Alaska Action Center, Inc. v. Municipality of Anchorage

84 P.3d 989, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 19, 2004 WL 225546
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 2004
DocketS-11252
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 84 P.3d 989 (Alaska Action Center, Inc. v. Municipality of Anchorage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaska Action Center, Inc. v. Municipality of Anchorage, 84 P.3d 989, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 19, 2004 WL 225546 (Ala. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This expedited appeal concerns an initiative proposed by citizens of Girdwood, aimed at preserving much of the lower end of Gird-wood valley as a park. The land is currently owned by the Municipality of Anchorage and has been subject to extensive study and planning, much of it aimed at the development of a private golf course. The Anchorage municipal clerk rejected the initiative petition on the advice of the municipal attorney, who maintained that it would constitute an impermissible appropriation. Alaska Action Center (AAC) appeals the clerk’s decision, arguing that the clerk does not have the authority to reject the initiative petition on those grounds, and that in any event the decision to reject it was wrong because the initiative does not propose an appropriation. We affirm, holding that executive officers are empowered to review prospective initiatives to ensure that they comply with statutory and constitutional subject-matter restrictions and that the proposed Girdwood initiative was properly rejected because the designation of parkland would effect an appropriation. We further hold that the impermissible park designation should not be severed from the rest of the initiative because no other portion may be certified in its absence.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The Municipality of Anchorage owns several hundred undeveloped acres in the lower end of Girdwood valley. Through several rounds of study and planning, the Municipality identified a golf course as a potential use for the land, and attempted to lease 730 acres of the land to a private developer in 1997. This lease was found unlawful on a number of grounds, including that it failed to conform with Anchorage code provisions requiring leases to reflect the land’s market *991 value. 1 When the Municipality changed its ordinance to allow below-market leases, some Girdwood citizens launched a municipal initiative.

The proposed initiative would amend the Anchorage charter, adding Article XXII. Section 22.01 sets out a “Policy Statement,” expressing that the “eastern lower Girdwood valley is largely unsuitable for development and is best preserved in its natural state.” Section 22.02 dedicates as a park that specific land identified in Section 22.03 as the 730 acres subject to the flawed 1997 lease, “excluding such 61 acres located north of 60° 57' 5" North latitude that the Anchorage Planning and Zoning Commission and the Municipal Assembly may select for development for single-family dwellings and commercial development.” Section 22.03 also sets minimum lot sizes for the residential development and requires that any sales or leases be for fair market value. Sections 22.04 and. .05 limit development within the park to seven acres of campground and an .educational or recreational center,. the construction of hiking or cross-country skiing trails, and the maintenance of existing roads or rights-of-way. Section 22.06 bars any use of the park for a golf course or other golf-related uses. Finally, Section 22.07 is a severability clause.

The sponsors submitted their initiative petition to the municipal clerk for certification in accordance with Anchorage Municipal Code 2.05.050. The clerk refused to certify the petition, relying on an opinion letter from the municipal attorney, which advised that the petition was “legally insufficient” because it proposed an appropriation. AAC appealed the clerk’s action to the superior court, where both AAC and the Municipality moved for summary judgment. The superior court granted judgment to the Municipality, and AAC appealed to this court.

llí. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

This court reviews a grant of sum: mary judgment de novo. 2 The questions we address in this case — the authority of executive officers, the meaning of the constitutional term “appropriation,” and the severability of parts of the initiative — -are all questions of law. To these we apply our independent judgment, “adopting] the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy.” 3

B. A Municipal Clerk Has the Authority To Reject an Initiative on Subject-Matter Grounds.

By statute, the power of lawmaking by initiative on the local level is reserved to the people of a home rule municipality. 4 Also by statute, this power may not be used to take any of the actions listed in article XI, section 7 of the Alaska Constitution. 5 Under article XI, section 7, an initiative may not be used to “make or repeal appropriations.” 6 The clerk of the Municipality of Anchorage refused to certify the initiative petition on the advice of the municipal attorney, who asserted in a brief opinion that if passed, the initiative would ' effect an appropriation. AAC challenges the clerk’s power to make this determination in the absence of clearly controlling precedent, claiming'that allowing an officer of the executive branch to keep an initiative off the ballot violates separation of power principles. A review of our cases dealing with the timing of initiative challenges shows that the clerk did not exceed her authority.

*992 The constitutionality of an initiative may be reviewed either before it goes to the voters or after it is enacted. We have divided challenges into two categories to determine when review is proper. One type of challenge invokes “the particular constitutional and statutory provisions regulating initiatives.” 7 The executive officer in charge of certifying initiatives — -in this case, the municipal clerk — has discretion to reject the measure if she determines it “violates any of the[se] liberally construed restrictions on initiatives,” 8 and the courts may review the clerk’s decision right away. 9 Separation of powers principles are not offended by this procedure, as these restrictions were devised to prevent certain questions from going before the electorate at all; 10 an executive officer must play the gatekeeper role in the first instance. Other challenges are grounded in “general contentions that the provisions of an initiative are unconstitutional.” 11 The executive officer may only reject the measure if “controlling authority” leaves no room for argument about its unconstitutionality. 12 The initiative’s substance must be on the order of a proposal that would “mandat[e] local school segregation based on race” in violation of Brown v. Board of Education before the clerk may reject it on constitutional grounds. 13

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Bluebook (online)
84 P.3d 989, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 19, 2004 WL 225546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-action-center-inc-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaska-2004.