Alaskans for Efficient Government, Inc. v. State

52 P.3d 732, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 110, 2002 WL 1832649
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 2002
DocketS-10633
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 52 P.3d 732 (Alaskans for Efficient Government, Inc. v. State) 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
Alaskans for Efficient Government, Inc. v. State, 52 P.3d 732, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 110, 2002 WL 1832649 (Ala. 2002).

Opinions

EASTAUGH, Justice,

with whom CARPENETI, Justice, joins, dissenting.

Order

IT IS ORDERED:

1. This expedited appeal concerns a challenge to the lieutenant governor's ballot summary for an initiative proposing to relocate state legislative sessions to the Matanuska-Susitna Borough. In August 2001 sponsors of the relocation initiative filed a complaint with the superior court seeking a declaratory judgment that the Heutenant governor's ballot summary was neither "true" nor "impar[733]*733tial" as required by AS 15.45.180(a)1 The superior court granted summary judgment in favor of the state, ruling that the sponsors had failed to show that the summary was either untrue or biased. The sponsors appeal. Because we find the last sentence of the summary to be inaccurate and potentially misleading, we reverse and remand with directions to amend the summary's language.

2. The relocation initiative has two major features. First, it would amend AS 24.05.090, which requires legislative sessions to be held in the state capital, Juneau. The initiative would move legislative sessions from the capital to a location within the Matanuska-Susitoa Borough (or in Anchorage until facilities in the Mat-Su Borough are available). Second, the relocation initiative would amend the "FRANK Initiative," an initiative enacted in 1994 as Ballot Measure 5 and currently codified in AS 44.06.050-44.06.060.2

8. The FRANK initiative requires that, before state money may be expended to relocate the capital or the legislature, voters must approve all bondable costs of the move;3 it also provides that the legislature shall establish a commission to determine costs required by an initiative or law that would relocate any present functions of state government; 4 and it requires this commission to determine all bondable and total costs of relocation.5 A prefatory section of the FRANK initiative describes its several purposes, including "to guarantee to the people their right to know and to approve in advance all costs of relocating the capital or the legislature." 6

4. The relocation initiative would change these provisions of the FRANK initiative-including its statement of purposes-by deleting references to relocation of the legislature, thereby making it possible to relocate the legislature without appointing a commission, without having the commission determine the bondable and total costs of the move, and without requiring the voters to approve the total bondable costs before money is spent on the move.

5. Alaska Statute 15.45.180 requires the lieutenant governor, with the assistance of the attorney general, to prepare a "true and impartial" ballot summary for initiatives; the [734]*734attorney general proposed the following summary for the relocation initiative:

This bill would move all sessions of the state legislature to the Matanuska-Susitna (Mat-Su) Borough. If facilities fit for these sessions cannot be found in that borough, sessions would be held in Anchor- - age until facilities are available in the Mat-Su Borough. The bill would repeal the requirements that before the state can spend money to move the legislature, the voters must know the total costs as determined by a commission, and approve a bond issue for all bondable costs of the move.

6. The initiative's sponsors did not object to the summary's first two sentences but took issue with its final sentence, which summarizes the changes the relocation initiative would make to the FRANK initiative. The sponsors maintained that this sentence is neither true nor impartial because it emphasizes how the relocation initiative would change one of the FRANK initiative's several purposes, while neglecting. to describe aceu-rately how the FRANK initiative itself would actually be changed. "This language is not neutral," the sponsors complained, "in that it has the effect of stating that the proponents of the initiative want to keep the costs of the legislative move secret."

7. The lieutenant governor approved the summary as initially proposed. The superior court affirmed the lieutenant governor's decision. The sponsors now appeal.

8. Renewing their initial objection to the proposed summary, the sponsors complain on appeal that "[the ballot language makes it appear that the sponsors are trying to prevent the voters from knowing the costs of the move." The sponsors suggest that this appearance is misleading and that the summary's last sentence conveys this appearance in two ways. First, the sponsors claim that the summary overemphasizes the relocation initiative's effect on only one of the FRANK initiative's stated purposes-guarantecing that voters have a right to know the costs of a move-by saying that the initiative would repeal the requirement that the voters "must know the total costs" of the move. In the sponsors' view, the summary should ignore proposed changes to the FRANK initiative's purpose section "because the purpose section is not an enactment of positive law, but is merely legislative history." Second, the sponsors contend, the summary too narrowly focuses on only one of the ways in which the relocation initiative would amend the FRANK initiative: the summary states that the initiative would repeal the requirement that voters approve bondable costs of the move but fails to make clear that the initiative also would repeal the requirements that a commission would be established and that 'this commission would have to determine the total and bondable costs of relocation.7

9. In response, the state argues that the summary's focus on removing the people's right to know the costs of the move is neither misleading nor biased. The state contends that this focus is accurate because the "voter's right to know the total costs" of relocation is one of the specific purposes of the FRANK initiative that the relocation initiative would repeal. Further, the state asserts, the focus is impartial because the relocation initiative's provisions repealing the existing requirements that the costs of the move be determined by a commission and then approved by voters would indeed have the effect of "removiing] the guarantee that the voters know the costs of a legislative session move." Finally, the state points out that the summary's language describing the FRANK initiative's purpose of guaranteeing people the right to know the cost of relocat[735]*735ing the legislature simply tracks the language included in the FRANK initiative's ballot summary, which presumably qualified as a true and impartial description when the FRANK initiative was proposed in 1994.

10. In reviewing the adequacy of a lieutenant governor's ballot summary we apply a "deferential standard of review."8 This means that we will not invalidate the summary simply because we believe a better one could be written; instead, "the lieutenant governor's summary [will] be upheld unless we [cannot] reasonably conclude that the summary [is] impartial and accurate."9 And we must place "[the burden ... upon those attacking the summary to demonstrate that it is biased or misleading." 10

11. We have addressed the adequacy of a lieutenant governor's ballot summary in only one previous case, Burgess v. Alaska Lieutenant Governor.

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Alaskans for Efficient Government, Inc. v. State
52 P.3d 732 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 P.3d 732, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 110, 2002 WL 1832649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaskans-for-efficient-government-inc-v-state-alaska-2002.