when to postpone such action would result in serious injury or damage to the people, the government, or the community directly concerned." (Municipal Corporations 5, McQuillin 3rd Ed. Section 15.40 Emergency.) vlc..- In this jurisdiction, the ordinance~\ rk(",~J. J1, "'..I ~~k Q~""""'1'. declaration of the urgency in jAHrf '. fV'1tl\<b H>.,d'- Q.'-l-eL<-lo'-V" 0 (-. ~ the I !~ rr-7;1"~ 1.] ~ "Such a declaration, though not conclusive, is prima facie evidence of the existence of an emergency, and places the burden on the party attacking the recital." (Los An~eles Dredgin~ Co. v. Cit~ of Long Beach l19 OJ 210 Cal. 34 , 291 P. B3 , B44. ole.. And, if no evidence to the contrary appears, the presumption arises that the action of the councilor other body in declaring an emergency is based upon facts after sufficient inquiry. (See Potter v. City of Compton, et al. [1936] 15 ~t- Cal.App.2d 232, 59 P.2d 537.) This legislative presumption does not always pertain. L ) .h'-~n~ ~~:~eC~;F~:n~~~~:~:~~~~RLt= ~ oraifldl.l.,,",,'I;;; .i..L,:,C'lf ll.ClL CUI C'un=.t:&cu",,) dOC3 Rot ~n~ CQyl~ net e]Ei8t~ . . _)the mere declaration of the council in such a case that the or~nance is passed for the immediate p servation of the pubIc health is neither conc usive nor yet sufficient. The nature of the ordinance itself will, in most '~,1' CL/~ o o o :) instances, be determinative, and where a sudden emergency has arisen, a statement of the nature of the urgency finds proper place to support the declaration." Ex Parte Hoffman (190'1) 99 P. 517, 520. ~ . ,I,t...,-'-- iL'-~' In the following California cases, the reviewing court found ~/ r./ r ~hat the adoption of an emergency or urgency ordinance(was _~r~ r lnappropriate. ~ ~)JJ,. "t ;J rJ-C" , 1. Ex Parte Hoffman (1909) 155 Ca1. 114, 99 P. 51. 8~ The City of Los Angeles adopted an ordinance establishing a standard for the components of "milk". The City subsequently adopted an ordinance making the sale of milk not in conformance with the standard a violation of the law. The milk standard was adopted as an urgency measure. The court found that the establishment of a standard for milk was not a measure which must be adopted for the immediate preservation of the public health. The court stated: " .. we agree that the mere declaration of the council in such a case that the ordinance is passed for the immediate !~ preservation of the public health is neither & conclusive nor yet sufficient. The nature of the ordinance itself will . . . be determinative, and where a sudden emergency has arisen, a statement of the nature of the urgency finds proper place to support the declaration. Id.,520. (Emphasis added) 2. Ex Parte Kazas (1937) 22 Ca1.App.2d 161, 70 P.2d 962. PI? The City of Bakersfield adopted an ordinance regulating the prices to be charged by barbers. The issue in the case was o o o ::) whether the City had the authority to so regulate prices. The City justified its action on the grounds that the national depression had created an economic "emergency" among the local barber trade and, that the price regulation was therefore necessary and constitutional as an exercise of the police power of the City. ."--, , ,~;/J'1 '/, 'Jr t,.,y-' ,.,--' " I .~ . .. " . \ i!c .' ~'.:' '" '/ Q,. '\oJ ~. grounds. However, the Kazas was decided on constitional court's observations in Kazas are pertinent insofar as they set forth the circumstances in which it is appropriate to -- --'----'., -.- adopt an emergency or urgency ordinance, or- F~.lt:111 .1. ~ ") ---- In overturning the ordinance in question, the court in Kazas states: ". . . without evidence or proper findings of fact Qy a com~etent fact=findini ~odr proauced-oerore 1ts members, a leg s at ve cody should go no-Iurther, in declaring the existence of a condition of emergency which ~/ depends for its existence on the truth of O~ certain facts, than a court can go in taking judicial notice of a general factual condition; that judicial notice is thus limited; 'that the matter be one of common and general knowledge, that it be well established and authoritatively settled, be practically indisputable, and that this common, general, and certain knowledge exist in the particular jurisdiction. '" Id., 966. (Emphasis added) Kazas requires that before an ordinance can be adopted as an emergency measure, there must be findings of fact in support of the existence of an emergency. Where there are no such c' o ~ u ,""" ,-) findings of fact, the emergency must be self-evident, to the point that it could be given judicial notice as an existing fact. 3. County of Los Angeles v. City Council of the City of ~ Lawndale (1962) 202 Cal.App.2d 20, 20 Cal.Rptr. 363. The City of Lawndale sought to annex a park contiguous to its boundaries which was owned by the County of Los Angeles. The City adopted the resolution initiating the annexation procedures as an emergency measure. By so doing, the City Council limited the time in which the County could file a protest against the annexation. In adopting the resolution, the City Council stated as a basis for its findings of an emergency: " .. That valuable buildings, extensive public recreational facilities and potentially dangerous conditions are ~ maintained upon said property and that it is essential that ma~imum police, fire and municipal type protection be given to said area immediately because of said activity." Id., 365. The court found that the resolution was not an emergency measure. ". . . The action of a city council in the passage of an ordinance for the protection of the public peace, health and I safety of the citizens of the community, is &C the exercise of the police power of such city, and the exercise thereof, with certain exceptions~ot here involved, l! limited to c' o o J the existing boundaries of the :ity. ~tations) The factuallfetermlnation of 'urgency' by a city council in the situation ~, here presented is not conclusive on review. V~ (Citation) The ordinance of annexation here under consideration was not, as a matter of law, an I urgency I measure. . . ." Id., 366. (Emphasis added) --- as an urgency resolution a measure tJ1 which affected property beyond the City's borders under the circumstances involved in the case. 4. Parr v. Municipal Court for Monterey-Carmel J.D. (1971) ~ 3 Cal.3d 861, 92 Cal.Rptr. 153. The City of Carmel adopted an anti-hippie measure as an urgency ordinance. The ordinance was invalidated as a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States 1~'/~-'co~-;;;;tution.~e court specifically avoided discussion of .,!- '-' d the validity of the finding of urgency. '\. 5. City of Colton v. City of Rialto (1964) 230 Cal.App.2d ~ 174, 40 Ca1.Rptr. 766. The City of Rialto was in a competition with the City of Colton to annex uninhabited territory contiguous to the borders of both cities. Within a five day period, the City of Rialto introduced and approved an ordinance approving annexation, There was no statement of urgency included in the ordinance. The court found that: c o o ~ "Section 36934 of the Government Code provides that ordinances of the type here in question 'shall not be passed within five days of their introduction' . . . where an ordinance . . . was purportedly adopted in violation of the five-day limitation contained in what is now section 36934, such an ordinance or resolution is void." ~. 770. The case does not in fact involve an ordinance adopted as an urgency measure. The City of Rialto was guilty of a violation of Government Code Section 36934 in adopting a non-emergency ordinance within five days of the date of its introduction. Relationship to CECA If the urgency ordinance pertains to subject matter which is a "project" within the meaning of CEQA, then environmental review must be carried out unless it concerns an emergency. Emergency is defined at Public Resources Code 21172 which states: "This division shall not apply to any project undertaken, carried out, or approved by a public agency, to maintain, repair, restore, demolish or replace property or facilities damaged or destroyed as a result of a disaster in a disaster stricken area in which a state of emergency has been proclaimed by the Governor pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8550) of Division 1, Title 2 of the Government Code." Emeraencv proiects "15269. o o o ~ The following emergency projects are exempt from the requirements of CEQA. (a) Projects to maintain, repair, restore, demolish, or replace property or facilities damaged or destroyed as a result of a disaster stricken area in which a state of emergency has been proclaimed by the Governor pursuant to the California Emergency Services Act, commencing with Section 8550 of the Government Code. (b) Emergency repairs to public service facilities necessary to maintain service. (c) Specific actions necessary to prevent or mitigate] an emergency.n Emeraencv n15359. 'Emergency' means a sudden, unexpected occurrence, involving a clear and imminent danger, demanding immediate action to prevent or mitigate loss of, or damage to life, health, property, or essential public services. Emergency includes such occurrences as fire, flood, earthquake, or other soil or geologic movements, as well as such occurrences as riot, accident, or sabotage.n CONCLUSION An ordinance should be designated as an emergency or urgency ordinance only when the situation which the ordinance addresses allows no time for deliberation. The facts upon which the finding - -- c o o J of emergency or urgency is based must be of common and general knowledge, well established and authoritatively settled. Adoption of an ordinance or resolution as an emergency measure shortens the time for adoption of such ordinance or resolution. Adoption as an emergency or emergency measure also forecloses any challenge to the new law by referendum of the citizens. An ordinance or resolution which constitutes a project under CEQA must conform to the narrower definition of "emergency" contained in the Public Resources Code to avoid CEQA review before adoption. JOHN F. WILSON Deputy City Attorney JFW:ca