Ky. Rev. Stat. § 67C.101

Election to approve consolidation of county and city of the first class --

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Powers, privileges, and jurisdiction of consolidated local government. (1) The governmental and corporate functions vested in any city of the first class shall, upon approval by the voters of the county at a regular or special election, be consolidated with the governmental and corporate functions of the county containing the city. This single government replaces and supersedes the governments of the pre-existing city of the first class and its county. (2) (a) A consolidated local government shall have all powers and privileges that cities of the first class and their counties are, or may hereafter be, authorized to exercise under the Constitution and the general laws of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, including but not limited to those powers granted to cities of the first class and their counties under their respective home rule powers. (b) A consolidated local government shall continue to exercise these powers and privileges notwithstanding repeal or amendment of any of the laws upon which the powers and privileges are based unless expressly repealed or amended for consolidated local governments. (c) In addition, a consolidated local government shall have other powers and privileges as the government may be authorized to exercise under the Constitution and general laws of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. (d) A consolidated local government is neither a city government nor a county government as those forms of government exist on July 15, 2002, but it is a separate classification of government which possess the greater powers conferred upon, and is subject to the lesser restrictions applicable to, county government and cities of the first class under the Constitution and general laws of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. (e) A consolidated local government shall be accorded the same sovereign immunity granted counties, their agencies, officers, and employees. (3) A consolidated local government shall have power and authority to: (a) Levy and collect taxes upon all property taxable for state purposes within the territorial limits of the consolidated local government not exempt by law from taxation; (b) License, tax, and regulate privileges, occupations, trades, and professions authorized by law, to be uniform throughout the jurisdiction; (c) Make appropriations for the support of the consolidated local government and provide for the payment of all debts and expenses of the consolidated local government and the debts and expenses of the county and city of which it is the successor; (d) Issue or cause to be issued bonds and other debt instruments that counties containing a city of the first class are authorized to issue or enter into all other financial transactions as may be permitted by law; (e) Purchase, lease, construct, maintain, or otherwise acquire, hold, use, and operate any property, real or personal, for any public purpose, and sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of any property, real or personal, belonging to a consolidated local government; (f) Exercise the power of eminent domain for any public purpose subject to the limitations and exceptions prescribed by the Constitution and the general laws of the Commonwealth of Kentucky; (g) Accept federal or state funds and other sources of revenue that are applicable to counties and cities of the first class; (h) Establish, erect, maintain, and operate facilities for the confinement, detention, and rehabilitation of persons convicted of the violation of the ordinances and laws of a consolidated local government or the Commonwealth of Kentucky; (i) Pass and enforce by fines and penalties, if necessary, all ordinances, not inconsistent with law, as are expedient in maintaining the peace, good government, health, and welfare of the inhabitants of the county and prevent, abate, and remove nuisances; (j) Collect and dispose of garbage, junk, and other refuse, and regulate the collection and disposal of garbage, junk, and other refuse by others; (k) Provide for the redevelopment, renewal, or rehabilitation of blighted, deteriorated, or dilapidated areas; (l) Enforce zoning regulations; (m) Enter into contracts and agreements with other governmental entities and with private persons, firms, and corporations; (n) Adopt procedures for collective bargaining with its employees and for the certification of exclusive bargaining agents for groups of employees in accordance with the Constitution and general laws of the Commonwealth of Kentucky and its ordinances; and (o) Exercise all other powers and authorities granted to counties and cities of the first class by the general laws of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. (4) The powers of the consolidated local government shall be construed broadly in favor of the consolidated local government. The specific mention, or failure to mention, of particular powers in this section shall not be construed as limiting in any way the general or specific powers of a consolidated local government. (5) A consolidated local government shall have power and jurisdiction throughout the total area embraced by the official jurisdictional boundaries of the county. (6) A consolidated local government shall be known as............../.....................County Metro Government, which shall be the combination of the names of the largest city in existence on the date of the adoption of the consolidated local government and the county. Effective: July 15, 2002 History: Amended 2002 Ky. Acts ch. 346, sec. 53, effective July 15, 2002. -- Created 2000 Ky. Acts ch. 189, sec. 1, effective July 14, 2000.

Notes of Decisions
Cited in 37 cases (18 in the last 5 years), 2004–2025 · leading case: Metro Louisville/Jefferson County Government v. Abma
Metro Louisville/Jefferson County Government v. Abma (2009) kyctapp · cites it 3× “” KRS 67C.101(2)(d). It also enjoys "the same sovereign immunity granted counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”
Transit Authority of River City v. Bibelhauser (2013) kyctapp “KRS 67C.101(2)(e) accords a consolidated local government, such as Louisville Metro, the same sovereign immunity accorded to counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”
Johnson v. Commonwealth (2014) ky · cites it 3× “1 Furthermore, the most recent statute establishing Louisville Metro’s powers, privileges, and jurisdiction is KRS 67C.101. That statute became effective in 2000 and omits any express mention of the authority to enact misdemeanor crimes.”
Kentucky Licensed Beverage Ass'n v. Louisville-Jefferson County Metro Government (2004) ky · cites it 2× “The Ordinance is of great benefit in both its preventative posture as well as its efficient, inexpensive, and fair adjudication of such disputes without resorting to the Court of Justice.”
Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government v. O'Shea's-Baxter, LLC (2014) ky “1 See KRS 67C.101; KRS 81.010 (repealed). Finding no reasonable basis to presume that the circumstances associated with the concentration of liquor licenses in the “combination business and residential area” in Louisville Metro are any different than they are in the “downtown…”
ST. MATTHEWS FIRE PROT. DIST. v. Aubrey (2009) kyctapp “3d at 132-133 ; see also KRS 67C.101(2)(e): "A consolidated local government shall be accorded the same sovereign immunity granted counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”
Whitlock v. Rowland (2015) kyctapp · cites it 2× “(2) Nothing in KRS 67C.101 to 67C.137 shall alter or affect the election or term of any county court clerk, county attorney, sheriff, jailer, coroner, surveyor, or assessor.”
Albert Marshall v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (2025) kyctapp · cites it 23× “-3- Conversely, the Commonwealth asserts that KRS 67C.101 and 83A.065 authorize Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government (“Louisville Metro”) to lawfully enact and enforce the ordinances.”
Parking Authority of River City, Inc. v. Bridgefield Casualty Insurance Co. (2015) kyctapp “On appeal, TARC first claimed it was entitled to sovereign immunity by virtue of KRS 67C.101(2)(e), which affords a consolidated local government such as Louisville Metro the same sovereign immunity as counties, their agencies, officers and employees, as well as KRS 96A.”
A.H., the Minor Child of James Hatcher, by and Through Heidi Gallo, Mother, Guardian, Next Friend and Administratrix of (2020) ky · cites it 6× “030(2),8 a statute explaining the handling of corrections issues in a 6 KRS 67C.101(2) states in relevant part: .”
Roy Stucky v. Louisville Jefferson County Metro Government A/K/A louisville/jefferson County Metro Government (2022) kyctapp · cites it 6× “” KRS 67C.101(2)(d). Furthermore, as a consolidated local government, Louisville Metro “shall be accorded the same sovereign immunity granted counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”
JJ Wig Shop, LLC v. louisville/jefferson County Metro Government (2024) kyctapp · cites it 5× “” KRS 67C.101(2)(a)-(c). As our Supreme Court noted in Meinhart, above, KRS 67C.”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 67C.101(1) — 2 cases
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 67C.101(2) — 1 case
A.H., the Minor Child of James Hatcher, by and Through Heidi Gallo, Mother, Guardian, Next Friend and Administratrix of (2020) ky “030(2),8 a statute explaining the handling of corrections issues in a 6 KRS 67C.101(2) states in relevant part: .”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 67C.101(2)(a) — 3 cases
JJ Wig Shop, LLC v. louisville/jefferson County Metro Government (2024) kyctapp “” KRS 67C.101(2)(a)-(c). As our Supreme Court noted in Meinhart, above, KRS 67C.”
Albert Marshall v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (2025) kyctapp “-3- Conversely, the Commonwealth asserts that KRS 67C.101 and 83A.065 authorize Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government (“Louisville Metro”) to lawfully enact and enforce the ordinances.”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 67C.101(2)(d) — 5 cases
Metro Louisville/Jefferson County Government v. Abma (2009) kyctapp “” KRS 67C.101(2)(d). It also enjoys "the same sovereign immunity granted counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”
Johnson v. Commonwealth (2014) ky “1 Furthermore, the most recent statute establishing Louisville Metro’s powers, privileges, and jurisdiction is KRS 67C.101. That statute became effective in 2000 and omits any express mention of the authority to enact misdemeanor crimes.”
A.H., the Minor Child of James Hatcher, by and Through Heidi Gallo, Mother, Guardian, Next Friend and Administratrix of (2020) ky “030(2),8 a statute explaining the handling of corrections issues in a 6 KRS 67C.101(2) states in relevant part: .”
Roy Stucky v. Louisville Jefferson County Metro Government A/K/A louisville/jefferson County Metro Government (2022) kyctapp “” KRS 67C.101(2)(d). Furthermore, as a consolidated local government, Louisville Metro “shall be accorded the same sovereign immunity granted counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”
JJ Wig Shop, LLC v. louisville/jefferson County Metro Government (2024) kyctapp “” KRS 67C.101(2)(a)-(c). As our Supreme Court noted in Meinhart, above, KRS 67C.”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 67C.101(2)(e) — 29 cases
Metro Louisville/Jefferson County Government v. Abma (2009) kyctapp “” KRS 67C.101(2)(d). It also enjoys "the same sovereign immunity granted counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”
Transit Authority of River City v. Bibelhauser (2013) kyctapp “KRS 67C.101(2)(e) accords a consolidated local government, such as Louisville Metro, the same sovereign immunity accorded to counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”
ST. MATTHEWS FIRE PROT. DIST. v. Aubrey (2009) kyctapp “3d at 132-133 ; see also KRS 67C.101(2)(e): "A consolidated local government shall be accorded the same sovereign immunity granted counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”
Parking Authority of River City, Inc. v. Bridgefield Casualty Insurance Co. (2015) kyctapp “On appeal, TARC first claimed it was entitled to sovereign immunity by virtue of KRS 67C.101(2)(e), which affords a consolidated local government such as Louisville Metro the same sovereign immunity as counties, their agencies, officers and employees, as well as KRS 96A.”
Roy Stucky v. Louisville Jefferson County Metro Government A/K/A louisville/jefferson County Metro Government (2022) kyctapp “” KRS 67C.101(2)(d). Furthermore, as a consolidated local government, Louisville Metro “shall be accorded the same sovereign immunity granted counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 67C.101(3)(h) — 1 case
A.H., the Minor Child of James Hatcher, by and Through Heidi Gallo, Mother, Guardian, Next Friend and Administratrix of (2020) ky “030(2),8 a statute explaining the handling of corrections issues in a 6 KRS 67C.101(2) states in relevant part: .”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 67C.101(3)(i) — 2 cases
Johnson v. Commonwealth (2014) ky “1 Furthermore, the most recent statute establishing Louisville Metro’s powers, privileges, and jurisdiction is KRS 67C.101. That statute became effective in 2000 and omits any express mention of the authority to enact misdemeanor crimes.”
Albert Marshall v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (2025) kyctapp “-3- Conversely, the Commonwealth asserts that KRS 67C.101 and 83A.065 authorize Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government (“Louisville Metro”) to lawfully enact and enforce the ordinances.”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 67C.101(4) — 1 case
Albert Marshall v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (2025) kyctapp “-3- Conversely, the Commonwealth asserts that KRS 67C.101 and 83A.065 authorize Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government (“Louisville Metro”) to lawfully enact and enforce the ordinances.”
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