Matanuska-Susitna Borough v. Hammond

726 P.2d 166, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 389
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1986
DocketS-825
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 726 P.2d 166 (Matanuska-Susitna Borough v. Hammond) 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
Matanuska-Susitna Borough v. Hammond, 726 P.2d 166, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 389 (Ala. 1986).

Opinions

OPINION

MOORE, Justice.

This case centers around the Department of Community and Regional Affairs’ determination of the “population” of municipalities for state revenue-sharing and tax-limitation purposes. Specifically at issue is the department’s method of counting remote site workers on the North Slope. These workers present a problem because of their unique working situation. Typical work schedules may be one week on, one week off; two on, one off; or four on, two off. Because of the remoteness of the North Slope, employees often reside in other municipalities or even in other states during their time off. The central question in this case is where these workers should be counted.

This is an appeal from the superior court’s decision that the department’s 1983 determinations of population were a rational exercise of its discretion. We affirm.

I. STATUTORY BACKGROUND1

A) The Revenue-sharing Statute

Alaska Statute 29.88.0102 directs the Department of Community and Regional Affairs to compute an “equalization entitlement” for determining each municipality’s share of the amount of state revenues apportioned by-the legislature to the equalization account each year. See AS 29.88.035. The entitlement is based “on the population, relative ability to generate revenue, and local tax burden of the taxing unit.” [169]*169It is to be calculated by the application of a formula which essentially multiplies the population of the municipality by the hypothetical local property tax rate if all local revenues were generated from property taxes. Alaska Statute 29.88.015 addresses the determination of population for insertion in this formula:

(a) For purposes of this chapter, the population of a taxing unit shall be determined annually by the latest figures of the United States Bureau of the Census or other population data which, in the judgment of the department, is reliable.
(b) The population of the taxing unit includes the population of any military reservation which is a part of the taxing unit.

“Population” is not- further defined anywhere in chapter 88.3

B) The Tax-limitation Statute

Alaska Statute 29.53.045 4 allows municipalities to levy taxes on specified oil and gas property, up to one of two alternative limits: (1) a municipality may tax the full value of this property at a rate such that its total tax revenues do not exceed “$1,500 a year for each person residing within its boundaries”; or (2) a municipality may tax the full value of a portion of this property so long as the value of that portion, when combined with the value of property otherwise taxable by the municipality, does not exceed the product of 225% of the state’s average per capita property value multiplied by “the number of residents of the taxing municipality.” For purposes of this case, the salient feature of both of these limits is that municipal population is a factor in their calculation. Alaska Statute 29.53.045(e) provides:

For purposes of this section, population shall be determined by the commissioner of community and regional affairs based on the latest statistics of the United States Bureau of the Census or on other reliable population data....

[170]*170Alaska Statute 29.53.0505 applies the same two alternate measures of tax-limitation to a municipality’s general ability to tax, repeating verbatim the directive regarding the determination of population.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A) Population Counts Prior to 1980

The U.S. Census Bureau counts people at their “usual residence,” generally construed as the place where a person lives and sleeps most of the time. For the vast majority of the general population, the decision as to what constitutes one’s “usual residence” is left to the individual, based on guidelines in the census questionnaire. However, the U.S. Census Bureau has historically counted people who are quartered in workcamps at the place where they spent most nights during the week that the census was taken (“the four-night rule”).

Prior to 1980, the Alaska State Department of Community and Regional Affairs based its population estimates on the 1970 federal decennial census, plus “other reliable data” submitted by the municipalities (usually based on school enrollments and utility hookups). The department’s historical practice has been to use the same population figures for both revenue-sharing and tax-limitation formulas. Since 1976, it has made population determinations pursuant to its own regulations for revenue-sharing purposes, but it has never promulgated regulations regarding tax-limitation calculations.6

B) 1980 Population Counts

In response to requests from oil companies, municipalities, and the governor of Alaska, in 1980 the U.S. Census Bureau counted remote site oil workers in Alaska at their “home” addresses. Although the record is not entirely clear, it appears that “the four-night rule” was applied to workers in group living quarters in other states. The Bureau believed that this approach would better implement its policy of counting people at their usual residences. Its justification for changing its methods only for Alaska was that most work sites are not as remote as those in Alaska.

In 1980, the state legislature enacted the revenue-sharing plan currently at issue, in-[171]*171eluding for the first time the concept of an equalization formula. In order to implement the new plan, the department issued emergency regulations indicating that it would base its population counts on the 1980 U.S. Census figures. Under these regulations, the, department initially approved a population estimate of 4,610 for the North Slope Borough. Acting on an appeal from the borough and advice from the state attorney general’s office, the department later adjusted this count to 9,234, returning to the previous practice of including remote site oil workers in the borough’s population count.

C) 1981 Population Counts

The department was disturbed to find that its 1980 population figures produced a statewide total that was substantially higher than the U.S. Census Bureau’s 1980 count for Alaska. In 1981, in order to insure that its figures would continue to be accepted by the federal government for the distribution of federal funds, the department issued a new set of permanent regulations regarding the determination of population for revenue-sharing purposes. These regulations, which are still in effect, state that the department will base its estimates on the latest figures of the U.S. Census Bureau, subject to adjustment upon its own motion or at the request of another state agency or municipality. A municipality that submits a request for adjustment must substantiate its figures with a census of its own or with estimates, either of which may count only those people who would be considered residents by the U.S. Bureau of the Census. 19 AAC 30.041.7 The regulations include the following definitions:

(3) “census” means a complete and accurate enumeration of the permanent residents and housing units in an area;
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
726 P.2d 166, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matanuska-susitna-borough-v-hammond-alaska-1986.