Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

@ffice of tiy JZWmwp @eneral Sbtate of llCexa$ DAN MORALES ATTORNEY GENERAL March IO, 1995 Honorable David H. Cain Gpiion No. DM-331 Texas State Senate P.O. Box 12068 Re: Whether a city’s expenditures of Austin, Texas 78711 community development block grant funds are subject to state competitive bidding hvs (RQ-644) Dear senator Cain: In your capacity as chahman of the House &m&tee on Transportation you asked whether the state’s competitive bidding laws apply to community development block grant (“CDBG”) 8mds “received and distributed” by a city to (a) “nonprofit contractors” and @) “for-profit entities.” You say that federal law, at least, “does not. require that CDBG funded projects be competitively bid if cities award a grant to a nonprofit corporation.” Also, you note that, while the municipal competitive bidding provisions in section 252.021 of the Local Government Code apply to “[a] contract.. . [that requires M expenditure]. . . from one or more municipl fun&” section 373.005(c) of the Local Government Code makes a distinction, in the context of municipal community development projects, between “fbderal money” and “municipal funds.” In our opinion, a city’s expenditures of CDBG Smds are subject to competitive bidding under state law when spent on %mtmcts” exceeding the threshold amounts set out in those laws and not falling within any of the exceptions to the bidding requirements set out there or elsewhere in state law. Chapter 373 of the Local Government Code generally authorizes a municipalityto finance community development projects using federal funds received by the municipality as well as other 8mds of the municipality. Section 373.005(c), referenced in your request, reads in pertinent part: A municipalitymay implementprograms to provide Snancing for the acquisition, wnstruction, improvement or rehabiitation of privately owned buildings and other improvements or to assist private, for-profit entities ifthe assistance is necessary or appropriate to carry out an economic development project, through the use of loans and grants from federal money remitted to the WC- ipslity. . . . A municipality may not provide municipal property or municipal junrl for private purposes. The programs and financing must be in keeping with an approved wmmunity development plan that the municipality has determined to be a public purpose. A Honorable David H. Cain - Page 2 PM-33 1) program established for financing the acquisition, wnstruction, improvement, or rehabilitation of buildings and improvements, or for financing economic development projects, through the use offerlea funds may prescribe procedures under which the owners of the buildings, improvements, or economic development projects agree to partially or fully reimburse the municipality. emphasis added.] The federal law providing for the granting of CDBG fbnds is found in 42 U.S.C. chapter 69. See also 24 C.F.R. pt. 570. We sre aware of nothing in current federal law. however, that specit?caUy addresses the applicabiMy of state wmpetitive bidding requirements to the use of CDBG funds by recipient municipalities. Several prior opinions of this office concluded that federal ?evenue sharing”funds received by local govemments under chapter 67 of title 3 1 of the United States Code, the Revenue Sharing Act, now repealed. were subject to state laws generally applicable to those entities’public 8mds.r See Attorney General Gpiions IM-716 (1987); MW-329 (1981); H-1189 (1978); H-1010; (1977), and H-127 (1973). In support of their wnclusions, those opinions, irrrer alia, cited federal provisions specifically nuking recipient entities’expenditures of any federal revemre sharing fbnds received subject to the same laws and procedures applicable to other timds of those entities. See 31 U.S.C 5 6794(a) (repealed 1986). in wntrast, the federal law pertaining to CDBGs provides merely that grantees must “comply with the other provisions of [42 U.S.C. ch. 691 cmd wirh other apphd$e lows..” 42 U.S.C. 0 5304(b)(6) (emphasis added). In our opinion, however, federal timds discretionarily obtained and expended by Texas municipalitiestake on the character of municipal funds and are generally subject to the state laws per&ing to such funds absent specific exceptions made under state law. We believe this to be the case even in the absence of specific federal provisions acknowledging the applicabiity of state law, such as those in the now-repealed Revenue Sharing Act, and indeed even ifthe pertinent federal law specificallyimposed requirements wntrary to state law.2 Further, as to the applicable state law here, while we think it IUlMCCSSaryittthiS context to determine precisely what, if any, distinction the legislature intended to make in section 373.005(c) of the Local Government Code vis~%vis the uses to which &deral ‘The Revenue !&ring Act wns tcpealai in 1986. Pub. Law No. 99372, TiL XIV, 0 14001(a)(l), Apr. 7,1986,100 Stat. 327. p. 1752 Honorable David H. Cain - Page 3 (DM-331) . timds and finds from other sources could be put by a city on wmmunity development projects, we do not believe that the use of the distinct terms “federal money” and “municipsJ funds” in section 373.005(c) was itself intended to exempt expenditures of federal 8mds in the hands of a municipality tkm the operation of state law generally applicableto municipalfunds. CDBG receipts would presumably be subject to the municipal budget process- section 102.003 of the Local Govemment Code rewires funds received and available “from all sources” to be included in the budget, Likewise, we wuld not imagine that CDBG receipts would not have to be deposited in the municipaldepository under chapter 105 of the Local Government Code, even though those provisions wnsistently speak only to the deposit of “municipalfunds.” See id. 58 105.014 - .015, .031. Had the legislature intended to exempt the expenditure of CDBG grant money 8om the state wmpetitive bidding laws, we think it would have specitMly done so. See. e.g., Local Gov’t Code 8Q212.071 (excepting certain municipal public improvement wntracts from bidding requirements), 374.904 (exempting certain municipal sales wmlected Withurban renewal projects from state law bidding requirements), 392.0565 (added in response to Attorney General Opinion JTvl-573(1986) specilicaUyexempting municipalhousing authorities from state law to extent newssary to participate in Consolidated Supply Program of Department of Housing and Urban Development); Attorney General Gpiion JM-573 (1986) (municipal housing authority may not participate in Consolidated Supply Program of Department of Housing and Urban Development Without also complying with state competitive bidding laws). Moreover, we think it clear that the fact, in itself, that an expenditure of CDBG funds is made to a nonprofit as opposed to a for-profit entity does not take the expenditure out of the competitive bidding requirements. The municipal wmpetitive bidding requirements in chapter 252 make no general distinction betvveen nonprofit and for-profit wntractees. Section 252.022(7)(P) does make a specific bidding requirement exception for ‘management services provided by. . . nonprofit wrporations” to certain museums, parks, zoos, or “other facilit[ies].” This specitic exception suggests that wntracts over the threshold amounts With nonprofit entities are generally subject to the bidding requirements, absent specific exceptions. See also Attorney General Gpiion I’M-385 (finding that a wunty contract with a nonprofit entity Was exempted from the competitive bidding requirements only because a state statute specificahy applicable to wntracts of the non-profit entities at issue there expressly excepted them from the requirements). Gf wurse, whether a particular expenditure of CDBG fimds wnstitutes one under a “wntract”s in a suEcient amount as to bring it Withinthe wmpethive bidding provisions p. 1753 Honorable David H. Cain - Page 4 (DM-331) Of course, whether a particular expenditure of CDBG funds constitutes one under a ‘contract”3 in a suf&cient amount as to bring it within the competitive bidding provisions of chapter 252, or whether a particular contract would fall within the exceptions to the bidding requirements in that chapter or elsewhere in state law would depend on the facts of the particular case. See, e.g., Local Gov’t Code 5 252.022(a)(4) (“personal or professional services*’ exception to bidding requirements), (a)(1 1) ,(exceptionfor certain public improvement wntracts under chapter 212). SUMMARl Expenditures by a city of Federal Community Development Block Grant Funds on “‘wntracts”exceeding the threshold amounts set out in the state’s municipal wmpetitive bidding laws and not falling within any of the exceptions to the bidding requirements set out there or elsewhere in state law are subject to competitive bidding. DAN MORALES Attorney Genera) of Texas JORGE VEGA First Assistant Attorney General SAFL4I-lJ. SHIRLEY Chair, Opinion Committee Pmpared by William Walker Assistant Attorney Genera) 3We note that your tquti spealu in part of cities’expeaditurr of CDBG funds in the form of “grants.” llte provisions of chapter 373 s@ficdlly authorize cider to make “gran0” to cutain entities, includiq c&ain kiads of nonprofit or&zations. We do not speculate here as to whether particubu grants must inevitably be “contracts” within the ambit of tbe bidding provisions af chapter 252. See, rg., Aaomey General Opinion C-246 (1964) (county may anange without a witten umbact for the cdrc of indigents). Bat see Atlomy Gwcral Opinion JM-274 (1985)(statc wwdtotion rcqairas public entity’s gram or knding of credit to be accompanied by sufficient control to ensure that a public purpwc of tbc emityi%SCWCd). p. 1754