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Municipal Government
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| Annexation to a Borough Government |
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Contents
Introduction
Frequently Asked Questions
Narrative
Additional Resources
Applicable Laws
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| Introduction Back
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"Annexation to a borough" means
to add territory to the boundaries of a borough government's
authority. Annexation results in the extension of borough
services, regulation, voting privileges, and taxing authority
to the annexed area.
There are six methods available for borough
annexation. (These are explained in more detail in the Frequently
Asked Questions below.) In most cases, the area to be
annexed must be next to the boundaries of the annexing borough.
State law requires certain standards and procedures be followed
for annexation.
Annexation requires a big commitment of time and other resources.
Before any decision is made to begin work on annexation, a
lot of thought should be given to the need for annexation
and the method to use. This chapter provides an overview of
basic information about borough annexation, however, annexation
is a complex matter that cannot be covered completely in this
brief overview. This overview provides information and links
to applicable law, additional publications, and staff available
to provide assistance on annexation.
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| Frequently
Asked
Questions Back
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Who can provide information
regarding annexation to boroughs?
Local
Boundary Commission (LBC) staff within the Department
of Community and Economic Development are available to provide
technical assistance, petition forms, and sample annexation
materials to anyone interested in petitioning or responding
to a petition and to other interested parties.
If an individual or group
does not want annexation, does the state assist them also?
Yes. LBC
staff will provide information about submitting comments
in the form of a responsive brief. This allows any interested
party to be identified as a "respondent" in the annexation
proceeding. Being identified as a respondent results in a
higher level of notice about action on the annexation and
provides certain procedural rights at the Local Boundary
Commission's
public hearing.
Is there a limit on the size
of the territory that a borough may annex?
Boroughs are regional governments
and may include entire geographic regions, unpopulated areas,
and sparsely populated areas. Borough annexation standards
require that after annexation the borough boundaries conform
to natural geography, environmental factors, regional transportation
and communication patterns, and ethnicity and culture. (3
AAC 110.160 through .210 - see The
Alaska Administrative Code.) Boroughs generally encompass
multiple communities. The Local Boundary Commission has adopted
model borough boundaries that serve as a general guide for
existing and potential borough boundaries. (See Model
Borough Boundaries Study.)
Who can initiate an annexation petition?
A petition for annexation may be initiated by:
- a city;
- a borough;
- a regional educational attendance area;
- a coastal resource service area;
- at least 10% of the resident registered voters
of a city, borough, regional educational attendance area, or coastal resource
service area;
- at least 10% of the resident registered voters
of the area proposed for annexation;
- the state legislature;
- the Commissioner of the Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development (Commerce);
- a party designated by the Local Boundary Commission.
What is the procedure for annexation?
State law establishes procedures for six different
types of annexation to boroughs. These relate to:
- annexation of adjoining municipally-owned property;
- annexation of adjoining property upon unanimous consent of the
owners of that property and the voters who live within the area to be annexed;
- annexation by election among voters in the area proposed
for annexation;
- annexation by election among the combined voters of the annexing
municipality and the area proposed for annexation;
- annexation by election by voters of the annexing municipality,
if the area proposed for annexation is uninhabited;
- annexation by legislative review.
Some of the methods of annexation are less complex
than others and may be acted upon by the Commission in a relatively short period.
Others are more complex and can require a year or more for the Commission to consider.
The six annexation types are summarized as follows:
- Annexation of Adjoining Borough-Owned Property.
Borough-owned property that is next to the boundaries of that borough may be annexed.
The borough assembly must adopt an ordinance and then petition the Local Boundary
Commission.
- Annexation Upon Unanimous Consent of Owners and
Resident Voters. An area next to a borough may be annexed if all of the property
owners and all of the voters living in the area proposed for annexation approve.
The borough assembly must adopt an ordinance and then petition the Local Boundary
Commission.
- Annexation Through Election by Voters in the
Area Proposed for Annexation. An area may be annexed, upon approval by the
Local Boundary Commission, if an election is held and a majority of the voters
living in the territory to be annexed vote to approve it. Only those living in
the territory approved for annexation vote on the proposal. To pass, the
proposition must be approved by a majority of those voting on the question.
- Annexation Through Election by Aggregate
Voters of the Annexing Borough and the Area Proposed for Annexation. An area
may be annexed, upon approval by the Local Boundary Commission, if an election is
held and a majority of the voters living in both areas approve it.
- Annexation Through Election by Voters of the
Annexing Borough, if the Area Proposed for Annexation is Uninhabited. An
uninhabited area may be annexed, upon approval by the Local Boundary Commission,
if an election is held and a majority of the voters living in the annexing
borough vote to approve it. The proposition must be approved by a majority of
those voting on the question.
- Annexation by Legislative Review. An area
may be annexed without approval by the voters or property owners under the legislative
review process. Such proposals require approval by the Local Boundary Commission as well
as review and tacit approval by the State legislature. Tacit approval means the action
is approved unless specific action is taken to deny the action within a set period of
time. Legislative review is initiated when the LBC files a recommendation for the
annexation with the legislature. Such recommendations may be filed only during the
first 10 days of a regular session of the legislature. The recommendation is rejected
only if the legislature adopts a concurrent resolution to deny the action within 45 days
of the date that it was filed. Otherwise, the proposal is tacitly approved by the
legislature.
What is tacit approval?
Tacit approval means the action is approved unless
specific action is taken to deny the action within a set period of time. Legislative
review is initiated when the LBC files a recommendation for the annexation with the
legislature. Such recommendations may be filed only during the first 10 days of a
regular session of the legislature. The recommendation is rejected only if the
legislature adopts a concurrent resolution to deny the action within 45 days of the
date that it was filed. Otherwise, the proposal is tacitly approved by the legislature.
How do we decide what method of annexation to use?
If all owners of property and registered voters
in an area want annexation, then annexation by unanimous consent of owners and
resident voters would likely be the annexation method to use. If there are
enough voters in the area proposed for annexation to conduct an election, and
it is reasonable to think that a majority of the voters will support annexation,
then annexation by local election might be the best method. If there is a strong
public need for annexation, but it appears that most voters in the area would not
approve the change, consider using the legislative review method or areawide
election method.
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| Narrative Back
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Annexation is a constitutionally-established
means of fulfilling the purpose of Article X, Section 1 of
Alaska's Constitution, which is: "...
to provide for maximum local self-government with a minimum of local government
units, and to prevent duplication of tax-levying jurisdictions." There
are three elements to an annexation decision by the Local Boundary Commission:
- the process defined by law and regulations;
- the standards in law; and
- the facts as documented in the official record of the proceedings.
Alaska's Constitution (Art. X, § 12) and state
statutes provide that corporate boundaries of municipalities
may be adjusted.
This allows boroughs to accommodate growth and adapt to changing
jurisdictional needs and conditions.
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| Applicable
Laws Back
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Top |
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Alaska
Supreme Court decisions: Fairview v. City of Anchorage;
Oesau v. City of Dillingham; City of Douglas v. City & Borough
of Juneau; United States Smelting v. LBC; Port Valdez
Company v. City of Valdez; Pavlik
v. State, Dept. of Community and Regional Affairs; Lake
and Peninsula Borough v. LBC
Alaska
Constitution - Article X
- Section 1. Alaska Constitution. Purpose and construction,
local self-government, local government units.
- Section 3. Boroughs, manner and standards for establishment.
- Section 12. Boundaries, authority for tacit legislative
approval, authority for LBC to establish procedures for
boundary adjustment.
- Section 14. Agency to advise and assist local governments.
Alaska Statutes (See
Current
Alaska Statutes)
AS
29.06.040. Local Boundary Commission,
authority to review, amend, accept boundary changes; appeal
under administrative procedures act; tacit approval; authority
to establish procedures for annexation; election on annexation
question.
- AS
29.06.050. Annexation of Military Reservation.
- AS 44.33.810. Local Boundary
Commission, appointment.
- AS 44.33.812. Powers and
Duties.
- AS 44.33.814. Meetings and
Hearings.
- AS 44.33.816. Minutes and
Records.
- AS 44.33.818. Notice of Public
Hearings.
- AS 44.33.820. Quorum.
- AS 44.33.822. Boundary Change,
majority vote.
- AS 44.33.824. Expenses.
- AS 44.33.826. Hearings on
boundary changes.
- AS 44.33.828. When boundary
changes take effect.
Alaska Regulations (See
The
Alaska Administrative Code)
- 3 AAC 110.160. Community
of interests, factors considered in determining characteristics
and community integration and compatibility.
- 3 AAC 110.170. Population,
factors considered in determining population characteristics.
- 3 AAC 110.180. Resources,
factors considered in determining resources available to
provide essential public services.
- 3 AAC 110.190. Boundaries,
factors considered in determining land and water needed
to provide essential public services, model borough boundaries,
consultation with Department of Education, overlapping boundaries.
- 3 AAC 110.195. Best interests
of state, factors considered in determining state's best
interest.
- 3 AAC 110.200. Legislative
review, factors considered in legislative review annexation.
- 3 AAC 110.210. Local action,
methods of annexation by local action.
- 3 AAC 110.400. Applicability.
- 3 AAC 110.410. Petitioners
authorized petitioners, signature requirements.
- 3 AAC 110.420. Petition,
form, supporting brief, exhibits.
- 3 AAC 110.425. Legislative
review annexation petitions.
- 3 AAC 110.430. Consolidation
of petitions.
- 3 AAC 110.440. Technical
review of petitions, Commerce review, deficient petition.
- 3 AAC 110.450. Notice of
petition, time limit and method for providing notice.
- 3 AAC 110.460. Service of
petition, recipients and method of delivery, availability
of all petition documents for public review.
- 3 AAC 110.470. Proof of notice
and service.
- 3 AAC 110.480. Responsive
briefs and written comments, filing with Commerce, affidavit
of delivery to petitioner.
- 3 AAC 110.490. Reply brief,
filing with Commerce, affidavit of delivery to respondent.
- 3 AAC 110.500. Limitations
on advocacy, adherence to regulations, commission contact
with interested parties.
- 3 AAC 110.510. Informational
sessions, Commerce determination of adequate public information
sessions, affidavit.
- 3 AAC 110.520. Departmental
public meetings, notice, affidavit of posting, presiding
officer, meeting summary, postponement, relocation.
- 3 AAC 110.530. Departmental
report, draft review and comment.
- 3 AAC 110.540. Amendments
and withdrawal, time limit, petition signatures, notice,
service.
- 3 AAC 110.550. Commission
public hearing, notice, public service announcement, postponement,
relocation.
- 3 AAC 110.560. Commission
hearing procedures, presiding officer, commission quorum,
limit on comments, witnesses, sworn testimony, timely submission
of documents.
- 3 AAC 110.570. Decisional
meeting, time limit, commission quorum, change to comply
with law, minutes, statement of considerations, decision,
affidavit.
- 3 AAC 110.580. Reconsideration,
time limit, denial or acceptance of request.
- 3 AAC 110.590. Certain local
action annexations, applicable regulations.
- 3 AAC 110.600. Local action/local
option elections, election by director of elections under
AS 15, election by municipality.
- 3 AAC 110.610. Legislative
review, amendment to consider as local action/option procedure,
legislative review of commission decision.
- 3 AAC 110.620. Judicial review,
appeal and judicial review in accordance with Administrative
Procedure Act.
- 3 AAC 110.630. Effective
date and certification, Voting Rights Act approval, certification
of election, legislative review deadline, certificate of
change, recordation.
- 3 AAC 110.640. Scheduling,
chairperson order setting/ amending schedule, timeline,
postponement.
- 3 AAC 110.650. Resubmittals
and reversals, denial of previous similar petition, request
for reversal of decision.
- 3 AAC 110.660. Purpose of
procedural regulations, relaxation or suspension of procedural
regulation, commission discretion, guidelines.
- 3 AAC 110.900. Transition,
submission of transition plan; assumption of powers, duties,
responsibilities, assets, and liabilities; time limit on
execution of plan; approved agreement.
- 3 AAC 110.910. Statement
of non-discrimination.
- 3 AAC 110.920. Determination
of community, factors considered in determining whether
the term community applies.
- 3 AAC 110.970. Determination
of essential city or borough services, guidelines.
- 3 AAC 110.980. Determination
of best interests of the state, guidelines.
- 3 AAC 110.990. Definitions.
Revised 3/24/03
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