HomeMy WebLinkAboutUNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE ASPEN STATON - 34 91 - CORRESPONDENCE - LEGAL COMMUNICATION (3)t
City A, cney
City of Fort Collins
MEMORANDUM
DATE: December 3, 1990
TO: Tom Peterson, Director of Planning
Sherry Albertson -Clark, Chief Planner
Ted Shepard, Senior Planner
FROM: W. Paul Eckman, Deputy City Attorney
RE: Municipal Zoning Regulations/New Post Office Building
ISSUE
Can the City regulate, either through standard zoning or through
the PUD process, the construction of the new United States Post
Office by the Postal Service?
POTENTIAL RISK/CONSEQUENCES
If the City cannot impose zoning regulations on the United States
Postal Service, there is a risk that the Post Office will be built
in such a manner as to present incompatibilities with the
surrounding neighborhoods. If the City attempts, wrongfully, to
regulate the construction of the building, the United States may
seek to enjoin the regulation and, if monetary damages are suffered
because of delays in construction, the United States may seek
damages against the City.
CONCLUSIONS/RECOMMENDATIONS
The City does not have the authority to regulate the United States
Postal Service under the zoning code of the City with respect to
the construction of the new .Post Office. I would not recommend
that the City attempt to regulate that construction through law.
I would recommend that the City stress, in its meetings with Postal
Service representatives, that it is in the best interest of both
the City and the Postal Service to cooperate in the design and
construction of the post office building and that, as governmental
entities seeking to serve the citizens of the City and the Nation,
both the City and the Postal Service should work together toward
the common goal of furthering the mutual public interest
represented by each. If you think that political pressure through
300 LaPorte Avenue • P. O. Box ;80 • Fort Collins, CO 80522-0580 • (303) 221-6520
December 3, 1990
Page 2
elected representatives would serve the City's purposes, I see no
legal difficulties in utilizing such political pressure.
ANALYSIS
The Supremacy Clause of Article VI of the United States
Constitution provides:
This Constitution and the Laws of the United States
which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; . . .
shall be the supreme law of the land; . . . and the
Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any
Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to
the Contrary not withstanding.
As a consequence, land owned or leased by the United States or an
agency thereof for purposes authorized by Congress is immunue from
and supersedes state and local laws in contravention thereof,
unless there is a clear and unambiguous congressional authorization
for the imposition of the local law. This is also true of zoning
ordinances attempted to be enforced against the federal government
by municipalities. See McOuillin, Municipal Corporation, Section
25.16 and Rathkopf, The Law of Zoning and Planning, Vol. 4, Section
53.07.
The case law with respect to zoning regulations over the
construction of post office buildings comes largely from the state
of New Jersey. In Thanet Corporation v. Board of Adjustment of the
Township of Princeton, ?SO A.2d 1 (N.J. Super. 1969), the Court
announced the rule that the United States government's
establishment of a post office facility is immune from the
township's zoning ordinance. Similarly, in Crivello v. Board of
-Adi'ustment of the Borough of Middlesex, 183—F.—Supp, 826 (U.S.
Dist. Ct. for Dist. of N.J. 1960), the Court stated that:
If the Postmaster General, pursuant to and in the
exercise of the authority vested in him by
Congressional enactment, contemplates the erection
of a post office on the proposed site, his authority
may not be restricted by local ordinance. A resort
to the municipal board of adjustment would be
unnecessary under such circumstances.
There is a tradition in the common law that is perhaps best
enunciated by the Court of Appeals in New Jersey in the case of Tim
v. Long Branch, 53 A.2d 164 (N.J. App. 1947),.that even though the
federal government has the constitutional power to exercise
sovereign immunity over local governments, it ought, in the
interest of comity, to cooperate with local governments in the
December 3, 1990
Page 3
construction of federal facilities. The Tim, supra, case was
based, however, upon a specific provision of federal law which
required cooperation in the construction of military installations
during time of war. That legislation also specifically provided
that the federal government need not comply with the precise
language of local zoning legislation and that it is not bound to
inflexible requirements.
Tom, you had raised the argument that since the United States Post
Office Department was reorganized into the United States Postal
Service, the Postal Service is no longer an official part of the
federal government which is able to the claim the benefit of the
Supremacy Clause of the Constitution, having been "privatized" by
the reorganization. I have examined the United States Code Service
with respect to the reorganization and have discovered that the
reorganization occurred in August of 1970 when the United States
Post Office Department was disbanded and transferred into a new
organization called the United States Postal Service.
The postal policy is set forth in Title 39 of the United States
Code Service. In Section 101 of that Title, the Congress stated
that:
The United States Postal Service shall be operated
as a basic and fundamental service provided to the
people by the government of the United States,
authorized by the Constitution, created by Act of
Congress, and supported by the people. The Postal
Service shall have as its basic function the
obligation to provide postal services to bind the.
Nation together through the personal, educational,
literary, and business correspondence of the people.
Section 201 of Title 39 provides that: -
There is established, as an independent
establishment of the executive branch of the
government of the United States, the United States
Postal Service.
I believe that the above -stated provisions of the Postal
Reorganization Act manifests the intent of Congress that the United
States Postal Service remain under the auspices of the United
States government and continue to enjoy the benefits of the
Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution. Section 101
further provides, in subparagraph (g) thereof, that:
In planning and building new postal facilities, the
Postal Service shall emphasize the need for
facilities and equipment designed to create
December 3, 1990
Page 4
desirable working conditions for its officers and
employees, a maximum degree of convenience for
efficient postal services, proper access to existing
and future air and surface transportation
facilities, and control of costs to the Postal
Service.
Other provisions of the Act give the Postal Service the power to
construct post office buildings "consistent with reasonable
economies of postal operations." See Section 401(6) and Section
403(c).
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