Mr. Joe Carter Opinion No. WW-506 Executive Secretary Texas Water Development Board 'Re: May the Texas Water Develop- Austin 1, Texas ment Board lawfully give financial,~assistanceto a political subdivision for the construction of a water filtration or water treat- ment plant when such plant constitutes an integral part of the entire water Dear Sir: project? You have requested the opinion of the AtiXXhey General on the matter of whether theYTexas Water Development Board may legally loan funds to a water.control ana improvement district for the purpose of the construction of a water treatment plant . . . "when such plant constitutes an integral part of the en- tire project.* We understand that,a district seeks a loan of State funds under applicable law so that it may construct a waterworks system designed to take rawwater from Lake Travis, render it potable by filtrationand aistribute':itto the consumers of the district. No problem is involved relative to the authority of a water control and improvement!district to do that which it seeks t0 do. Article 700048, V.C.S. The voters of the State on November 5, 1957, authorized an Amendment to the Constitution known as Section 49-c of Article III. Briefly, the amendment authorizes the sale of State Bonds to provide an initial fund of $lOO,OOO,bOO.OO to be used to as- sist named public corporations of the State in the conservation and development of the water resources of Texas. 14r.Joe Carter, page 2 (WW-506) The portion of the Amendment applicable to this opinion follows: "Such fund shall be used only for the purpose of aiding or making funds available upon such,~terms and conditions as the Legislature may prescribe, to the various political-subdivisions or bodies politic and corporate of the State of Texas in- cluding river authorities, ~conservation~~andrec- lamation districts created or organized or autho- rized to be created or organized under Article XVI, Section 59, or Article III, Section 52, of this Constitution, interstatecompact commissions to which-the State of Texas is a party and munici- pal corporations,.ink..theconservation and develop- ,mentof the water resources of this State,,including the control, storing and preservation of its.storm and flood waters and the waters of its rivers and streams, for all useful and lawful purposes by the acquieition, improvement, extension,~01~construc- tion of dams, reservoirs'and.other water storage, projects, including~any system necessary for'the transportation.of;w&ter from,storage to points of treatment and/or distribution, including facilities for transporting Waterstherefrom to wholesale pur- chasers, or for any one or more of such>purposes or methods. I* Chapter 425, Acts 55th ,Legislature,R.S.,,,1957 (Article 8280-9, V.C.S.) is the enabling act for the Amendment. Therein the Legi.slaturedefines the.word "project" as I . . . any engineering undertaking or work for the purpose of the,conservation and development of the surface water resources of the State of Texas, in- cluding the control, storing ana preservation of its storm and flood waters and the waters of its rivers and streams for+,alluseful and lawful pur- poses by the acquisition, improvement,~exteneion or construction of dams,.reservoirs and other water etorage projects, filtration and water treatment plants including any system necessary Mr. Joe Carter, page 3 (WW-506) for the.transportationpof water'.fromstorage to points of 'distr~ibutiomo~ or from storage to filtration.and treatmant phnts~,..bncluaing facilities for.transporting~watar therefrom to ~wholesale~purohasers,or fat any 0ne:or more of..suchpurpos,e~s,: or methods.u (Under- scoring ours,) .' The Legislature.deeme'd,thae Amendment broad enough to include the construetion,of;filtration.and water'treatment plants as a par'tof a,systemtthat conserves and developssthe water res6urces of the State,' The enablingsact was.~‘anticipatory It was approved by 'the Legislature June 6',.'1957.The proposed amendment known as ~,'H.J.R.NO. 3~#Acts 55th.Legislature,.ra.s.,..1957, was,approved by the s'ameLegislatur8'on~~June~~~6~,~l957~ The legal effect,of,.;t~e.lggBsBative interpretation is assayed in Collinqsworth, 120 Tex. 473, 40 S.W. 2a 13, 16: *Contemporaneous-~legislative,interpretation of a constitutional~,provisiowie universally held to be entitled'to weight D e aa In,Coreic~a~Co.tton.MilBo.~v,Sh=pard,/l23 Tex, 352, 71 S.W. 2d 247, 251, the Courticautions:, ..: "A legislative act Which iS in conflict With the Constitution is .stillborn and af no force or effect - impotent alike to confer rights or to afford protection," Consequently. we are.bound to,consider whether there is conflict between the enabling.legislation and the organic law. "The fundamental purpose in construing a con- stitu,tionalprovision~is to ascertain aa give effect to the intent,of,the framers and of the people who adopted it,? ~ollfngsworth County v. Allred, 120 Tg~.,473~,.4OS-W, 26213,~15. Mr. Joe Carter, page 4 (WW-506) *Generally it may be raid that in determining the meaning, intent,:aAa purpose of a law or constitutional proviaion,..,thehistory of the timee out of which ,it~grew,,"andto which it . may be rationally eupp+red tobear taomedirect relationship, the .evile intended to be remedied, and the good to be~~accompliehed,are proper oub- jecte of inquiry.~~'~ Travelere"Inr. Co. v. War- shall, 124 Tex. 45, 76 8.W. 28 1007, 1012; 96 ALRo2. The hisQorica1 background enveloping the framing aAd enactment of the AmendmeAt~is,a.:harsh.onereflecting as it doee the longest drouth in the.recorded history of the State. De- ginning in 1951 ana continuing ,intoApril -'Way,.1957 the year8 of drouth were dieartrous,.;bitteralike to rural and metropoli- tan areas. They were year8 of physical and economic stress well calculated to implant iA:tbe~miAd of those exposed to its rigoAs that water aAd the water.reaourcee of the State were asset6 to be COAseNed aAd developed. It was in. the final year of drouth that the electore of the ,State:Votedthe AmendmAt into the ConstitutioA. The question irrwheth&r.a filtration plant coAotitutiAg *an integral part of the entire water project* ie within the scope of the AmendmeAt? spirit tttta When the'AmeAdment waSdrafted and at the time it wae voted upon, there exiated Texa8',lawon the treatment of water aAd the purity thereof. Tho8e .whodrafted the Amendment were bound to have had cognicance:'thereof;~thoeewho voted it into law are chargeable with knowledge thereof. Article 4477-1,uv.c.s.,,.provide8t "Section 12(a). Dveryperron, firm, corporation, public,or private, contemplating the eEtablif#hmeAt of any drinking water!aupply.y~.. . for public use ". shall, previous to the construction thereof, submit completed plans Ma rpecifications therefor to the’ ,State Department of Health aAd the gala Department, shall approve 8amel provided maid plans conform to . .. . or. Joe Carter, page 5 (WW-506) the water safety . . . laws of this State. The said water supply . . . system shall be established only after approval+has beeA given by the State DepartmeAt of Health.* Article 44186, V.C.S.,*confers certain rule making powers on the Commie8ioAer of.Health. Section C 4.00 of the *Rules and Regulations Covering the Preparation, Submission and Approval of Plans and Specifications for Water Supply Systems and Acceptable Operating Practices, Texas State Depart- ment of Health* providear "All water Secured from surface source8 of supply shall be given complete treatment at ;I a plaAt which provide8 faCilitie8 for COA- tinuous coagulatioA,~aedimentatioA, filtra- tion through acceptable media, covered clear well storage.aAd continuous disinfection of the water with chlorine gas or suitable chlo- rine compounds.* Article 4477-1, Section 13 (f) gives the above rule the teeth of law in that: "No water from~any~aurface public drinking water supply shall be made accessible or delivered to any consumer for drinkiAg pur- poses unless it hae first received treatment essential to rendering it safe for human COA- sumption. All treatment plants IAClUdiAg aeration, coagulation, mixing, settling fil- tration, and chlorinating units shall be of such size and type as may be prescribed by good public health engineering practices.* Article 7471, V.C.S., contains a declaration of policy relative'the appropriation of the public waters of the State. The number one aAd highest priority granted is for YIomestic and MUAiCipal uses, IAClUdiAg Water for 8UStaining human life and the life of domestic animals.* . . w. Joe Carter, page 6 (WW-506) 'ThXtfact is that surface water, as available in Nature, may be so colored, turbid, hard or contaminated as to be unfit for either domestic or industrial use. See "Waterworks Hand- book* by Flinn, Weston and:Pogert,:and~"Water Works Practice," a manual issued by the American Water Works Association. By a series of processes:generically designated as water treatment the raw water may be;restored to a,condition of use- fulness. Filtration is one,such process. See authorities nwt above. Here, for convenience,z,iwe will paraphrase Section 49-c of Article III, Constitution,.ofT-as: The fund may be used only for the purpose of aiding in a designated manner~the named public corporations in the~conservation and,develop- ment of the State's.water resources which shall include the control, storing and preservation of waters derived from storms, floods,.,rivers and streams by the acquisition, improvement, extension, or constructionof aams,,,reservoirs and other waterst6rage:projects *Bincludinq any system necessarv-forthe transportation of water from storage tonoints of treatment and/ or distribution,~.including~facilitiesfor trans- porting water,therefrom towholesale purchasers, or for anyyone~:ormorer,~of such+purposes or meth- ods.- (Emphasis:aaaea) The underscored portionfirst~above~might'be construed to mean that the fund,could'be,,usedtoassist in,the construc- tion of a system to convey~water‘~;from,~storage.~ a point of treatment, ana, therefrom to ,wholesale.:purchasers.That con- struction of the Amendmentwould+preclude.;the use of the fUAd to assist in any manner withthe:construction of a treatment ,,' plant. The purpose promptingrthe~iamendmentwas a bold attempt to meet the water problems of the State aAd that legitimate purpose should not be defeated,ihindered or frittered away by narrow or technical construction.,,,.Aransas County v. Coleman- Fulton Pasture Co., 108 Tex.,~223,:191S.W. 5530 Imperial~Irri- gation Co. v. Jayne, 104 Te%,.395,,;138S.W. 575. .-:. Mr. Joe Carter, page 7 (WW-506) It is our opinion~that a fair interpretation of the language, spirit and intent of,the Amendment would be that the construction of a treatment plant was included. Cer- tainly it can be said that if it was the intent of the framer8 to expressly exclude.,suchplants. much ha8 been left to chance. Matter8 of.such importance should not be.read out of the obviously broad.scope of the Amendment on the Strength Of SUCh a AebUlOUS iAdiCatiOA Of negative intent. *It is a proper inquiry. . . in ascer- taining whether 'a,certain interpretation should be given to the language of the Con- stitution, to consider whether its framers aAd the voters,by whom'it was adopted intended the consequences which must follow such inter- pretatioAlm KOY.V. Schneider, 110 Tex. 369, 218 S.W. 479, 481. Some practical VonsequencesH of the exclusion of treatment plants are these. The State 00uia assist,a city or town in developing a water.eource~but:could notaid it in ren- dering such water fit foruse by treating it in compliance with the laws sponsoredand enforced.by the assisting sover- eignty. Also, the aeeistance~is in the nature of loans that must be repaid. If the water can.not be use&it can not-be Sold and thereby earn~the~~incomenecessary to repay the loan from the State. Further,,,acity or town with an existinq treat- ment plant could avail itselfiof the benefits of the Amendment; whereas, a muAicipality thathad no plant and could not finance the construction of one without SUCh~~aSSiStaACeas is contem- plated by the Amendment;.would be,, as,a practical matter, denied the benefit of stored water because it lacked treatment facili- ties. We do not believe that,such inequities between munici- palities similarly situated were intended by either,the framers of the Amendment or those who voted it into being. *When a statute is plainand unambiguous inits terms and not susceptible of mre than one con- struction, courte'iarenot,,coAcernedwith the consequences that may result therefrom, but must enforce the law as they find it. But when a statute is ambiguous in Ifs terms o.r susceptible -5 fir.Joe Carter, page 8 (WW-506) of two constructions, then the evil results and hardships which may follow one construction may be properly considered by the.oourt, and it is right that the court shall cplaceuponthe stat- ute that interpretation of which it is faftly susceptible, which will ,attain the just solution of the questions:involved and protect the rights of all parties." Oriental Hotel Co. v. Griffiths, 88 Tex. 574, 33,S.W. 652, 53 Am. St. Rep. 790, 30 LRA 765. Generally speaking, rules of~statutory construction are equally applicable to~,the.~.construction~of a Constitution. Bad- ger v. Hoidale 1C.C.A.,,88th,,88 F. (2d);208, 109 ALR 798, ii Am. Jur., Sec. 49, pa 658. Therefore,.because,of the reasonsheretofore set out it is the opinion of the Attorney General that the Texas Water Development Board may.,lawfullygrant financial assistance to a political subdivision, otherwise qualifying,~,forthe purpose of constructing a water filtration ,plant.whensuch project consti- tutes an integral part of the entire ~water project. However, it is not,.our,~intent, ~nor do we hold, that under the provisions of Section 49-c,.~ArticleIII,.Constitution of Texas, the fund may be used,inithe.construction of water treatment plants alone,,not a necessary part of a system, but as an independent or exclusive~undertaking. SUMMARY The Texas Water Development Roard may lawfully grant financial nssistance to a.;politicalsub- division, otherwise qualifying, for the pur- pose of constructing a water filtration plant when such project constitutes an integral part of the entire water project. ,p... . Mr. Joe Carter, page 9 (WW-506) Yours very truly, GW-e APPROVED8 OPINION COMMITTEE Geo. P. Blackburn, Chabman L. P. Lollar c. K, Richards J. C. Davis, Jr, Arthur Sandlin REVIEWED FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL =8 W. V. Geppert