Attorney General of Arkansas — Opinion
Opinion Delivered November 4, 2011
DUSTIN McDANIEL, Attorney General
The Honorable Denny Altes State Representative
8600 Moody Road Fort Smith, Arkansas 72903-6718
Dear Representative Altes:
You have requested my opinion on the following question: “Is it constitutional for [Fort Smith] to fluoridate [municipal] water when [Fort Smith residents] have already voted down this issue twice?”[1]
RESPONSE
In 2011, the General Assembly enacted Act 197, which is now codified at A.C.A. § 20-7-136 (Supp. 2011). This Act requires all water systems in the state that serve more than 5,000 people to fluoridate their water systems according to regulations to be promulgated by the Department of Health. Accordingly, Fort Smith is under a state mandate to fluoridate water. Therefore, I take your question as asking whether Act 197 of 2011 is constitutional as applied to Fort Smith given that this city’s residents have, as you say, “already voted down this issue twice.”
In my opinion, the answer to this question is “yes.” The fact that a city’s voters failed to approve an ordinance — or, as you say, “voted it down” — that would have required fluoridation has no bearing on whether a state law requiring fluoridation can constitutionally apply to that city. The easiest way to see this is to assume that,
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before 2011, the city had actually passed an ordinance that prohibited fluoridation. When the General Assembly passed Act 197 of 2011 — which requires fluoridation in cities of the size of Fort Smith — the city ordinance would conflict with state law. The state constitution specifically provides that cities cannot pass ordinances that conflict with state law.[2] Accordingly, such a hypothetical ordinance would have been invalidated when Act 197 was passed.
In the scenario you describe, there is no pre-existing city ordinance that conflicts with Act 197. Instead, you describe a scenario in which the city voters simply failed to approve a proposal that would have required fluoridation. Therefore, a fortiori, the failure to approve a local ballot measure has no bearing — whether under the federal or state constitution — on whether the state statute can constitutionally apply to the city.
Assistant Attorney General Ryan Owsley prepared this opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
DUSTIN McDANIEL Attorney General
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