Title: Forms of Georgia County Government
1Forms of Georgia County Government
A Presentation for the State Senate Study
Committee on the Structure of DeKalb Government,
2006
- Carl Vinson Institute of Government
- The University of Georgia
2Source Handbook for Georgia County
Commissioners, Carl Vinson Institute of Government
3Source Handbook for Georgia County
Commissioners, Carl Vinson Institute of Government
4Source Handbook for Georgia County
Commissioners, Carl Vinson Institute of Government
5Source Handbook for Georgia County
Commissioners, Carl Vinson Institute of Government
6Source Handbook for Georgia County
Commissioners, Carl Vinson Institute of Government
7Forms of Georgia County Government
Source ACCG (Association County Commissioners of
Georgia) 2006. Prepared by the Carl Vinson
Institute of Government, Governmental Services
Division, August 2006.
8(No Transcript)
9Size of Georgias County Commissions
DeKalb has a total of 8 (7 commissioners plus 1
elected executive)
Source ACCG (Association County Commissioners of
Georgia) 2006. Prepared by the Carl Vinson
Institute of Government, Governmental Services
Division, August 2006
10(No Transcript)
11DeKalbs Structural History 1880s - 1980s
- 1886 - 5 member Board of Commissioners of Roads
and Revenue - 1896 - Repeal of 5 member board form, instituted
Governance by a sole Ordinary - 1902 - General Assembly Created 5 member Board
- 1904 - Act repealed by referendum, Board
abolished - 1906 - Sole Commissioner Form
- 1912 - Created 5 Member Board - elected by Grand
Jury - 1918 - Created 5 Member Board - by popular
election - 1953 - Referendum for proposed Board with Chair
elected at large fails - 1956 - Chair elected at large and Board
instituted by General Assembly - 1981 - Board of Commissioners and Chief Executive
Officer form enacted
Source A Study of the Legal Structure of the
Office of Chief Elected Officer and the Board of
Commissioners of DeKalb County, Georgia. Carl
Vinson Institute of Government, October 1986
12Elected Executive Form in other States
- While Georgia only has one true Elected
Executive County Government this structure is
employed in a number of other states. - Alaska, Arkansas, Hawaii, Louisiana, Maryland,
Tennessee, Texas, and Washington are some of the
states where Elected Executive County Governments
can be found.
13Elected Executive Countieswith Comparable
Population
14Elected Executive Counties with Comparable
African American Population
15Elected Executive Counties with Similar
Population Density
16Selected Comparison Elected Executive Counties
17DeKalb County Incorporation
- John O'Looney, Ph.D.Senior Public Service
AssociateCarl Vinson Institute of
GovernmentUniversity of Georgia - olooney_at_cviog.uga.edu
18Outline of Report
- Fiscal Impacts
- Franchise Fees
- County Economic Impact
- Other Fiscal impacts
- Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations
- Non-Financial Impacts
- Legal Authority, Powers, and Liability
- Potential Legal Issues and Developments
- Governmental Coordination
- Scale of Representation and Citizen Interaction
- Possible Response to the Problem of Scale
19Franchise Fees
- Original Purpose To allow cities to recoup some
of the value of utility use of rights of way. In
early 20th century only cities had the kind of
densities that would support the development of
utilities. - General Principle Georgia law (and most states)
allows municipalities, but not counties, to
collect franchise fees. - Exception In Georgia, both cities and counties
can collect a franchise fee from cable utilities.
- Key Policy Impact Franchise fees provide the
major financial incentive for consolidation
and/or incorporation. - Key Policy Controversy Most franchise fee
revenue is derived from utilities that build this
business expense into the rate base. Hence,
residents of unincorporated areas contribute to
franchise fees through payment of their utility
bills.
20Sources of Franchise Fees
21Changes Since 1998
- Changes in the usage of cell phones vis a vis
landline phones. - A new method for calculating gas franchise fees.
- Previously assessed on gross receipts from
sales of natural gas, excluding industrial
customers. - Now Generally based on needed capacity to
deliver gas (i.e., Design Day Capacity Charge and
the current franchise fee factor). The entire
franchise fee is collected by the gas
infrastructure provider not the natural gas
vendor. - Georgia Municipal Association negotiated a common
agreement for cities that used historical
franchise fees as a basis. - DeKalb County (and new cities) do not have an
historical recordHence, uncertainty.
22Factors in Estimating Franchise Fees
- Franchise fee estimates are not commonly
available from the utilities. - Different communities have different needs for
gas or electricity. (e.g. different climates,
different levels of industrialization and
commercializationsuggest different usages of
electrical power). - CVIOG Method 1) identify comparison cities
(level of development/climate) 2) Establish avg.
per capita fees. 3) Estimate fees for franchises
whose sales are likely to be linked to
population. 4) Estimate fees for franchises whose
sales are likely to be linked to variations in
property classes. 4) adjust for existing cable
fees.
23Per Capita Franchise Fee Estimate
Total Expected New Revenue 51.07 X 602,730
30,783,668
24County Economic Impact
- An economic impact occurs when new monies come
into a local economy. - Communities that have a very high proportion of
their property/population that is incorporated
receive a larger share of the revenues that go
into the franchise fee pool. - Because DeKalb has a lower proportion of the
population in cities 10 versus 40, it is a net
exporter of franchise fees. With incorporation it
will go from 10 to 100 and become a net
importer of fee revenue.
25Economic Impact
- Using the Georgia Economic Modeling System, we
forecast economic output over a six year period
beginning in 2006. The input to the model was
25 million a year in new general administrative
services expenditures. - This model forecast approximately 10 million per
year in new indirect or economic multiplier
impacts. - The total annual economic impact is approximately
35 million (25 million direct and 10 million
indirect).
26Long-term and Equity Results
- Utility Companies could argue for an increase in
the rate base so as to recoup new franchise fee
costs. - DeKalb County will go from being a county that
benefits substantially less than a proportional
share of franchise fee revenues to a county that
collects substantially more than a proportional
share of these revenues.
27Other Fiscal Impacts
- Regulatory and Enforcement Fees none
- Grants minimal
- Taxation of Depository Financial Institutions
city loss of potential future revenues - Transition Costs and Benefits insignificant
28Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations
- DeKalb County is unique in Georgia in that
intergovernmental fiscal relations are governed
by a local constitutional amendment rather than
the Service Delivery Strategy Act. - Georgia General Assembly defines an assessment
that residents and property owners in the cities
of DeKalb County will pay for the urban-type
services that these cities may be receiving from
DeKalb county. - The existing local Constitutional amendment
could potentially allow the state legislature to
include the new City of DeKalb in any future
local legislation specifying the special service
district assessments. - Service delivery and annexation coordination
costs would tend to be stabilized and/or
eliminated since the opportunities for service
boundary changes would be minimized.
29Non-Financial Impacts Legal Authority, Powers,
and Liability
- Major distinctions between cities and counties in
terms of powers generally do not exist in Georgia
law. - Charter specific differences do exist.
- Incorporated DeKalb would have some minor
advantages in terms of choosing city versus
county liability rules as would be advantageous
in the circumstances.
30Potential Legal Issues and Developments
- Cobb County and the Association County
Commissioners of Georgia have filed a petition
with the Public Service Commission challenging
the way in which franchise fees are included as
part of the total rate base. - Currently, the HOST specifies that 80 percent of
the funds have to go to county homestead
exemptions. Were DeKalb County to be
incorporated, what would be the relationship of a
county that is both a county and a city
government with regard to HOST? - For example, would the letter or spirit of HOST
require that the county budget strictly separate
countywide service expenditures (e.g., on courts
and the sheriff) from expenditures on
municipal-type services (e.g., police and fire)
and require that the HOST exemption credit only
apply to countywide services and not services
that are municipal in nature?
31Potential Legal Issues and Developments
- DeKalb is governed by a local constitutional
amendment and related legislation that specifies
the percentage of the special services districts
ad valorem millage for which each city will be
responsible. - Were DeKalb County to be incorporated, there may
need to be some determination of how
incorporation might impact the relationship of
the county part of the government with the
city part. - For example, would the constitutional amendment
require that the new incorporated entity comprise
a special services tax district as is the case
with existing cities?
32Governmental Coordination
- Incorporation has the impact of eliminating the
ability of any city in the county from expanding
its jurisdiction through annexation. - Positive Eliminates uncertainty and costs of
annexation. Improves potential for long-term
planning due to the reduction of
intergovernmental gamesmanship - Negative Eliminates ability of cities to reach a
desirable size and scope or achieve related
economies of scale. Eliminates citizen choices
with regard to jurisdictions and reduces their
ability to be part of a smaller scale government.
33Scale of Representation and Citizen Interaction
with Government
- Full County Incorporation changes the traditional
pattern of municipal growth and stabilization.
Traditionally, cities played a role in terms of
keeping the scale of representation (i.e., the
number of citizens represented by a single
representative) and the scale of interaction
(i.e., the distance that a citizen would need to
travel to meet with government officials) fairly
small.
34The New Cities Movement
- Part of the motivation for the incorporation
movements in Fulton and DeKalb counties is based
on citizens desires for smaller scale and scope
in the provision of services and representation.
35 A Possible Response to the Problem of Scale
- Carl Vinson Institute of Government has conducted
extensive research on Unincorporated Towns and
other alternatives to traditional cities. - Purpose of these Alternatives to enable county
governments to begin to address needs of local
communities for self-determination, without
having to undermine the essential sovereignty of
county government. - Implementing the unincorporated town concept in
Georgia might require changes in Georgias laws
depending on the nature of the powers and
responsibilities that are devolved onto the town.
36The end
37Thank You for Your Attention
- Carl Vinson Institute of Government
- The University of Georgia