Michael Rider Attorney for Glades County Board of County Commissioners Lake Placid
QUESTIONS:
1. May the surplus second gas tax funds be used by the county commission for the construction of roads within the city limits of an incorporated municipality located wholly within the county?
2. May the seventh-cent gas tax funds be used by the county commission for the construction of roads within the city limits of an incorporated municipality located wholly within the county?
SUMMARY:
The Board of County Commissioners of Glades County may use the surplus second gas tax funds for the acquisition and construction of roads within the `county road system' of Glades County, which is limited within the city limits of incorporated municipalities in that county to include only extensions of (county) collector roads into and through such municipalities. The Board of County Commissioners of Glades County may use the seventh-cent gas tax funds for the acquisition of rights-of-way and for the construction, reconstruction, operation, maintenance, and repair of transportation facilities, roads, and bridges within the `county road system' of Glades County, which is limited within the city limits of incorporated municipalities in that county to include only extensions of collector roads into and through such municipalities.
Your letter of inquiry and subsequent correspondence with this office indicate that the Glades County Board of County Commissioners is willing to assist in the construction of certain streets within the corporate limits of the City of Moore Haven, relying on ss.
The Department of Transportation has been authorized under s. 335.04, F. S., to classify each and every public road in the state in a functional manner, according to the character of service each road provides in relation to the total road network and based on the definitions contained under s.
AS TO QUESTION 1:
Section 9(c)(5), Art. XII, State Const., and s.
Use by counties of the surplus from the second gas tax. —
(1) Any county which has agreed prior to July 1, 1977, by resolution, to use the surplus of the second gas tax to provide a connecting road to a planned interchange on the interstate system shall provide such connecting road.
(2) Any surplus which is not otherwise used to provide connecting roads pursuant to subsection (1) shall be used on the county road system, as defined in s.
334.03 (23). (Emphasis supplied.)
Collector roads inside a municipality which are not in the county road system are a part of the municipality's street system. See s.
It is therefore my opinion that surplus second gas tax funds must be used for the acquisition and construction of roads within the `county road system' and cannot be properly expended for the construction of any other roads.
The `county road system' is defined under s.
`County road system.' — The county road system of each county shall consist of all collector roads in the unincorporated areas and all extensions of such collector roads into and through any incorporated areas, all local roads in the unincorporated areas, and all urban minor arterials not in the state highway system. (Emphasis supplied.)
Thus, the only roads within an incorporated municipality of a county that fall within the definition of the `county road system' are extensions of (county) collector roads into and through any incorporated areas and urban minor arterials not in the state highway system. Collector roads, urban minor arterial roads, and the state highway system are defined respectively under subsections (16), (21), and (22) of s.
I have been informed by the Department of Transportation that Glades County has no urban areas, as that term is defined under s.
Accordingly, the Board of County Commissioners of Glades County can use surplus second gas tax funds for the construction of roads within the `county road system' of Glades County, which would be limited within the city limits of incorporated municipalities in the county to include only extensions of (county) collector roads into and through such municipalities.
AS TO QUESTION 2:
The use of the additional seventh-cent gas tax is governed by s.
Prepared by: Cecil L. Davis, Jr., Assistant Attorney General
Michael K. Wilensky Legal Intern