The inhabitants of Westminster, in Carroll County,
are hereby declared to be a body corporate, by the name of "The Mayor
and Common Council of Westminster," and by that name shall have perpetual
succession, may sue and be sued, have and use a common seal, which
may be altered at pleasure, and have and possess all powers incident
to municipal corporations, as well as those hereinafter particularly
enumerated. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 522.)
A copy of the courses and distances describing
the corporate boundaries of the City of Westminster shall be on file
in the city offices and available for public inspection during normal
business hours. A map showing the current corporate boundaries shall
be maintained in the city offices and shall be similarly available
for public inspection. (Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 1.)
The government of the city shall be vested in
and enforced by a mayor and common council of five members who shall
be elected by the inhabitants of the city qualified to vote for delegates
to the general assembly, who have actually resided within the corporate
limits of the city, and 5 whose names shall appear upon the books
of registered voters as hereinafter provided. The mayor shall be at
least twenty-five years of age; the members of the common council
shall be at least twenty-one years of age; and the mayor shall have
resided at least two years and the members of the council at least
one year within said city. The qualified voters of the city shall
elect three members of the council on the second Tuesday of May, 2015,
and every four years thereafter, and two members of the council and
the mayor on the second Tuesday of May, 2013, and every four years
thereafter.
Nominations for offices of mayor and members
of the council which are filled by elections under the provisions
of this section shall be made as follows: Each candidate for election
shall file a certificate of nomination not later than five o'clock
P.M. on the Monday which is four weeks before election day, and shall
meet the requirements as above set forth as to qualifications. Said
certificate shall be filed under oath with the clerk of elections,
to be appointed by the mayor, acting for the judges of election of
the City of Westminster, and if this date should occur on a legal
holiday, the certificate must be filed not later than 9:00 P.M., on
the next regular business day which is not a legal holiday. In case
of any vacancy which may exist in respect to a candidate for the office
of mayor or member of the common council, a town meeting shall be
called by the mayor at such time and place as he shall deem proper
for the purpose of filling such vacancy or vacancies. Each candidate
for nomination for mayor and members of the common council shall pay
the sum of twenty-five dollars. All such payments shall be made to
the person with whom the certificate of nomination is filed and shall
accompany the certificate. These sums shall be retained by the mayor
and common council of Westminster to whom the same shall have been
paid by the judges of election. In the event that any candidate who
has paid a filing fee to said judges of election shall withdraw his
certificate of nomination by 11:00 A.M. ten days prior to the day
of election, or in the event that the name of any candidate who has
paid a filing fee shall not appear on the official ballot by reason
of death, he or his estate shall be entitled to a return of said filing
fee.
Said elections shall be held at such place or
places as shall be designated by the mayor and common council between
the hours of seven o'clock A.M., and eight o'clock in the evening.
The mayor shall give at least two weeks' notice of the election in
the newspapers published in Westminster and by such other means as
he may elect, and shall appoint at least three judges of election
for each polling place. The said judges shall keep a record of the
persons voting and the persons voted for; and may use voting machines
in their discretion; and the persons having the highest numbers of
votes for the several offices of mayor and members of the common council
shall be declared duly elected. The judges and clerk of election shall
notify the persons elected of their election. Said judges shall conduct
such election in accord with the ordinance prescribing the same, which
shall require them to make return to the mayor and common council,
and provide for the preservation of the ballots for a reasonable time.
If notice of such election shall not be given as hereinbefore required,
or if the judges of election shall not be appointed or refuse to act,
five or more voters of said city may call an election for said offices
by notice set up in the most public places in said city, not less
than one week previous to such election, therein naming the time and
place of holding such election, and naming three judges thereof, who,
or any two of them, may hold such election, and have the same powers
in respect thereto as the judges appointed by the mayor. (C.P.L.L.
Md., 1930, § 524; 1939, ch. 453, § 1; 1941, ch.
105, § 1; Char. Res. No. 2,§ 1; Ord. No. 361,
§ 1; Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 2; Char. Res. No.
91-1,§ 1; Char. Res. No. 91-2, § 1; Char. Res.
No. 01-11.)
(a) Purpose. It is declared to be the purpose of said
municipal corporation in enacting this resolution [this section] to
provide that absentee residents of said municipality, as herein defined,
at the time of any election, as herein defined, shall be given the
right and every possible opportunity to register and vote by mail
in any such election to the full extent permitted by the Constitution
of the state; and, further to protect such absentee residents in the
exercise of those rights, and to correlate insofar as the Constitution
of the United States and the Constitution of this state permit, the
provisions of this resolution [this section] with all acts of Congress
and of this state relating to voting by mail by such absentee residents,
and to permit and facilitate the general operation of this state and
municipality and its election officials and commissions with every
department, commission or agency of the United States and of the State
of Maryland to which the carrying out of the provisions of such Act
of Congress and of the legislature of the State of Maryland may be
delegated and committed.
(b) Absentee resident. An "absentee resident" means a
resident of said municipality, (1) qualified to vote under its Charter
as to age, citizenship, and length of residence, and not disenfranchised
because of crime, and (2) who is absent and engaged in the military
or naval services of the United States, and their spouses, members
of the merchant marines who are absent, and their spouses, and all
civilians who are employees and are absent, and their spouses, and
such absentee residents who are serving with the Red Cross, the Society
of Friends, and their spouses, as well as all those honorably discharged
from the armed forces of the United States too late to register or
vote.
(c) Absentee registration. Any member of the armed forces,
as heretofore defined in this section, who is not registered to vote
in an election of said municipality, may upon application on a form
to be prepared by the board of registration, be allowed to register
or reregister by absentee certification. Such absentee certification
shall be issued by the board of registration upon said application
being acted upon favorably by said board. Such registration or reregistration
shall be done within the specified time allowed for all other registration
or reregistration within said municipality.
(d) Absentee voting. Every absentee resident of said municipality
shall be entitled to vote at any election in the manner hereafter
provided.
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At any time before any election, any absentee
resident of said municipality who has reason to believe that because
of his status as such he will be unable to vote in person at such
election, may make application in writing to said municipality requesting
that he be sent an absentee ballot. Such application shall be signed
by the applicant and shall disclose the applicant's full name and
last home address in said municipality, the address to which the absentee
ballot shall be sent, and that he is in the armed services of the
United States, or otherwise has a status which entitles him or her
to vote as an absentee resident. As soon as the application is received,
the board of registration shall mail the applicant an absentee ballot
as provided in the Public General Laws of the State of Maryland. The
informality of any application, including any made in accordance with
said laws, or failure to include therein all the data prescribed above
shall not invalidate the application and said municipality upon a
written or printed request for an absentee ballot signed by the applicant
shall honor the same if it is possible to ascertain from the request
or otherwise the name of the individual seeking the ballot and the
address to which the ballot is to be sent.
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An absentee resident shall be entitled to be
sent an absentee ballot as hereinabove provided only if the application
therefor is received by said municipality at least ten days before
the date of an election.
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Notwithstanding any other provisions hereof,
any form of application for the right or means to vote as an absentee
resident or to secure an absentee ballot or official war ballot executed
in accordance with any Act of Congress providing for absentee voting,
if signed by any absentee resident, shall be treated by said municipality
as an application for a city absentee ballot. (Char. Res. No. 4, § 2;
Ord. No. 362, § 2; Char. Res. 76-1, § 3.)
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The mayor shall, on the second Monday of April,
1939, and thereafter biennially on the second Monday of April, by
and with the advice and consent of the common council, appoint three
qualified voters of the said city, not holding any office under the
government of the said city, and who shall constitute the board of
registration of voters of Westminster, to serve for two years and
until their successors shall have qualified. (1939, ch. 453, § 2.)
(a) Form of permanent registration. The said board of
registration shall cause the names of all persons then registered
on the registration books to be transcribed on the forms or cards
provided for the permanent registration of voters, as specified in
the Public General Laws of the State of Maryland. The registration
of voters in said city shall thereafter be conducted as prescribed
for registration books; except, that cards or loose-leaf pages or
forms shall be used instead of books, and in addition to the names
of the voters there shall be entered the age, actual place of domicile
in said city and the time thereof, and the occupation of the persons
registered, which cards, or loose-leaf pages, containing the names
of the persons so registered shall be used on election day of said
municipality. When such cards, or loose-leaf pages have been duly
filled out, and both the original and duplicate registration forms
have been signed by the applicant for registration, the said original
and duplicate forms shall be filed in different filing cases or loose-leaf
binders. The original forms shall constitute those for use in the
polling place on election day. The duplicate forms shall constitute
the permanent office record of the board, and they shall not be open
to public inspection except in the presence of the clerk of the board,
nor shall they be removed from the office of the board except on order
of the court. The registration records shall be open to public inspection
under reasonable regulations at all times when the office of the board
is open for business; except, that during the twenty days preceding
and ten days following an election such records shall not be opened
to public inspection except upon the special order of the board.
(b) Forms and cards. It shall be the duty of the board
of registration to prescribe the style, color, quality and dimensions
of all forms, cards, and records required for the permanent registration
of voters as herein provided; and to prescribe the requirements of
the cabinets, binders and other equipment needed for filing the original
and duplicate registration cards. No particular design or make shall
be prescribed for such cabinets, binders or other equipment. Such
registration forms or cards shall consist of an equal number of original
cards or loose-leaf pages of one color, and duplicate cards or loose-leaf
pages of another color, of a size adequate to contain the information
required for books of registry, as specified hereinabove in this article.
Provision shall be made on said cards or loose-leaf pages for recording
the fact that registered voters have or have not voted at each general,
special, or primary election; and space shall be provided for such
recording for a period of not less than twelve (12) years. The fact
of voting shall be indicated by writing the letter "V" in the proper
space. Provisions shall also be made on such cards or loose-leaf pages
for showing subsequent changes of address or party affiliation.
(c) Time of registration. The Board of registration may
prescribe the hours during which its office at the City Hall shall
be open for registration; but unless the said board by unanimous vote
decides otherwise, the office shall be open for such purpose on the
fourth Saturday of each month before the clerk of said board or any
member thereof between the hours of 9 o'clock, A.M., and 12 o'clock,
noon, beginning on the first fourth Saturday of the month following
the effective date of this Charter Amendment.
(d) Oath. All persons applying at the office of the board
of registration shall be examined under oath as to their names, addresses,
age, qualifications as voters and right to register and vote.
(e) Cancellation of registration. If a registered voter
in the city has not voted at least once at a general or special election
within six preceding calendar years, it shall be the duty of the board
of registration, unless cause to the contrary be shown, to cause the
registration of such voter to be canceled by removing the registration
card or forms of said voter from the original and duplicate files
and placing the same in a transfer file; provided, however, before
such cancellation, notice shall be mailed to such voter addressed
to the address given in the registration of such voter, notifying
such voter to appear before such board at a date specified in such
notice, not earlier than one week or later than two weeks from the
date of mailing such notice, and to show cause why his or her name
should not be canceled as a voter. A voter whose registration has
been canceled under this subsection shall not thereafter be eligible
to vote except by registering again as in this Charter Resolution
provided. (1939, ch. 453, § 2; 1941, ch. 105, § 1;
Char. Res. No. 4, § 1; Ord. No. 362, § 1; Char.
Res. No. 76-1, § 4.)
(a) Registration. Any qualified voter whose physical disability
confines him to a hospital or causes his to be confined to a bed and
permanently prevents him from being present to register or reregister
with the board of registration, shall be allowed to register or reregister
by absentee certification. Such absent certification may be issued
by the board of registration upon personal application and proof satisfactory
to said board of the permanent physical incapacity of the registrant
to personally register or reregister with said board. Such registration
or reregistration shall be done within said municipality.
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Any person who will become eighteen years of
age during an election year and on or prior to the date of an election,
if otherwise entitled to be registered as a qualified voter, shall
be entitled to register to vote at any time provided for registration
of voters during such election year and, when so registered, shall
be entitled to vote at such election; the date of birth of any such
registrant shall be shown under the heading of 'Remarks' in the registry
record.
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(b) Absentee voting. A qualified voter, who, on the occurrence
of any municipal election may be unavoidably absent from said municipality
for whatever reason on the day of the election, may vote as an absentee
voter. A voter who is otherwise qualified and who is also a full-time
and regular student in a bona-fide school, college, hospital, or similar
institution and who is unavoidably absent from such municipality in
which he is registered, as the case may be, on the occurrence of any
election, also may vote as an absentee voter.
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Any qualified voter whose physical disability
which confines him to a hospital or causes him to be confined to bed
and prevents or will prevent him from being present and personally
voting at the polls on any election day shall be considered an absentee
voter of said municipality. Such persons, as well as those set forth
in the preceding paragraph, shall make application on forms to be
supplied, upon application, by the board of registration, and shall
obtain a certificate from a duly licensed physician as evidence of
his qualification for an absentee ballot hereunder. The certificate
shall state that the voter is mentally competent to vote in elections
in this state, and that because of illness or injury which confines
him to a hospital or causes him to be confined to a bed, the voter
is now, or will be, prevented from voting personally at said election.
Such certificates shall be filed with said municipality not later
than ten days prior to any election. Thereupon an absentee ballot
may be mailed to the voter entitled thereto.
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The "determination upon absentee voters' application
for ballots; deliver of ballots" and "ballots for absentee voters"
and "instructions to voters" shall be the same as provided by the
Public General Laws of the State of Maryland. (Char. Res. No. 4, § 3;
Ord. No. 362, § 4; Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 5.)
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If at any election for mayor and councilmen,
or three councilmen, there shall be a tie vote between any candidates
for the same office, a new election shall be held; or if any person
elected to the office of councilman shall refuse to act, die, resign,
be disqualified or remove beyond the corporate limits, the remaining
members of the council shall elect a successor to serve the remaining
part of his term, who shall qualify as the other members; and in event
of the death or disqualification of the mayor during the term of his
office, he shall be succeeded by the president of the council, as
hereinafter provided, and a successor of the president of the council
shall be elected by its remaining members. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 525.)
All officers of said city, except the mayor,
before they enter upon the duties of their respective offices, shall
make oath that they will act faithfully, without favor, partiality
or prejudice, in all things appertaining to their respective offices;
the mayor shall qualify as directed by section 7 of Article 70 of
the Code of Public General Laws, title "Official Oaths," [Anno. Code
of Md., 1957, art. 70, § 7, "Other Officers"] before the
clerk of the circuit court for Carroll County; and a failure to take
such oath and to qualify within two weeks after their election shall
be deemed a refusal on the part of the party failing to accept the
office to which he has been elected. The common council shall be judges
of the qualifications of the mayor and of their own members. (C.P.L.L.
Md., 1930, § 526; Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 6.)
The mayor and common council shall have the
power and authority to establish, operate and maintain a police department.
All members of the police department shall have the power and authority,
within the municipality and beyond those limits for one-half mile,
to keep and enforce the laws of the State of Maryland and the City
of Westminster. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 527; Char. Res. No.
76-1, § 7.)
The mayor and common council may provide by
ordinance for the appointment of a clerk and treasurer, may prescribe
his or their duties, the character and amount of penalty of the bond
the treasurer shall give for the faithful performance of his duties,
and fix their compensation; and may provide for the prompt payment
of the taxes hereinafter authorized to be levied. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930,
§ 528; Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 8.)
They shall also appoint a suitable person to
be street commissioner in said city and fix his compensation, whose
duty it shall be to superintend the grading, paving, repairing, keeping
in order and opening of streets, lanes and alleys in said city, and
the removing of obstructions therefrom; to take care of and preserve
the public squares and property and preserve the health and well-being
of the inhabitants of the city, he being hereby given all the police
powers of constables of this state. He shall perform all other appropriate
duties prescribed by the mayor and common council, and give bond in
such penalty and in such manner as may be prescribed by them. (C.P.L.L.
Md., 1930, § 529.)
The mayor and common council shall meet at least
once a month, at such hour as shall be fixed by the common council,
and at such other times as they shall adjourn to; special meetings
may be called at any time by the mayor. They shall elect one of their
number president, who, during the absence, sickness or disability
of the mayor, shall be clothed with all his power and authority; and
in event of the death, resignation or disqualification of the mayor,
he shall serve as mayor for the unexpired term, receiving the salary
of the mayor, with all his power and authority; at any meeting which
the president fails to attend, a president pro tem shall be elected.
Three members of the council shall constitute a quorum for the transaction
of business, and the council shall pass rules and by-laws for their
own government while in session, and all by-laws and ordinances for
the government of the city. The mayor of said city, in case he disapproves
of any ordinance passed by the common council, may refuse to sign
the same and shall return it to the common council at its next meeting,
with his reasons for withholding his signature therefrom; and if the
said ordinance, when again put upon its passage, shall receive the
votes of four-fifths of the members of said common council, it shall
become a valid ordinance without the signature of said mayor. All
ordinances, when passed, shall be posted for no less than two weeks
in some conspicuous location in the City Hall and shall be recorded
in a book provided for that purpose. And the mayor and common council
are authorized and directed and are given full power and authority
to provide for the revision and codification of all its ordinances
heretofore passed or which may hereafter be passed, and to provide
for the payment of the same, and to by ordinance approve and adopt
said revision and codification as a whole, as and for the ordinances
then existing and in force in the City of Westminster. And said ordinances,
so revised and codified, when adopted and approved by the mayor and
common council, shall be evidence of said ordinances in any court
of this authority of this state, and a printed copy thereof, published
by the authority of the mayor and common council, shall be received
in evidence and have the same force and validity as the original.
All ordinances passed before or after the adoption of such codification
may also be proven by either the original or the record thereof in
the book provided by the mayor and common council for recording them.
(C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 530; Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 9;
Char. Res. No. 86-1, § 1)
The mayor and common council of Westminster
shall have power to purchase and hold real, personal and mixed property
for the use and benefit of said [municipal] corporation, or the recreation,
entertainment and amusement of its citizens, and may convey and dispose
of the same or any part thereof, and to receive property by gift,
devise or deed, in trust for any municipal object. They shall have
power to pass ordinances and bylaws to prevent and remove nuisances
and obstructions from the streets, lanes and alleys, and from lots
adjoining streets, lanes and alleys, and from any other place within
the limits of said city, and regulate and prohibit the excavation
and opening of streets and alleys, and any work or anything being
done therein or thereon; restrain all disorders, annoyances, disorderly
conduct and drunkenness; suppress street walkers, bawdy houses and
prevent gambling; prevent the firing of cannons, guns, pistols, firecrackers,
fireworks or other explosives within the corporate limits; suppress
fires, and prevent the danger thereof; establish or aid and assist
the maintenance of a fire department; make or cause to be made and
repaired, all necessary drains, sewers, culverts and bridges; direct
in what part of the city wooden buildings may be erected; establish
building lines on any of the streets and alleys of said town, beyond
which no structure can be erected; prevent and regulate the storage
of gunpowder, oil or other combustible matter in such quantities and
in such places as they may deem proper; regulate the speed of horses,
vehicles, motorcycles, automobiles, cars and locomotives in the city
limits; regulate the maintenance of proper safety appliances by railroads
at street crossings and the stopping of trains thereon; provide for
the restraining or regulation of theatricals or other public amusements
within said city; regulate the construction and maintenance of exits
from places of amusement and all public buildings; regulate the use
of sidewalks and all structures in, under or above the same, and may
require the owner or occupant of premises to keep the sidewalk in
front of same and the gutters thereof free from snow and other obstructions,
and prescribe hours for cleaning same; regulate or prevent the throwing
of sweepings, dust, ashes, offal, garbage, paper, handbills, dirty
liquids or any other offensive or objectionable material or substances
into any street, alley or public place, or upon any vacant lot in
said city; regulate or prevent the use of streets, sidewalks and public
places for signs, signposts, awnings, boxes, posts, poles, horse troughs,
steps, bay windows, railings, entrances, the posting of handbills
and advertisements, and display of goods, wares and merchandise; regulate
the putting in of sewers or drains on or under its streets or alleys,
and the charges for entering and maintaining the same; grant franchises
to electric companies, telegraph companies, telephone companies, street
railway companies, water companies, sewer and drain companies, and
any other public or quasi-public service corporation; and the ordinance
or contract granting such franchise shall especially set out the nature,
right and character of same, and no power or right not expressed in
the franchise or grant shall pass thereunder; regulate the erection
and use of telephones, telegraph and electric light poles and wires
within the town; regulate the keeping of dogs in said city, and provide
for the removal or killing worthless, annoying or dangerous dogs;
prevent the running at large within said city of horses, cattle, hogs,
geese and any other beast, brute or fowl, and regulate or prevent
the keeping of the same within said city; provided for the protection
of all city property and of all public property of public service
companies or corporations; punish and suppress tramps and vagrants
by imposing fines, or both fine and imprisonment, or by hard labor
on the streets of the city; and they may pass such other ordinances
as they may deem advisable, in addition to the powers herein particularly
enumerated, to provide for the good government and peace, health and
welfare of the city and the inhabitants thereof. They shall have power
to enforce the observance of all ordinances by fines, penalties and
forfeitures, not exceeding one hundred dollars for any one offense,
or by imprisonment not exceeding sixty days in the jail of Carroll
County, or by both fine and imprisonment, and all ordinances relating
to disorderly conduct and the suppression of nuisances may be enforced
within the city limits and beyond for one-half mile (C.P.L.L. Md.,
1930, § 531.)
In addition to any other borrowing power which
the mayor and common council of Westminster may presently have, from
whatever source derived, and notwithstanding any other provision or
limitation of public general or public local law:
(a) Whenever in its opinion it is necessary for carrying
out the municipal purposes of the City of Westminster, the mayor and
common council of Westminster shall have the power and authority to
borrow money and incur indebtedness, from time to time, in order to
pay current expenses of the mayor and common council of Westminster,
but the aggregate amount of such sums borrowed and not yet repaid
at any one time under the authority of this section shall not exceed
ten percent of the City's operating expense budget for the general
fund for the fiscal year in which the debt is incurred.
(b) Such borrowing or indebtedness shall be evidenced
by notes to be issued, sold and delivered in accordance with the terms
and conditions of an ordinance or ordinances passed in conformity
with sections 31 through 37, inclusive, of article 23A of the Annotated
Code of Maryland (1966 Replacement Volume, as amended), title "Corporations-Municipal,"
subtitle "Home Rule," subheading "Creation of Municipal Public Debt,"
provided, however, that:
(1) No ordinance authorizing any issue of notes pursuant
to the authority contained in this section shall be subject to referendum;
such ordinance shall become fully effective upon its final passage;
(2) If the ordinance or ordinances authorizing the issuance
of said notes shall so specify, said notes may be sold at private
sale without advertisement or publication of notice of sale or solicitation
of competitive bids.
(c) The issuance of said notes shall constitute a pledge
of the full faith and credit of the mayor and common council of Westminster;
the prompt payment of the principal of and interest on said notes
shall be made from unlimited ad valorem taxation and any other revenues,
lawfully available for the purpose and described in the authorizing
ordinance or ordinances. The mayor and common council of Westminster
shall annually levy upon all property subject to taxation within its
corporate limits ad valorem taxes sufficient to provide for the payment
of the maturing principal of and interest on any notes issued pursuant
to the authority contained in this section, without limitation as
to rate or amount, notwithstanding the limitation contained in section
790 of this article [section 42 of this charter] or in any other law.
(1937, ch. 15, § 1; Char. Res. No. 3, § 1; Char.
Res. No. 01-10.)
In addition to any other borrowing power which
the mayor and common council of Westminster may presently have, from
whatever source derived, and notwithstanding any other provision or
limitation of public general or public local law:
(a) The mayor and common council of Westminster may borrow
money and incur indebtedness, from time to time, for any public purpose,
and evidence that borrowing or indebtedness by the issue and sale
of its general obligation bonds or notes issued in anticipation thereof
(hereinafter sometimes collectively referred to as "bonds").
(b) Bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness issued
by the mayor and common council of Westminster shall be issued, sold
and delivered in accordance with the terms and conditions of an ordinance
or ordinances passed in conformity with sections 31 through 37, inclusive,
of article 23A of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1966 Replacement
Volume, as amended), title "Corporations-Municipal," subtitle "Home
Rule," subheading "Creation of Municipal Public Debt," provided, however,
that:
(1)
The mayor and common council of Westminster
may sell bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness at private
sale without advertisement or publication of notice of sale or solicitation
of competitive bids, provided the ordinance(s) authorizing the issuance
of the bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness shall so specify;
and
(2)
No ordinance authorizing any issue of bonds,
notes or other evidences of indebtedness pursuant to the authority
contained in this section shall be subject to referendum; such ordinance
shall become fully effective upon its final passage;
(c) The mayor and common council of Westminster may pay
the maturing principal of and interest on bonds, notes or other evidences
of indebtedness, to the extent practicable, from the revenues, if
any, of the particular project or improvement for which the bonds,
notes or other evidences of indebtedness were issued, notwithstanding
any limitation contained in any other law.
(d) In addition to any other sources of payment for the
principal of and interest on such bonds, notes or other evidences
of indebtedness, the mayor and common council of Westminster may also
pay the maturing principal of and interest on such bonds, notes, or
other evidences of indebtedness, in whole or in part, from the proceeds
of such capital contribution charges, connection charges (including
area connection charges related to the cost of base plant construction
as well as the actual cost of connection), ready to serve charges,
service charges, charges for upkeep, and any other charges or impositions
as the mayor and common council of Westminster may levy, impose and
collect from time to time during the life of said bonds, the power
and authority so to do being hereby specifically granted, notwithstanding
any limitation contained in any other law.
(e) In addition to any other sources of payment for the
principal of and interest on such bonds, notes or other evidences
of indebtedness, the mayor and common council of Westminster may also
pay the maturing principal of and interest on such bonds, notes or
other evidences of indebtedness, in whole or in part, from the proceeds
of such front foot benefit assessments as the mayor and common council
of Westminster may levy, impose and collect from time to time during
the life of said bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness,
power and authority so to do being hereby specifically granted, notwithstanding
any limitation contained in any other law.
(f) The issuance of said bonds, notes or other evidences
of indebtedness shall constitute a pledge of the full faith and credit
of the mayor and common council of Westminster to the payment of the
principal of and interest on such obligations when due; the prompt
payment of the principal of and interest on said bonds, notes or other
evidences of indebtedness shall be made from unlimited ad valorem
taxation and other revenues lawfully available for the purpose and
described in the authorizing ordinance or ordinances. In any event,
the mayor and common council of Westminster shall annually levy upon
all property subject to taxation within its corporate limits ad valorem
taxes sufficient to provide, together with any other funds lawfully
available for the purpose, for the payment of the maturing principal
of and interest on said bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness,
without limitation as to rate or amount, notwithstanding the limitation
contained in section 790 of this article [section 42 of this Charter]
or in any other law.
(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be deemed
or construed to impair the terms or conditions of any bonds, notes
or other evidences of indebtedness or other obligations of the mayor
and common council of Westminster issued prior to the effective date
of this section. (Char. Res. No. 5, § 1.)
In addition to the other powers granted to the
mayor and common council of Westminster in this Article, [division]
the mayor and common council of Westminster shall have power to pass
all necessary ordinances for the establishment of a merit and pension
system and shall classify all the municipal offices and positions
under the mayor and common council of Westminster, but, in no event
shall the city attorney be included under said merit and pension system.
(1943, ch. 462, § 1.)
For the purpose of promoting the health, security,
general welfare and morals of the community, the mayor and council
of Westminster shall have the power to regulate and restrict the height,
number of stories, and size of buildings and other structures, the
percentage of lot that may be occupied, the size of yards, courts,
and other open spaces, the density of population and the location
and use of buildings, structures and land for trade, industry, residence,
or other purposes. (1947, ch. 529, § 1.)
For any or all of said purposes in the foregoing
section, said mayor and council of Westminster may divide the municipality
into districts of such number, shape and area as it may deem best
to carry out the purpose of this Act [Char., §§ 15
to 23 inclusive]; and within such districts may regulate and restrict
the erection, construction, reconstruction, alteration, repair or
use of buildings, structures or land. All such regulations shall be
uniform for each class or kind of buildings throughout each district,
but the regulations in one district may differ from those in other
districts. (1947, ch. 529, § 1.)
Such regulations to be made in accordance with
a comprehensive plan and designed to lessen congestion in the streets;
to secure the safety from fire, panic and other dangers; to promote
health and the general welfare; to provide adequate light and air;
to prevent overcrowding of land; to avoid undue concentration of population;
to facilitate the adequate provision of transportation, water, sewerage,
schools, parks, and other public requirements, and otherwise to control
and direct municipal expansion and development. Such regulations shall
be made with reasonable consideration, among other things, to the
character of the district and its peculiar suitability for particular
uses, and with a view to conserving the value of buildings and encouraging
the most appropriate use of land throughout such municipality. (1947,
ch. 529, § 1.)
The mayor and council of Westminster may provide
for the manner in which such regulations and restrictions and the
boundaries of such districts shall be determined, established, and
enforced, and from time to time amended, supplemented, or changed,
However, no such regulation, restriction, or boundary shall become
effective until after a public hearing in relation thereto, at which
parties in interest and citizens shall have an opportunity to be heard.
At least fifteen days' notice of the time and place of such hearing
shall be published in a paper of general circulation in Carroll County.
(1947, ch. 529, § 1.)
Such regulations, restrictions and boundaries
may from time to time be amended, supplemented, changed, modified,
or repealed. In case, however, of a protest against such change, signed
by the owners of twenty per cent. or more either of the area of the
lots included in such proposed change or of those immediately adjacent
in the rear thereof extending one hundred feet therefrom, or of those
directly opposite lots, extending one hundred feet from the street
frontage of such opposite lots, such amendment shall not become effective
except by the favorable vote of all the members of the legislative
body of such municipality. The provisions of the previous section
relative to public hearings and official notice shall apply equally
to all changes or amendments. (1947, ch. 529, § 1.)
In order to avail itself of the powers conferred
by this Act, [Char., §§ 15 to 23, inclusive], the mayor
and council of Westminster may appoint a commission, to be known as
the zoning commission, to recommend the boundaries of the various
original districts and appropriate regulations to be enforced therein.
Such commission shall make a preliminary report and hold public hearings
thereon before submitting its final report, and the mayor and council
of Westminster shall not hold its public hearings or take action until
it has received the final report of such commission. (1947, ch. 529,
§ 1.)
The mayor and council of Westminster may provide
for the appointment of a board of zoning appeals, and in the regulations
and restrictions adopted pursuant to the authority of this Act [Char.,
§§ 15 to 23 inclusive] may provide that the said board
of zoning appeals may, in appropriate cases and subject to appropriate
conditions and safeguards, make special exceptions to the terms of
the ordinance in harmony with its general purpose and intent and in
accordance with general or specific rules therein contained.
The board of zoning appeals shall consist of
three members and they shall be appointed for a term of four years.
Vacancies shall be filled for the unexpired term of any member whose
term becomes vacant. The members of the board of zoning appeals shall
be removable for cause by the appointing authority upon written charges
and after public hearing.
The board shall adopt rules in accordance with
the provisions of any ordinance adopted pursuant to this Act [Char.,
§§ 15 to 23 inclusive]. Meetings of the board shall
be held at the call of the chairman and at such other times as the
board may determine. Such chairman, or in his absence the acting chairman,
may administer oaths and compel the attendance of witnesses. All meetings
of the board shall be open to the public. The board shall keep minutes
of its proceedings, showing the vote of each member upon each question,
or, if absent or failing to vote, indicating such fact, and shall
keep records of its examinations and other official actions, all of
which shall be immediately filed in the office of the board and shall
be a public record.
Appeals to the board of zoning appeals may be
taken by any person aggrieved or by any officer, department, board
or bureau of the municipality affected by any decision of the administrative
officer. Such appeal shall be taken within a reasonable time, as provided
by the rules of the board, by filing with the officer from whom the
appeal is taken, and with the board of zoning appeals a notice of
appeal specifying the grounds thereof. The officer from whom the appeal
is taken shall forthwith transmit to the board all the papers constituting
the record upon which the action appealed from was taken.
An appeal stays all proceedings in furtherance
of the action appealed from, unless the officer from whom the appeal
is taken certifies to the board of zoning appeals after the notice
of appeal shall have been filed with him that by reason of facts stated
in the certificate a stay would, in his opinion, cause imminent peril
to life or property. In such case proceedings shall not be stayed
otherwise than by a restraining order which may be granted by the
board of zoning appeals or by a court of record on application, on
notice to the officer from whom the appeal is taken and on due cause
shown.
The board of zoning appeals shall fix a reasonable
time for the hearing of the appeal, give public notice thereof, as
well as due notice to the parties in interest, and decide the same
within a reasonable time. Upon the hearing any party may appear in
person or by agent or by attorney.
The board of zoning appeals shall have the following
powers:
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1.
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To hear and decide appeals where it is alleged
there is error in any order, requirement, decision, or determination
made by an administrative official in the enforcement of this Act
[Char., §§ 15 to 23 inclusive] or of any ordinance
adopted pursuant thereto.
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2.
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To hear and decide special exceptions to the
terms of the ordinance upon which such board is required to pass under
such ordinance.
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3.
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To authorize upon appeal in specific cases such
variance from the terms of the ordinance as is necessary to avoid
arbitrariness and so that the spirit of the ordinance shall be observed
and substantial justice done.
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In exercising the above-mentioned powers such
board may, in conformity with the provisions of this Act [Char., §§ 15
to 23 inclusive], reverse or affirm, wholly or partly, or may modify
the order, requirement, decision, or determination appealed from and
may make such order, requirement, decision, or determination as ought
to be made, and to that end shall have all the powers of the officer
from whom the appeal is taken.
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The concurring vote of two members of the board
shall be necessary to reverse any order, requirement, decision, or
determination of any such administrative official, or to decide in
favor of the applicant on any matters upon which it is required to
pass under any such ordinance, or to effect any variation in such
ordinance.
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Any person or persons jointly or severally aggrieved
by any decision of the board of zoning appeals, or any taxpayer, or
any officer, department, board or bureau of the municipality may present
to the Circuit Court for Carroll County, Maryland, a petition, duly
verified, setting forth that such decision is illegal in whole or
in part, specifying the grounds of the illegality. Such petition shall
be presented to the court within thirty days after filing the decision
in the office of the board.
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Upon the presentation of such petition, the
court may allow an appeal to review such decision of the board of
zoning appeals and shall prescribe therein the time within which a
return thereto must be made and served upon the realtor's attorney,
which shall not be less than ten days and may be extended by the court.
The allowance of the appeal shall not stay proceedings upon the decision
appealed from, but the court may, on application, on notice to the
board and on due cause shown, grant a restraining order.
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The board of zoning appeals shall not be required
to return the original papers acted upon by it, but it shall be sufficient
to return certified or sworn copies thereof or such portions thereof
as may be called for by such appeal. The return shall concisely set
forth such other facts as may be pertinent and material to show the
grounds of the decision appealed from and shall be verified.
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If, upon the hearing, it shall appear to the
court that testimony is necessary for the proper disposition of the
matter, it may take evidence or appoint a commissioner to take such
evidence as it may direct and report the same to the court with his
findings of fact and conclusions of law, which shall constitute a
part of the proceedings upon which the determination of the court
shall be made. The court may reverse or affirm, wholly or partly,
or may modify the decision brought up for review.
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All issues in any proceeding under this section
shall have preference over all other civil actions and proceedings.
(1947, ch. 529, § 1; Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 10.)
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The mayor and council of Westminster may provide
by ordinance for the enforcement of this Act (Char. §§ 15
to 23 inclusive) and of any ordinance or regulation made thereunder.
A violation of this Act or of such ordinance or regulation is declared
to be an infraction. The penalty for violation shall be $400.00 for
each initial offense and $400.00 for each repeat offense.
In case any building or structure is erected,
constructed, reconstructed, altered, repaired, converted, or maintained,
or any building, structure, or land is used in violation of this Act
(Char. §§ 15 to 23 inclusive) or of any ordinance or
other regulation made under authority conferred hereby, the proper
local authorities of the municipality, in addition to other remedies,
may institute any appropriate action or proceedings to prevent such
unlawful erection, construction, reconstruction, alteration, repair,
conversion, maintenance, or use, to restrain, correct, or abate such
violation, to prevent the occupancy of said building, structure or
land, or to prevent any illegal act, conduct, business, or use in
or about such premises.. (1947, ch. 529, § 1; Char. Res.
No. 86-2.)
Wherever the regulations made under authority
of this Act (Char., §§ 15 to 23 inclusive) require
a greater width or size of yards, courts, or other open spaces, or
require a lower height of building or less number of stories, or require
a greater percentage of lot to be left unoccupied, or impose other
higher standards than are required in any other statute or local ordinance
or regulations, the provisions of the regulations made under authority
of this Act shall govern. Wherever the provisions of any other statute
or local ordinance or regulation require a greater width or size of
yards, courts, or other open spaces, or require a lower height of
building or a less number of stories, or require a greater percentage
of lot to be left unoccupied, or impose other higher standards than
are required by the regulations made under authority of this Act,
the provisions of such statute or local ordinance or regulation shall
govern. (1947, ch. 529, § 1.)
The mayor and common council of Westminster
is authorized to levy and collect a special tax, not to exceed in
any one year ten cents on the one hundred dollars on all property
liable to assessment and taxation by the mayor and common council
of Westminster, as it may consider necessary for the purpose of purchasing
and maintaining fire fighting equipment for the use of Westminster
fire engine and hose company, No. 1, and for its general maintenance,
support and expenses. All moneys realized from said tax shall be held
by the mayor and common council of Westminster in a special fund to
be known as the fire department fund and shall be used for no other
purposes than those herein specified. All payments out of said fund
to said fire company shall be within the discretion of the mayor and
common council of Westminster, and the said fire company shall furnish
from time to time such financial statements and other information
as may be requested by the mayor and common council of Westminster.
(C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 532; 1953, ch. 115, § 1.)
The mayor and common council of Westminster
is authorized to levy and collect a special tax not to exceed in any
one year two cents on the one hundred dollars on all property liable
to assessment and taxation by the mayor and common council of Westminster,
as it may consider necessary towards the cost of the maintenance and
operation of the Davis Library, Inc., a free public library in Westminster.
All moneys realized from said tax shall be held by the mayor and common
council of Westminster in a special fund to be known as the library
fund, and shall be used for no other purposes than those herein specified.
All payments out of said fund to said library shall be within the
discretion of the mayor and common council of Westminster, and the
said library shall furnish from time to time such financial statements
and other information as may be requested by the mayor and common
council of Westminster. (1953, ch. 319, § 1.)
The mayor and common council of Westminster,
in addition to the powers already possessed by it, shall have the
right and power to acquire by condemnation any land, improvements,
rights-of-way, waters, watercourses or other property of any kind
whatsoever, whether used for private purposes or already devoted to
a public use, or any interest therein, which it may require for an
engine house or house, or other fire purposes, sewers, culverts, drains, markets,
parks, squares and other public places; or which it may require for
streets, roads, footways, lanes, alleys, highways or bridges, including
the laying out, opening, extending, widening, straightening and closing
up of the same in whole or in part, or which it may require for any
other public or municipal purpose. In all condemnation cases instituted
by it for any purpose, the procedure followed shall be the method
provided and prescribed by the Public General Laws of this State and
the Rules of Procedure thereof. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 533;
Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 11.)
The mayor and common council shall have power
to provide by ordinance for the construction, opening, enlarging or
straightening of any sewer or drain and for regulation of the same;
for paving and keeping in repair all necessary sewers and drains or
gutters; to provide by ordinances for the purchase and condemnation
of private or public property, as is now provided in this Act [Char., §§ 1, 2, 6-12,
26, 27, 30-39, 41, 43 & 44] for the condemnation and opening of
streets in said city, for the purpose of paving, building and maintaining
any sewer or drain for surface water in said city; they are empowered
to by ordinance regulate and prohibit cesspools, earth pits and other
means of sewage disposal; to regulate or exclude places where offensive
trades or any offensive occupation is conducted or engaged in; to
regulate or exclude pig pens within the corporate limits; to pass
ordinances governing the disposal of garbage or refuse; to regulate
or exclude slaughterhouses within the corporate limits; to pass ordinances
to close polluted wells, springs and other sources of water supply
when such sources shall be certified by the state board of health,
after proper analysis, to be polluted; and to pass ordinances for
the quarantine and regulation of all communicable diseases, not inconsistent
with the laws of this state or with the rules and regulations of the
state board of health; and its officers may enter upon and into any
private property or building whenever necessary to execute or enforce
any such ordinance. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 534.)
The rates and charges for the use of the sanitary
sewerage system as determined and charged by the mayor and common
council of Westminster, a municipal corporation, are hereby declared
to be and made liens upon the property using said sewerage system
until paid, and that the same shall be collected as other municipal
taxes of said corporation. (1937, ch. 52.)
For the purpose of preserving the sanitary condition
of the City of Westminster the mayor and common council of Westminster
be, and it is hereby authorized to borrow money temporarily up to
such amount as may be necessary not exceeding the amount of the obligations
or indebtedness of property owners to it for the purpose of providing
the mayor and common council of Westminster with the necessary funds
to make sewer connections of properties with the sewerage system of
the City of Westminster, [and] the mayor and common council of Westminster
is hereby authorized for the purpose of borrowing such money to give
its note to be signed on behalf of the mayor and common council of
Westminster by the mayor and the clerk, and to pledge as collateral
the obligations or indebtedness of property owners so connected to
the mayor and common council of Westminster to an amount equal to
the amount of the loan, and to renew such note in whole or in part
from time to time, not exceeding the maturity of the collateral. The
method of pledging such indebtedness from said owners of property
as collateral for such loan shall be as follows:
The city clerk shall give a certificate over
his hand that there is due to the mayor and common council of Westminster
a certain sum for such connections from the following property owners,
giving the number of the property and the name of the owner, and the
amount due on each, and that said indebtedness is not pledged for
any other loan. Said certificate attached to and delivered with the
note of the mayor and common council of Westminster, as above provided,
shall constitute a pledge of the indebtedness of said parties to the
mayor and common council of Westminster as collateral security for
the said note, or any renewal thereof as above provided. The mayor
and common council of Westminster shall collect such indebtedness
just the same as if it were not pledged, but shall pay over to the
holder of any note given under this Act [section] all collections
of any of the indebtedness pledged as collateral therefor, and such
holder shall credit all such payments on such note; and that every
indebtedness accruing to the mayor and common council of Westminster
from any property holder in said city arising out of said connections,
as aforesaid, is hereby declared to be a lien upon the property of
such property owner, until paid, and interest shall be chargeable
on said indebtedness after thirty days from the time of completion
of connection and that the same shall be collected, after the maturity
of the note of said property owner, or of any renewal thereof, and
which renewal shall be in the discretion of the mayor and common council
of Westminster, as other municipal taxes of said mayor and common
council of Westminster.
The mayor and common council of Westminster
is hereby authorized and empowered to pass such ordinances as may
be necessary to carry out the provisions of this Act [section] (1939,
ch. 153, § 1.)
The mayor and common council shall have the
power and authority to issue licenses and permits for occupations
and businesses, other than those licensed by the State of Maryland,
whenever it is deemed advisable in the interest of the public health,
safety and morals. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 535; 1931, ch.
44, § 1; Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 12.)
The mayor and common council of Westminster
may contract with any corporation, firm or person for the lighting
of the city either with electric, gas or by such other means as they
may deem proper; and for water for use for extinguishing fires or
for other city purposes; provided, no such contract shall be for a
longer period than ten years; and the said mayor and common council
of Westminster are hereby authorized and directed to annually levy
a special tax upon the property subject to assessment in the City
of Westminster sufficient to pay for such light or water, whether
now or hereafter contracted for; and the said special tax so levied
shall be collected as the other taxes are collectible, and the surplus,
if any, of such special tax shall be annually carried forward to the
account of this fund for the succeeding year, and at the expiration
of any such contract the balance shall go into the general funds of
the City of Westminster. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 536.)
(a) The mayor and common council is authorized and empowered
to acquire by lease, purchase or condemnation land, rights, privileges,
waters, streams, waterways, watercourses, easements, reservoirs, facilities
or franchises for the purpose of enlarging or extending the city's
water system or for improving its efficiency.
(b) The mayor and common council is authorized to pass
such ordinances, rules and regulations as may be necessary to provide
for the proper operation, management, maintenance, enlargement, improvement,
and conservation of the city's water system and supply; and is further
authorized to provide water service to all premises located within
the city limits and to those areas outside those limits where water
service can be extended without undue expenditure and where a reasonable
return thereon can be anticipated.
(c) The mayor and common council of Westminster hereby
is authorized, empowered and directed to charge all premises supplied
with water from the said water system such rate or rates therefor
as shall be prescribed by ordinances or resolutions of the mayor and
common council of Westminster, and all moneys received for water so
supplied shall constitute a separate fund to be in the keeping of
the treasurer of the mayor and common council of Westminster and to
be known as the "water fund." Such moneys shall be used in the operation
and maintenance of said water system and may also be used to defer
the cost of any extension or improvement of the said water system,
to pay the interest on the principal of any outstanding bonds on the
said water system which may have been assumed by the said mayor and
common council of Westminster at the time of the acquisition of the
said water system and the interest on the principal of any bonds which
may be issued under the provisions of this subheading. (Char. Res.
No. 76-1, § 14; Char. Res. No. 86-3.)
They [the mayor and common council] shall have
power to provide for laying out, opening and extending, or widening
or closing, straightening, in whole or in part, any street, alley
or square in the city, and may fix the dimensions thereof which in
their judgment the public welfare or convenience may require; to provide
for ascertaining whether any, and if so, what amount in damage will
be caused thereby for which the owner or possessor of any property
through or over which such street or alley may pass or square or park
may lie, ought to be compensated and paid; and for assessing and laying
either generally on the whole assessable property within the city
or specially on the property of persons specially benefited by such
improvement, the whole or any part of the damages and expenses which
may be incurred in laying out, opening, extending, straightening or
widening such street, lane or alley, square or park; to provide (in
case they shall determine to levy and assess the whole or any part
of said damages and expenses upon the owners of the property in the
city specially benefited by such improvement) for the appointment
amongst them of the amount of such damage and expenses so determined,
to be levied upon them in due proportion to the amount of benefits
by them, respectively, received; to provide for the appointment of
commissioners to said damages and benefits and prescribe their duties
and compensation; to provide for the condemnation of all land and
property so taken for public use in opening, extending, straightening
or widening, in whole or in part, any street, lane or alley as aforesaid,
and for the notice to be given in relation thereto; to provide for
the payment of the damages so awarded, and for the mode of payment,
and collection of the benefits so determined to be assessed; and to
pass all ordinances necessary and proper to the exercise and enforcement
of the powers granted in this section; provided, however, that no
land or property shall be taken under the powers given in this section
without just compensation being first paid or tendered to the party
entitled to such compensation, as agreed on with the owners of such
property or awarded by a jury summoned for the purpose by the sheriff
of Carroll County, in the mode and at the time prescribed by said
mayor and common council; and provided further, that provision is
made in all such ordinances for reasonable notice to the person whose
land is to be condemned or against whom benefits are to be assessed,
with the right of appeal to the circuit court for Carroll County by
any and all persons interested, including the mayor and common council,
from the decision of the jury of condemnation, or persons appointed
or authorized to such damages or benefits. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 540.)
The mayor and common council of Westminster
shall have the power to provide by ordinance for the grading, paving
and curbing, or the regrading, repaving and recurbing of any street,
alley and lane, or part thereof, in the corporate limits of said city
of Westminster, now condemned, ceded or opened as a public highway,
or which hereafter may be condemned, ceded, opened, widened, straightened
or altered, according to the ordinances regulating the same; to lay
flag-stones across said streets, alleys and lanes, whenever necessary;
to provide of what material the streets, alleys and lanes, sidewalks,
gutters and curbs, in said city, shall be paved and curbed, and how
the same shall be done and kept in good repair. They may pass all
ordinances necessary for grading and regrading, paving, repaving and
repairing of the streets, alleys, lanes and footways of the said city;
and compel, by fine or otherwise, the owner or proprietor of any lot
to pave or repave, grade or regrade or repair the footways, curbs
and gutters fronting thereon, at the expense of said proprietor or
owner, in whole or in part; and if any proprietor or owner of a lot
shall neglect to grade and pave, or repave or repair the footways
and gutters of said lot, within thirty days after notice has been
given by the mayor or street commissioner of said city, either by
publication in a newspaper in the city of Westminster not less than
four consecutive times, or by service of the said notice on the proprietor
or owner, requiring the same to be done, the mayor and common council
may direct the street commissioner to cause the same to be done at
the expense of the owner or proprietor of said lot, which expense,
together with an addition thereto of ten per cent for the expense
of collection, shall be a lien on said property until paid, and shall
be collected by the tax collector of said city in the same manner
that ordinary taxes are collected, or by the mayor and common council
as other debts of like amount are recovered in this state by law;
provided, however, that the additional ten percent for the expense
of collection, specified above, shall not be charged except in cases
wherein the said mayor and common council are obliged to resort to
legal proceedings to make said collection. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 541.)
Whenever the owners of two-thirds of the linear
feet of property binding on any public street, square, avenue or other
city thoroughfare, or part thereof, shall petition in writing to the
mayor and common council of Westminster to have such public street,
square, avenue or other city thoroughfare, or part thereof, macadamized,
telfordized, paved, renewed or remade, the mayor and common council
of Westminster may by ordinance provide for such street, square, avenue
or other city thoroughfare, or part thereof, being macadamized, telfordized,
paved, renewed or remade, and by such ordinance assess not more than
two-thirds of the cost of such work or improvement, pro rata, upon
all the property binding upon such street, square, avenue or other
city thoroughfare, or part thereof so improved, according to the linear
feet of property binding upon the same; and the remaining cost of
such work or improvement to be paid by the mayor and common council
of Westminster; provided, that after the introduction of such ordinance
and before its final passage the mayor and common council of Westminster
shall give public notice of the said ordinance, and that any person
interested therein will be heard upon any matter relating thereto,
by the mayor and common council of Westminster, at a public hearing
to be held at the time and place designated in said notice, which
shall be published in one of the newspapers published in Westminster
for two successive weeks before said hearing; and in addition to such
notice the mayor and common council may provide for such other notice
to and hearing of the owners of property affected as it may deem requisite
and proper. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 542.)
The mayor and common council of Westminster
may, from time to time, by ordinance provide for the submission to
the qualified voters of Westminster, at any annual municipal election
held in Westminster, or at any special election called for that purpose
by the mayor and common council, the question of renewing, remaking,
repaving and grading any specified street, square, avenue or other
city thoroughfare, or part thereof, and the payment of not more than
two-thirds of the cost thereof by the abutting property on such streets,
pro rata, according to the linear feet of property bounding thereon,
the remaining cost of such work or improvement to be paid by the mayor
and common council of Westminster; and if two-thirds of the vote cast
at such election shall be in favor of the said specified improvement
the mayor and common council of Westminster shall by ordinance provide
for such renewing, remaking, paving and grading of any such specified
street, square, avenue or other city thoroughfare, or part thereof,
and the payment of not more than two-thirds of the cost thereof, as
specified by such ordinance, shall be assessed pro rata upon all the
property binding upon such street, square, avenue or other city thoroughfare,
or part thereof so improved, according to the linear feet of property
binding upon the same; and the remaining cost of such improvement
or work to be paid by the mayor and common council of Westminster;
provided, that the mayor and common council of Westminster shall give
public notice of the passage of the ordinance submitting this question
to vote, as aforesaid, by publishing said ordinance in one of the
newspapers published at Westminster for four successive weeks prior
to such election. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 543.)
The assessment mentioned in the preceding sections
[Char., §§ 35 to 37] shall be a lien on the property
on which the assessment is made until the same be paid; and may be
collected in any of the methods and ways for collecting taxes after
the expiration of ninety days from the date of the said assessment.
(C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 544.)
A tenant for ninety-nine years, or for ninety-nine
years renewable forever, or the executor or administrator of such
tenant, or the guardian of an infant owner shall be deemed and taken
as an owner for the purpose of any application to the mayor and common
council of Westminster authorized by these aforegoing sections [Char.,
§§ 35 to 38] and a tenant for ninety-nine (99) years,
or for ninety-nine (99) years renewable forever, and the executors
or administrators of such tenant, or the guardian of an infant owner
shall be deemed and taken as the proprietor or owner of the estate
or property assessable within the meaning of this Act [Char., §§ 1,
2, 6-12, 26, 27, 30-39, 41, 43 & 44] in reference to streets and
sidewalks, gutters and curbing, as well as for all other purposes
and objects by it authorized. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 545.)
The mayor and common council of Westminster
shall levy annually a general tax on the property in said corporation.
Such taxes shall be due and payable on the first day of July in the
year for which they are levied and shall be overdue and in arrears
three (3) months thereafter. They shall bear interest while in arrears
at the rate imposed by the mayor and common council by ordinance for
each month or fraction thereof until paid. The mayor and common council
shall also have the authority to levy a half-year tax on new construction,
which tax shall be due and payable on the first day of January in
the year for which such tax is levied and shall be overdue and in
arrears three (3) months thereafter and shall bear the same rate of
interest while overdue and in arrears as provided for taxes due and
payable on the first day of July. Property upon which taxes are overdue
and in arrears may be sold by tax sale as provided in this Charter
or as provided by the public general laws of the State of Maryland.
The mayor and common council may, by ordinance or resolution, impose
and collect a penalty for failure to pay such taxes after they are
overdue and in arrears. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 547; 1935,
ch. 244, § 1; 1951, ch. 531, § 1; Char. Res. No.
6, § 1; Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 18; Char. Res.
No. 88-2.)
In addition to any other borrowing power which
the mayor and common council of Westminster may presently have, from
whatever source derived, and notwithstanding any other provision or
limitation of public general or public local law:
(a) The mayor and common council of Westminster shall
have the power and authority from time to time to borrow money and
incur indebtedness in order to finance the acquisition, purchase,
establishment, design, construction, reconstruction, expansion, extension,
alteration or repair of a water supply and distribution system, within
or beyond the corporate limits of the mayor and common council of
Westminster, including all sites, property rights, equipment and appurtenances
necessary thereto and costs in connection therewith.
(b) Such borrowing or indebtedness shall be evidenced
by the issuance of bond anticipation notes or general obligation bonds
(hereinafter collectively referred to as "bonds") the same to be issued,
sold and delivered in accordance with the terms and conditions of
an ordinance or ordinances passed in conformity with and pursuant
to the authority of sections 31 through 37, inclusive, of article
23A of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1957 Ed., as amended), title
"Corporations-Municipal," subtitle "Home Rule," subheading "Creation
of Municipal Public Debt," provided, however, that:
(1) No referendum shall be necessary for any issue of
bonds made pursuant to the authority contained in this section;
(2) If the ordinance or ordinances authorizing the issuance
of said bonds shall so specify, said bonds may be sold at private
sale without advertisement or publication of notice of sale or solicitation
of competitive bids.
(c) The issuance of said bonds shall constitute a pledge
of the full faith and credit of the mayor and common council of Westminster;
the prompt payment of the principal of and interest on said bonds
shall be made from unlimited ad valorem taxation and other revenues,
which may be described in the authorizing ordinance or ordinances.
The maturing principal of and interest on said bonds shall be paid,
to the extent practicable, from the net proceeds (after providing
for costs of operation and maintenance of the water supply and distribution
system) of such connection or service charges, or any combination
thereof as the mayor and common council of Westminster may levy, impose
and collect from time to time during the life of said bonds, power
and authority so to do being hereby specifically granted, notwithstanding
any limitation contained in any other law. In any event, the mayor
and common council of Westminster shall annually levy upon all property
subject to taxation within its corporate limits ad valorem taxes sufficient
to provide for the payment of the maturing principal of and interest
on said bonds, without limitation as to rate or amount, notwithstanding
the limitation contained in section 547 of this article [section 42
of this Charter] or in any other law.
(d) In addition to the sources of payment provided in the foregoing subsection
(c), the maturing principal of and interest on said bonds may be paid, in whole or in part, from the proceeds of such front foot benefit assessments as the mayor and common council of Westminster may levy, impose and collect from time to time during the life of said bonds, power and authority so to do being hereby specifically granted, notwithstanding any limitation contained in any other law. (Char. Res. No. 1, § 1.)
(a) To ensure the observance of the ordinances of the
city, the mayor and common council has the power to provide that violation
thereof shall be assessed a misdemeanor unless otherwise specified
as an infraction, and has the power to affix thereto penalties of
a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) or imprisonment
for not exceeding six (6) months, or both such fine and imprisonment.
Any person subject to any fine, forfeiture, or penalty has the right
of appeal within ten (10) days to the circuit court of the county
in which the fine, forfeiture, or penalty was imposed. The mayor and
common council may provide that, if the violation is of a continuing
nature and is persisted in, a conviction for one violation shall not
be a bar to a conviction for a continuation of the offense subsequent
to the first or any succeeding conviction.
(b)
(1) The mayor and common council may provide that violations
of any municipal ordinance shall be a municipal infraction unless
that violation is declared to be a felony or misdemeanor by the laws
of the state or ordinances. For purposes of this charter a municipal
infraction is a civil offense.
(2) A fine not to exceed four hundred dollars ($400.00)
may be imposed for each conviction of a municipal infraction. The
fine is payable by the offender to the municipality within twenty
(20) calendar days of receipt of a citation. Repeat offenders may
be a fine not to exceed four hundred dollars ($400.00) for each repeat
offense, and each day a violation continues shall constitute a separate
offense.
(3) Any person receiving a citation for an infraction
may elect to stand trial for the offense by notifying the city in
writing of this intention at least five (5) days prior to the date
set for payment of the fine as set forth in the citation. Failure
to pay the fine or to give notice of intent to stand trial may result
in an additional fine or adjudication by the court.
(4) Adjudication of a municipal infraction is not a criminal
conviction for any purpose, nor does it impose any of the civil disabilities
ordinarily imposed by a criminal conviction.
(c) All ordinances relating to disorderly conduct and
the suppression of nuisances may be enforced within the city limits
and beyond for one-half mile. (C.P.L.L. Md., 1930, § 549;
Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 20; Char. Res. No. 86-4.)
The term "taxicab" as used in this sub-title
[Char. §§ 45-47] shall embrace any motor vehicle for
hire designated to carry seven persons or less, including the driver,
operated upon any public street or highway in the City of Westminster,
or, on call or demand, accepting or soliciting passengers indiscriminately
for transportation for hire between such points along public streets
or highways in said city, as may be directed by the passenger or passengers
so being transported; provided, that nothing in this sub-title shall
be construed to include as taxicab a motor vehicle operated, with
the approval of the public service commission of Maryland, on fixed
routes and schedules. (1949, ch. 454, § 1.)
In order to protect the public health, safety
and welfare of the citizens of the City of Westminster and other persons
who may use taxicab facilities therein, the common council of Westminster
is hereby authorized and empowered by ordinance to fix requirements
for the ownership and operation of taxicabs in the corporate limits
of Westminster and to provide for inspection and licensing of taxicabs,
their owners and operators. The regulation herein provided for the
taxicab industry in Westminster shall be in addition to any regulation
by any agency of the State of Maryland. Any person, firm or corporation
subject to this subheading. [Char. §§ 45-47] who shall
be dissatisfied with any ordinance of the common council of Westminster,
enacted pursuant to the authority herein conferred, may commence any
action in the circuit court for Carroll County against said council
to vacate and set aside any such ordinance on the ground that the
regulation, practice, act or service established by such ordinance
is unreasonable or unlawful. The decision of the circuit court shall
be appealable to the court of appeals of Maryland by either party.
(1949, ch. 454, § 1; Char. Res. No. 76-1, § 21.)
Any person, firm or corporation violating any
ordinance promulgated under the authority of this sub-title [Char.
§§ 45-47], shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon
conviction shall be punished by a fine of not more than two hundred
fifty dollars for each offense. In addition, the common council of
Westminster, upon proof of any violation of any ordinance promulgated
under this [Char. §§ 45-47], shall have authority to
revoke or suspend any license issued under the authority thereof after
according reasonable opportunity to the licensee to be heard in his,
her or its defense. (1949, ch. 454, § 1.)
(a) The following terms wherever used or referred to in
this subheading [division] shall have the following meanings, unless
a different meaning is clearly indicated by the context
(b) "Federal government" shall include the United States
of America or any agency or instrumentality, corporate or otherwise,
of the United States of America.
(c) "Slum area" shall mean any area where dwellings predominate
which, by reason of depreciation, overcrowding, faulty arrangement
or design, lack of ventilation, light or sanitary facilities, or any
combination of these factors, are detrimental to the public safety,
health or morals.
(d) "Blighted area" shall mean an area in which a majority
of buildings have declined in productivity by reason of obsolescence,
depreciation or other causes to an extent they no longer justify fundamental
repairs and adequate maintenance.
(e) "Urban renewal project" shall mean undertakings and
activities of a municipality in an urban renewal area for the elimination
and for the prevention of the development or spread of slums and blight,
and may involve slum clearance and redevelopment in an urban renewal
area, or rehabilitation or conservation in an urban renewal area,
or any combination or part thereof in accordance with an urban renewal
plan. Such undertakings and activities may include--
(1) acquisition of a slum area or a blighted area or portion
thereof;
(2) demolition and removal of buildings and improvements;
(3) installation, construction or reconstruction of streets,
utilities, parks, playgrounds, and other improvements necessary for
carrying out in the urban renewal area the urban renewal objectives
of this sub-heading in accordance with the urban renewal plan;
(4) disposition of any property acquired in the urban
renewal area including sale, initial leasing or retention by the municipality
itself, at its fair value for uses in accordance with the urban renewal
plan;
(5) carrying out plans for a program of voluntary or compulsory
repair and rehabilitation of buildings or other improvements in accordance
with the urban renewal plan;
(6) acquisition of any other real property in the urban
renewal area where necessary to eliminate unhealthful, unsanitary
or unsafe conditions, lessen density, eliminate obsolete or other
uses detrimental to the public welfare, or otherwise to remove or
prevent the spread of blight or deterioration, or to provide land
for needed public facilities; and
(7) the preservation, improvement or embellishment of
historic structures or monuments.
(f) "Urban renewal area" shall mean a slum area or a blighted
area or a combination thereof which the municipality designates as
appropriate for an urban renewal project.
(g) "Urban renewal plan" shall mean a plan, as it exists
from time to time, for an urban renewal project, which plan shall
be sufficiently complete to indicate such land acquisition, demolition
and removal of structures, redevelopment, improvements, and rehabilitation
as may be proposed to be carried out in the urban renewal area, zoning
and planning changes, if any, land uses, maximum density and building
requirements.
(h) "Bonds" shall mean any bonds (including refunding
bonds), notes, interim certificates, certificates of indebtedness,
debentures or other obligations.
(i) "Person" shall mean any individual, firm, partnership,
corporation, company, association, joint stock association, or body
politic; and shall include any trustee, receiver, assignee, or other
person acting in similar representative capacity.
(j) "Municipality" shall mean, the Mayor and Common Council
of Westminster, a municipal corporation of this state. (1961, ch.
342, § 1, "1.")
The municipality is hereby authorized and empowered
to carry out urban renewal projects which shall be limited to slum
clearance in slum or blighted areas and redevelopment or the rehabilitation
of slum or blighted areas; to acquire in connection with such projects,
within the corporate limits of the municipality, land and property
of every kind and any right, interest, franchise, easement or privilege
therein, including land or property and any right or interest therein
already devoted to public use, by purchase, lease, gift, condemnation
or any other legal means; to sell, lease, convey, transfer or otherwise
dispose of any of said land or property, regardless of whether or
not it has been developed, redeveloped, altered or improved and irrespective
of the manner or means in or by which it may have been acquired, to
any private, public or quasi public corporation, partnership, association,
person or other legal entity. No land or property taken by the municipality
for any of the aforementioned purposes or in connection with the exercise
of any of the powers which by this sub-heading [division] are granted
to the municipality by exercising the power of eminent domain shall
be taken without just compensation, as agreed upon between the parties,
or awarded by a jury, being first paid or tendered to the party entitled
to such compensation. All land or property needed or taken by the
exercise of the power of eminent domain by the municipality for any
of the aforementioned purposes or in connection with the exercise
of any of the powers granted by this sub-heading [division] is hereby
declared to be needed or taken for public uses and purposes. Any or
all of the activities authorized pursuant to this section shall constitute
governmental functions undertaken for public uses and purposes and
the power of taxation may be exercised, public funds expended and
public credit extended in furtherance thereof. The municipality is
hereby granted the following additional powers which are hereby found
and declared to be necessary and proper to carry into full force and
effect the specific powers hereinbefore granted and to fully accomplish
the purposes and objects contemplated by the provisions of this section:
(1) To make or have made all surveys and plans necessary
to the carrying out of the purposes of the sub-heading [division]
and to adopt or approve, modify and amend such plans, which plans
may include but shall not be limited to: (i) plans for carrying out
a program of voluntary or compulsory repair and rehabilitation of
buildings and improvements, (ii) plans for the enforcement of codes
and regulations relating to the use of land and the use and occupancy
of buildings and improvements and to the compulsory repair, rehabilitation,
demolition, or removal of buildings and improvements; and (iii) appraisals,
title searches, surveys, studies, and other plans and work necessary
to prepare for the undertaking of urban renewal projects and related
activities; and to apply for, accept and utilize grants of funds from
the federal government for such purposes;
(2) To prepare plans for the relocation of persons (including
families, business concerns and others) displaced from an urban renewal
area, and to make relocation payments to or with respect to such persons
for moving expenses and losses of property for which reimbursement
or compensation is not otherwise made, including the making of such
payments financed by the federal government;
(3) To appropriate such funds and make such expenditures
as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of this sub-heading,
[division] including the payment or reimbursement of reasonable actual
costs incurred as a result of utility relocations when such relocations
are made necessary by an urban renewal project, after making appropriate
adjustment for any improvements or betterments to the utility's facilities
made in connection with the relocation; and to levy taxes and betterments
for such purposes; to borrow money and to apply for and accept advances,
loans, grants, contributions and any other form of financial assistance
from the federal government, the state, county or other public bodies,
or from any sources, public or private, for the purposes of this subheading
[division], and to give such security as may be required therefor;
to invest any urban renewal funds held in reserves or sinking funds
or any such funds not required for immediate disbursement, in property
or securities which are legal investments for other municipal funds.
(4) To hold, improve, clear or prepare for redevelopment
any property acquired in connection with urban renewal projects; to
mortgage, pledge, hypothecate or otherwise encumber such property,
to insure or provide for the insurance of such property or operations
of the municipality against any risks or hazards, including the power
to pay premiums on any such insurance;
(5) To make and execute all contracts and other instruments
necessary or convenient to the exercise of its powers under this subheading
[division] including the power to enter into agreement with other
public bodies or agencies (which agreements may extend over any period,
notwithstanding any provision or rule of law to the contrary), and
to include in any contract for financial assistance with the federal
government for or with respect to an urban renewal project and related
activities such conditions imposed pursuant to federal laws as the
municipality may deem reasonable and appropriate;
(6) To enter into any building or property in any urban
renewal area in order to make inspections, surveys, appraisals, soundings
or test borings, and to obtain an order for this purpose from the
circuit court for the county in which the municipality is situated
in the event entry is denied or resisted;
(7) To plan, replan, install, construct, reconstruct,
repair, close or vacate streets, roads, sidewalks, public utilities,
parks, playgrounds, and other public improvements in connection with
an urban renewal project; and to make exceptions from building regulations;
(8) To generally organize, coordinate and direct the administration
of the provisions of this sub-heading [division] as they apply to
such municipality in order that the objective of remedying slum and
blighted areas and preventing the causes thereof within such municipality
may be most effectively promoted and achieved;
(9) To exercise all or any part or combination of powers
herein granted. (1961, ch. 342, § 1, "2.")
The municipality may itself exercise all the
powers granted by this sub-heading [division] or may, if its legislative
body by ordinance determines such action to be in the public interest,
elect to have such powers exercised by a separate public body or agency
as hereinafter provided. In the event said legislative body makes
such determination, it shall proceed by ordinance to establish a public
body or agency to undertake in the municipality the activities authorized
by this subheading [division]. Such ordinance shall include provisions
establishing the number of members of such public body or agency,
the manner of their appointment and removal, the terms of said members
and their compensation. The ordinance may include such additional
provisions relating to the organization of said public body or agency
as may be necessary. In the event the legislative body enacts such
an ordinance, all of the powers by this sub-heading [division] granted
to the municipality shall, from the effective date of said ordinance,
be vested in the public body or agency thereby established, except:
(1) The power to pass a resolution to initiate an urban
renewal project pursuant to section 4 of this sub-heading. [Char.,
§ 51.]
(2) The power to issue general obligation bonds pursuant
to section 9 of this sub-heading. [Char., § 56.]
(3) The power to appropriate funds, and to levy taxes
and assessments pursuant to section 2(3) of this sub-heading. [Char.,
§ 49, sub-sec. 3]. (1961, ch. 342, § 1, "3".)
In order to initiate an urban renewal project,
the legislative body of the municipality shall adopt a resolution
which
(1) finds that one or more slum or blighted areas exist
in such municipality;
(2) locates and defines the said slum or blighted areas;
(3) finds that the rehabilitation, redevelopment, or a
combination thereof, of such area or areas, is necessary in the interest
of the public health, safety, morals or welfare of the residents of
such municipality. (1961, ch. 342, § 1, "4".)
(a) The municipality, in order to carry out the purposes
of this subheading [division], shall prepare or cause to be prepared
an urban renewal plan for slum or blighted areas in the municipality,
and shall formally approve such plan. Prior to its approval of an
urban renewal project, the municipality shall submit such plan to
the planning body of the municipality, for review and recommendations
as to its conformity with the master plan for the development of the
municipality as a whole. The planning body shall submit its written
recommendation with respect to the proposed urban renewal plan to
the municipality within sixty days after receipt of the plan for review;
upon receipt of the recommendations of the planning body or, if no
recommendations are received within said sixty days, then without
such recommendations, the municipality may proceed with a public hearing
on the proposed urban renewal project. The municipality shall hold
a public hearing on an urban renewal project after public notice thereof
by publication in a newspaper having a general circulation within
the corporate limits of the municipality. The notice shall describe
the time, date, place and purpose of the hearing, shall generally
identify the urban renewal area covered by the plan, and shall outline
the general scope of the urban renewal project under consideration.
Following such hearing, the municipality may approve an urban renewal
project and the plan therefor if it finds that: (1) a feasible method
exists for the location of any families who will be displaced from
the urban renewal area in decent, safe and sanitary dwelling accommodations
within their means and without undue hardship to such families; (2)
the urban renewal plan substantially conforms to the master plan of
the municipality as a whole; and (3) the urban renewal plan will afford
maximum opportunity, consistent with the sound needs of the municipality
as a whole, for the rehabilitation or redevelopment of the urban renewal
area by private enterprise.
(b) An urban renewal plan may be modified at any time;
provided, that if modified after the lease or sale of real property
in the urban renewal project area, the modification may be conditioned
upon such approval of the owner, lessee or successor in interest as
the municipality may deem advisable and in any event shall be subject
to such rights at law or in equity as a lessee or purchaser, or his
successor or successors in interest, may be entitled to assert. Where
the proposed modification will substantially change the urban renewal
plan as previously approved by the municipality, the modification
shall be formally approved by the municipality as in the case of an
original plan.
(c) Upon the approval by the municipality of an urban
renewal plan or of any modification thereof, such plan or modification
shall be deemed to be in full force and effect for the respective
urban renewal area and the municipality may then cause such plan or
modification to be carried out in accordance with its terms. (1961,
ch. 342, § 1, "5".)
(a) The municipality may sell, lease or otherwise transfer
real property or any interest therein acquired for it by an urban
renewal project, for residential, recreational, commercial, industrial,
educational or other uses or for public use, or may retain such property
or interest for public use, in accordance with the urban renewal plan,
subject to such covenants, conditions and restrictions, including
covenants running with the land, as it may deem to be necessary or
desirable to assist in preventing the development or spread of future
slums or blighted area or to otherwise carry out the purposes of this
sub-heading [division]. The purchasers or lessees and their successors
and assigns shall be obligated to devote such real property only to
the uses specified in the urban renewal plan, and may be obligated
to comply with such other requirements as the municipality may determine
to be in the public interest, including the obligation to begin within
a reasonable time any improvements on such real property required
by the urban renewal plan. Such real property or interest shall be
sold, leased, otherwise transferred, or retained at not less than
its fair value for uses in accordance with the urban renewal plan.
In determining the fair value of real property for uses in accordance
with the urban renewal plan, the municipality shall take into account
and give consideration to the uses provided in such plan; the restrictions
upon, and the covenants, conditions and obligations assumed by the
purchaser or lessee or by the municipality retaining the property;
and the objectives of such plan for the prevention of the recurrence
of slum or blighted areas. The municipality in any instrument of conveyance
to a private purchaser or lessee may provide that such purchaser or
lessee shall be without power to sell, lease or otherwise transfer
the real property without the prior written consent of the municipality
until he has completed the construction of any or all improvements
which he has obligated himself to construct thereon. Real property
acquired by the municipality which, in accordance with the provisions
of the urban renewal plan, is to be transferred, shall be transferred
as rapidly as feasible in the public interest consistent with the
carrying out of the provisions of the urban renewal plan. Any contract
for such transfer and the urban renewal plan (or such part or parts
of such contract or plan as the municipality may determine) may be
recorded in the land records of the county in which the municipality
is situated in such manner as to afford actual or constructive notice
thereof.
(b) The municipality may dispose of real property in an
urban renewal area to private persons only under such reasonable competitive
bidding procedures as it shall prescribe or as hereinafter provided
in this sub-section. The municipality may, by public notice by publication
in a newspaper having a general circulation in the community (not
less than sixty days prior to the execution of any contract to sell,
lease or otherwise transfer real property and prior to the delivery
of any instrument of conveyance with respect thereto under the provisions
of this section) invite proposals from and make available all pertinent
information to private redevelopers or any persons interested in undertaking
to redevelop or rehabilitate an urban renewal area, or any part thereof.
Such notice shall identify the area, or portion thereof, and shall
state that proposals shall be made by those interested within a specified
period of not less than sixty days after the first date of publication
of said notice, and that such further information as is available
may be obtained at such office as shall be designated in said notice.
The municipality shall consider all such redevelopment or rehabilitation
proposals and the financial and legal ability of the persons making
such proposals to carry them out, and may negotiate with any persons
for proposals for the purchase, lease or other transfer of any real
property acquired by the municipality in the urban renewal area. The
municipality may accept such proposal as it deems to be in the public
interest and in furtherance of the purposes of this sub-heading [division].
Thereafter, the municipality may execute and deliver contracts, deeds,
leases and other instruments and take all steps necessary to effectuate
such transfers.
(c) The municipality may temporarily operate and maintain
real property acquired by it in an urban renewal area for or in connection
with an urban renewal project pending the disposition of the property
as authorized in this sub-heading [division], without regard to the
provisions of sub-section (a) above, for such uses and purposes as
may be deemed desirable even though not in conformity with the urban
renewal plan.
(d) Any instrument executed by the municipality and purporting
to convey any right, title or interest in any property under this
subheading [division] shall be conclusively presumed to have been
executed in compliance with the provisions of this sub-heading [division]
insofar as title or other interest of any bona fide purchaser, lessees
or transferees of such property is concerned. (1961, ch. 342, § 1,
"6".)
Condemnation of land or property under the provisions
of this subheading [division] shall be in accordance with the procedure
provided by the laws of the State of Maryland or the Rules of Procedure
thereof. (1961, ch. 342, § 1, "7"; Char. Res. No. 76-1,
§ 22.)
The municipality, to the greatest extent it
determines to be feasible in carrying out the provisions of this sub-heading
[division], shall afford maximum opportunity, consistent with the
sound needs of the municipality as a whole, to the rehabilitation
or redevelopment of any urban renewal area by private enterprise.
The municipality shall give consideration to this objective in exercising
its powers under this subheading [division]. (1961, ch. 342, § 1,
"8".)
For the purpose of financing and carrying out
of an urban renewal project and related activities, the municipality
may issue and sell its general obligation bonds. Any bonds issued
by the municipality pursuant to this section shall be issued in the
manner and within the limitations prescribed by applicable law for
the issuance and authorizations of general obligation bonds by such
municipality, and also within such limitations as shall be determined
by said municipality. (1961, ch. 342, § 1, "9.")
(a) In addition to the authority conferred by section
9 of this subheading [Char., § 56], the municipality shall
have the power to issue revenue bonds to finance the undertaking of
any urban renewal project and related activities, and shall also have
power to issue refunding bonds for the payment or retirement of such
bonds previously issued by it. Such bonds shall be made payable, as
to both principal and interest, solely from the income, proceeds,
revenues, and funds of the municipality derived from or held in connection
with its undertaking and carrying out of urban renewal projects under
this sub-heading [division]; provided, however, that payment of such
bonds, both as to principal and interest, may be further secured by
a pledge of any loan, grant or contribution from the federal government
or other source, in aid of any urban renewal projects of the municipality
under this sub-heading [division], and by a mortgage of any such urban
renewal projects, or any part thereof, title to which is in the municipality.
In addition, the municipality may enter into an indenture of trust
with any private banking institution of this state having trust powers
and may make in such indenture of trust such covenants and commitments
as may be required by any purchaser for the adequate security of said
bonds.
(b) Bonds issued under this section shall not constitute
an indebtedness within the meaning of any constitutional or statutory
debt limitation or restriction, shall not be subject to the provisions
of any other law or charter relating to the authorization, issuance
or sale of bonds, and are hereby specifically exempted from the restrictions
contained in sections 9, 10 and 11 of article 31 of the Annotated
Code of Maryland (1957 Edition, as amended). Bonds issued under the
provisions of this article are declared to be issued for an essential
public and governmental purpose and, together with interest thereon
and income therefrom, shall be exempted from all taxes.
(c) Bonds issued under this section shall be authorized
by resolution or ordinance of the legislative body of the municipality
and may be issued in one or more series and shall bear such date or
dates, shall mature at such time or times, bear interest at such rate
or rates, not exceeding six per centum per annum, be in such denomination
or denominations, be in such form either with or without coupon or
registered, carry such conversion or registration privileges, have
such rank or priority, be executed in such manner, be payable in such
medium or payment, at such place or places, and be subject to such
terms of redemption (with or without premium), be secured in such
manner, and have such other characteristics, as may be provided by
such resolution or trust indenture or mortgage issued pursuant thereto.
(d) Such bonds may be sold at not less than par at public
sales held after notice published prior to such sale in a newspaper
having a general circulation in the area in which the municipality
is located and in such other medium of publication as the municipality
may determine or may be exchanged for other bonds on the basis of
par; provided, that such bonds may be sold to the federal government
at private sale at not less than par, and, in the event less than
all of the authorized principal amount of such bonds is sold to the
federal government, the balance may be sold at private sale at not
less than par at an interest cost to the municipality of not to exceed
the interest cost to the municipality of the portion of the bonds
sold to the federal government.
(e) In case any of the public officials of the municipality
whose signatures appear on any bonds or coupons issued under this
subheading [division] shall cease to be such officials before the
delivery of such bond or, in the event any such officials shall have
become such after the date of issue thereof, said bonds shall nevertheless
be valid and binding obligations of said municipality in accordance
with their terms. Any provision of any law to the contrary notwithstanding,
any bonds issued pursuant to this subheading [division] shall be fully
negotiable.
(f) In any suit, action or proceeding involving the validity
or enforceability of any bond issued under this sub-heading [division]
or the security therefor, any such bond reciting in substance that
it has been issued by the municipality in connection with an urban
renewal project, as herein defined, shall be conclusively deemed to
have been issued for such purpose and such project shall be conclusively
deemed to have been planned, located and carried out in accordance
with the provisions of this sub-heading [division].
(g) All banks, trust companies, bankers, savings banks
and institutions, building and loan associations, savings and loan
associations, investment companies and other persons carrying on a
banking or investment business; all insurance companies, insurance
associations, and other persons carrying on an insurance business;
and all executors, administrators, curators, trustees, and other fiduciaries,
may legally invest any sinking funds, monies, or other funds belonging
to them or within their control in any bonds or other obligations
issued by the municipality pursuant to this sub-heading [division];
provided, that such bonds and other obligations shall be secured by
an agreement between the issuer and the federal government in which
the issuer agrees to borrow from the federal government and the federal
government agrees to lend to the issuer, prior to the maturity of
such bonds or other obligations, monies in an amount which (together
with any other monies irrevocably committed to the payment of principal
and interest on such bonds or other obligations) will suffice to pay
the principal of such bonds or other obligations with interest to
maturity thereon, which monies under the terms of said agreement are
required to be used for the purpose of paying the principal of and
the interest on such bonds or other obligations at their maturity.
Such bonds and other obligations shall be authorized security for
all public deposits. It is the purpose of this section to authorize
any persons, political subdivisions and officers, public or private,
to use any funds owned or controlled by them for the purchase of any
such bonds or other obligations. Nothing contained in this section
with regard to legal investments shall be construed as relieving any
person of any duty of exercising reasonable care in selecting securities.
(1961, ch. 342, § 1, "10".)
If any provision of this sub-heading [division],
or the application thereof to any person or circumstances, is held
invalid, the remainder of the sub-heading [division] and the application
of such provision to persons or circumstances other than those as
to which it is held invalid, shall not be affected thereby. The powers
conferred by this sub-heading [division] shall be in addition and
supplemental to the powers conferred by any other law. (1961, ch.
342, § 1, "11".)