Area G Home & Landowners Organization, Inc. v. Anchorage

927 P.2d 728, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 141, 1996 WL 674309
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1996
DocketS-7731
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 927 P.2d 728 (Area G Home & Landowners Organization, Inc. v. 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
Area G Home & Landowners Organization, Inc. v. Anchorage, 927 P.2d 728, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 141, 1996 WL 674309 (Ala. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The Area G Home and Landowners’ Organization, Inc. and three taxpayer-citizens (HALO, collectively) appeal the superior court’s dismissal of their lawsuit. Their suit sought to prevent the Municipality of Anchorage (Municipality) from creating a new police service area that would include the area of southeast Anchorage called the Hillside. HALO alleges that in creating the new service area, the Municipality violated its own charter and ordinances as well as the equal protection guarantees in the state and federal constitutions. We affirm the superi- or court’s decision in favor of the Municipality-

11. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The Municipality was incorporated as a unified municipality 1 in September 1975, when voters adopted by referendum its constitutional document, the Home Rule Charter for the Municipality of Anchorage (Charter). The Municipality united the previously separate cities in the Greater Anchorage Borough.

The Alaska Constitution and the Charter provide for the creation of “service areas” within the Municipality. Residents of a service area receive specific services, such as fire or police protection, and are taxed accordingly. Alaska Const., art. X, § 5; AS 29.35.450; Charter, art. IX, § 9.01; North Kenai Peninsula Road Maintenance Serv. Area v. Kenai Peninsula Borough, 850 P.2d 636, 639 (Alaska 1993). Ordinances presently in effect define over thirty-five service areas within the Municipality to provide for services such as police protection, fire protection, road maintenance, drainage, parks and recreation, and solid waste disposal. Anchorage Municipal Code (AMC) 27.30.010-.610 (1996).

The Charter states twice that a service area may be created or altered only by vote “within the area affected.” The section entitled “Service areas” provides:

(a) A service area may be created, altered, or abolished only with the approval of a majority of those voting on the question within the area affected....
*730 (b) The assembly by ordinance shall adopt procedures for creating, altering, abolishing and operating service areas.

Charter, art. IX, § 9.01(a) and (b). In addition, a section designated as a “Bill of Rights,” provides:

This Charter guarantees rights to the people of Anchorage that are in addition to rights guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States of America and the Constitution of the State of Alaska. Among rights guaranteed by this Charter are:
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(2) The right of immunity from the creation or alteration of a service area, except upon a vote within the area affected.

Charter, aft. II.

The Anchorage Police Department (APD) serves the Anchorage Police Service Area (APSA), which encompasses a large portion of the Municipality. 2 However, APSA does not include the Hillside, an area in southeast Anchorage that is bordered on the west by the New Seward Highway, on the north by O’Malley and Abbott Roads, and on the south by Potter Drive.

The Hillside is a residential area that has grown from a population of approximately 2,500 in 1975 to approximately 25,000 now. It is relatively affluent; according to Mayor Rick Mystrom, its voting population is approximately ten percent of Anchorage’s, but its residential property value comprises seventeen percent of the Anchorage total.

Hillside residents do not pay for APD police service. Instead, they rely on Alaska state troopers for protection. However, Hillside residents benefit from APD services. APD provides emergency services and investigates major crimes in the Hillside. APD polices roads that border the Hillside and public institutions, such as Service High School, within the Hillside. About thirty APD officers reside in the Hillside and drive their patrol cars home, providing a limited patrol service for the Hillside. Many citywide services provided by APD benefit Hillside residents. Those services include the 911 system, specialized units such as the bomb squad, and what the Municipality calls “safe city” functions. Safe city functions are programs designed to benefit all Anchorage residents and include crime prevention education, municipal prosecution, jail cells, patrols for safer recreation and shopping areas, and measures to reduce drunk driving.

The boundaries of APSA have not been static. Previous expansions of APSA, to include the neighborhoods of Eagle River/Chugiak, Muldoon/Sand Lake, Dimond Industrial Park, Ocean View/Klatt, Glenn Heights, South-East Midtown, Basher/part of Bicentennial Park, Abbott/O’Malley, and Independence Park, were approved by the separate votes of residents of the new areas to be added. Hillside voters have rejected expansion of APSA into their neighborhood on three occasions.

On February IB, 1996, the Anchorage Assembly passed AO 96-30(S). That ordinance placed two propositions on the April 1996 ballot. The first, Proposition 13, provided for the abolition of APSA. Only residents within the existing APSA could vote on it. However, it was contingent on passage of the second proposition, Proposition 14. Proposition 14 provided for the creation, effective January 1, 1997, of a new Anchorage Police Service Area (NAPSA) consisting of the old APSA plus the Hillside. Proposition 14 also stated that “[t]he new police service area would succeed to all of the assets and liabilities, including bonded indebtedness, of the Anchorage Police Service Area.” All residents within the boundaries of NAPSA could vote on the second proposition. Thus AO 96-30(S) offered a mechanism to expand APSA to include the Hillside without a separate vote by Hillside residents.

The April 1996 ballot also included Proposition 6, which authorized $900,000 in bonds to purchase APD police cars. That proposi *731 tion stated that the bonds will be paid by property taxes within APSA and guaranteed by the Municipality. Local law requires service area bonds to receive “dual majority” approvals from the voters who will be primarily liable for them and the voters who will guarantee them. AMC 06.20.020(A). Therefore, Proposition 6 had to pass both among APSA residents and among all voters in the Municipality. Hillside residents did not vote as APSA residents on Proposition 6. However, if Propositions 6, 13, and 14 all take effect, Hillside residents will be assessed for property taxes on the $900,000 debt after January 1,1997, under the “assets and liabilities” clause of Proposition 14.

Before the election, HALO brought suit. HALO alleged that AO 96-30(S) violated (1) the “area affected” provisions in the Anchorage Municipal Code and the Charter and (2) the equal protection clauses of the Alaska and United States Constitutions. It sought declaratory and injunctive relief.

The superior court ruled that HALO was not entitled to a preliminary injunction.

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927 P.2d 728, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 141, 1996 WL 674309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/area-g-home-landowners-organization-inc-v-anchorage-alaska-1996.