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2023 SESSION
23100847DBe it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That § 1 of Article II, § 1 of Article III, as amended, § 1 of Article IX, and § 1 of Article XI of Chapter 540 of the Acts of Assembly of 1950 are amended and reenacted as follows:
Article II. Corporate Limits.
§ 1. (1) The limits
of said town shall be as follows:
Beginning in the center of
John Marshall Highway (Virginia State Route 55) a distance of 2,241.57 feet
northwesterly from a pipe driven into the said highway where it intersects
Carolina Road (State Route 625); thence North 35 degrees 21 minutes 25 seconds
East, with Peters, 1,800 feet (passing through a concrete marker at 40.07 feet)
to a concrete marker; thence, with Peters, Robinson (or Robertson), Thomas,
King, and Jordan, South 57 degrees 31 minutes 39 seconds East, 4,474.04 feet
crossing Carolina Road (Virginia State Route 625) and passing through concrete
markers at 1,855.82 feet and 1,892.42 feet respectively, to a concrete marker;
thence, with Jordan, Prince William County School Board and Stanton, South 35
degrees 21 minutes 25 seconds West, a distance of 3,500 feet crossing John
Marshall Highway (Virginia State Route 55) and passing through concrete markers
at 1,599.78 feet and 1,680.22 feet respectively to a concrete marker just southwesterly
from the Southern Railway Company's right-of-way; thence, with Stanton,
Bleight, Tyler, and Rust, South 58 degrees 09 minutes 59 seconds West, 4,476.84
feet crossing Carolina Road (Virginia State Route 625) just northeasterly from
a bridge and passing through concrete markers at 1,671.11 feet and 1,711.61
feet, respectively to a concrete marker, and thence with Rust and Fletcher
(following the old Clarkson line) North 35 degrees 21 minutes 25 seconds East,
a distance of 1,750 feet crossing the Southern Railway Company's right-of-way
at about 800 feet and passing through a concrete marker at 1,709.93 feet to the
place of beginning, containing 361.59288 acres, more or less, according to a
survey based on true bearings made by R. J. Ratcliffe, Surveyor of Prince
William County, Virginia. The
boundaries of the Town, until altered, shall be as shown in Chapter 540 of the
Acts of the General Assembly of 1950 as modified by a boundary line adjustment
entered into between the Town of Haymarket and the County of Prince William,
approved by Circuit Court order recorded in the Prince William County land
records as Instrument number 201402260012836.
Article III. Administration and Government.
§ 1. (1) The councilmen council members and mayor in
office on the effective date of this act April 7, 1950 shall continue
in office until the first day of July of the year following termination of
their respective terms or until their respective successors shall have been
duly elected and qualified.
(2) On the first Tuesday after the
first Monday in May November, 1974 2024, and every two years
thereafter, there shall be elected by the qualified voters of the town, one
elector of the town, who shall be denominated mayor, and six other electors,
who shall be denominated councilmen council members, and the mayor
and councilmen council
members shall constitute the Town council. They shall enter
upon the duties of their offices on the first day of July January next succeeding their
election, and shall continue in office
until their successors are duly elected and qualified. Every person so elected
shall take an the
oath faithfully to execute and discharge the duties of
his office to the best of his judgment, and the mayor shall take the oath prescribed
by law for State officers. The failure of any person elected or appointed under
the provisions of this charter to qualify or to take the oath required, within
the time prescribed for entering upon the discharge of
the duties of the office to which he is elected or appointed, shall vacate the
said office and the council shall proceed and is hereby vested with power to
fill such vacancy in the manner herein prescribed of office as prescribed by general law.
(3) There shall be appointed for
the town a registrar and officers of election in the manner provided for by
general law of Virginia, and all elections held in said town shall be conducted
in accordance with said general law; the electorate shall be that prescribed by
general law. [Repealed]
(4) The council shall judge of
the election, qualification, and returns of its members; may fine them for
disorderly conduct, and, with the concurrence of two-thirds, expel a member. If
any person returned be adjudged disqualified, or be expelled, a new election to
fill the vacancy shall be held on such day as the council may prescribe. Any
vacancy occurring otherwise during the term for which such person was elected
shall be filled by the council by the appointment of any one eligible to such
office. A vacancy in the office of mayor shall be filled by the council from
the electors of the town, and any member of the council may be eligible to fill
such vacancy. [Repealed]
(5) A majority of the members of the council shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.
(6) Each member of the council may receive a salary to be
fixed by the council, payable at such times and in such manner as the council
may direct, but the salary paid to any one member during any
year shall not exceed the sum of one hundred dollars per annum. The mayor may
receive a salary to be fixed by the council, payable in such manner and at such
times as the council may direct, not to exceed the sum of five hundred dollars
per annum; and such salary shall be in lieu of any fees he is entitled to enter
up as part of the costs and receive in the trial of cases of violation of the
ordinances of the town as hereinafter provided for.
(7) The mayor shall preside at the meetings of the council and
perform such other duties as are prescribed by this charter and by general law,
and such as may be imposed by the council consistent with his office. The mayor
shall have no right to vote in the council, except in case of a tie he the
mayor shall have the right to cast
a vote to break the same by his vote; tie,
but he the
mayor shall have the right to veto as provided
in § 1 (8) of this Article III. He The mayor
shall have the following duties: to take care and see that the bylaws, ordinances, acts and resolutions
of the council are faithfully executed and obeyed, and shall
have and exercise all power and authority conferred by general law on mayors of
towns not inconsistent with this charter. He shall be ex officio a conservator
of the peace within the town and within one mile of its corporate
limits; and shall have jurisdiction to issue process for and try all cases for
the violation of the town ordinances, subject to an appeal to the Circuit Court
of Prince William County, Virginia, and impose such punishment and/or fines as
may be prescribed for violation of the same, and he shall have power to issue
executions for all fines and costs imposed by him, or he may require an
immediate payment thereof, and in default of such payment he may commit the
defaulting party to the Prince William County Jail until such fine and costs
shall be paid, such commitment, however, not to be for more than twelve months.
He may release persons accused or convicted of the violation of a town
ordinance upon the giving of sufficient bail to be fixed by him. He shall; to see
that peace and good order are preserved and that persons and property within
the town are protected. He shall; to authenticate by his signature such
documents and instruments as the council, this charter, or the laws of this
Commonwealth require. He shall; and from time to time
recommend to the council such measures as he may deem seem needful for the welfare of the town.
(8) Every ordinance, or
resolution having the effect of an ordinance, shall, before it becomes
operative be presented to the mayor. If he approves, he shall sign it, but if
not, he may return it The mayor
may veto an ordinance or a resolution having the effect of an ordinance by
transmitting it, with his objections the reasons for the veto in writing, to the town clerk who shall enter the reasons for the mayor's objections veto at length on the minute books book
of the council. The council shall may thereupon proceed to
reconsider such ordinance or resolution. If, after such consideration, two-thirds
of all the members elected to the council shall
agree to pass the ordinance or resolution, it shall become operative
notwithstanding the objection veto of the mayor. In all such
cases, the votes of members of the
council upon such reconsideration and the names of the members voting for and
against the ordinance or resolution shall be entered on the minute book of the
council. If any ordinance or resolution having the effect of an
ordinance shall not be returned by the mayor within five
days (Sunday excepted) after it shall have been presented
to him passage by the council,
it shall become operative in like manner as if he had
signed it without the mayor's signature,
unless his the mayor's
term of office or that of the council, shall
expire expires within
said five days.
(9) The council shall, as soon as practicable after
qualification, and biennially thereafter following the regular municipal
election, appoint one of its members as vice-mayor. The vice-mayor, during the
absence or disability of the mayor, shall perform the duties and be vested with
all the powers, authority, and jurisdiction,
of the mayor except the power to veto; and
in the event of a vacancy for any reason in the office of mayor, he shall
act as mayor until a mayor is duly appointed by the Town council or is elected.
The member of the council who shall be chosen vice-mayor shall continue to have
all of the rights, privileges, powers, duties and obligations of councilman a council
member even when performing the duties of mayor during the
absence or disability of the mayor of the town.
(10) The council shall, by ordinance, fix the time for their regular meetings, which shall be held at least once a month. Special meetings may be called by the clerk at the instance of the mayor or any two members of the council in writing; and no other business shall be transacted at a special meeting except that stated in the call, unless all members be present and consent to the transaction of such other business. The meetings of the council shall be open to the public except when in the judgment of the council the public welfare shall require executive meetings consistent with the terms of the Virginia Freedom of Information Act (§ 2.2-3700 et seq. of the Code of Virginia) as then in effect.
(11) The council shall keep a minute book, in which the clerk
shall note the proceedings of the council,
and shall record proceedings at large on the minute book and keep the same
properly indexed.
(12) The council may adopt rules for regulating its
proceedings, but no tax shall be levied, corporate debt
contracted, or appropriation of money exceeding the sum of one hundred dollars
be made, except by a recorded affirmative vote of a majority of all the members
elected to the council.
(13) There shall be appointed by the council at its first
meeting in September March,
or as soon as practicable thereafter, a treasurer, who shall hold office for a
term of two years. The council may provide a salary for the treasurer. He The
treasurer shall give such bond, with surety and in such
penalty as the council prescribes. He The treasurer shall receive
all money belonging to the town,
and keep correct accounts of all receipts from all sources and of all
expenditures of all departments. He The treasurer shall be
responsible for the collection of all taxes, license fees, levies and charges
due to the town,
and shall disburse the moneys of the town in the manner prescribed by the
council as it may by ordinance direct.
(14) The treasurer shall make such reports and at such time as
the council may prescribe. The books and accounts of the treasurer shall be
examined and audited at least once during the term
for which he is elected by a competent accountant selected by the council, such
examination and audit to be reported to the council in accordance with general law.
(15) The council may in its discretion designate the place of
deposit of all town funds, consistent
with state law, which shall be
kept by the treasurer separate and apart from his the treasurer's personal
funds.
(16) There shall be appointed by the council, at its first
regular meeting in September March after its
election, a clerk of the council, who need not be a resident of the town, and
who shall hold office at the pleasure of the council. He The clerk shall attend the
meetings of the council and keep its minutes and records and have charge of the
corporate seal and shall attest the same. He The clerk shall keep all
papers required to be kept by the council, shall publish such reports and
ordinances as are required to be published, and shall perform such other duties
as the council may from time to time require. His The clerk's compensation shall
be fixed by the council. Any vacancy in this office shall be filled by the
council.
(17) There shall be appointed by the council at its first
regular meeting in September March or as soon as
practicable thereafter, a town sergeant, who shall also be chief of police;,
and shall hold office at the pleasure of the council. His The town sergeant's
duties shall be such as the council prescribes. He The town sergeant
shall be vested with the powers of a conservator of the peace. His The town sergeant's
compensation shall be fixed by the council.
(18) The council may appoint a
trial justice for the town who shall serve at the pleasure of the council and
until his successor is appointed by the council and qualifies. He shall be an
attorney at law licensed to practice under the laws of the Commonwealth, but he
need not be a resident of the town.
The trial justice is hereby vested
with all the power, authority and jurisdiction and charged with all the duties
within and for the town of Haymarket, and in criminal matters for one mile
beyond the corporate limits thereof, which are or may hereafter be conferred
upon the trial justice by the laws of the State of Virginia, so far as the same
may be applicable, and not in conflict with the provisions of this charter; and
any amendments of the trial justice laws of this State shall be considered as
amendments also of this section of this charter if the same are applicable
hereto.
Fees and costs shall be
assessed by the trial justice and shall be collected as provided by the laws of
the State of Virginia relating to trial justices as the same shall now be or as
hereby amended. All fees and costs collected by the said trial justice and all
fines collected for violations of all laws and ordinances of the town shall be
paid into the town treasury for the use and benefit of the town.
Removals may be taken, and
appeals from the decisions of the trial justice may be taken, to the Circuit
Court of Prince William County in the same manner, upon the same terms and
shall be tried in the same way as removals or as appeals from the decision of
trial justices, as the case may be, are provided to be taken and tried by the
laws of the State of Virginia, relating to trial justices as the same shall now
be or as hereafter amended.
The council may also appoint
such clerk or clerks as may in their discretion be necessary, provide for just
compensation therefor and provide necessary records.
The council of said town shall
provide a salary to compensate such trial justice in such amount and payable at
such times as the council shall deem proper, and the council may provide also for
a vacation period, either with or without pay, and for such duration, as in the
judgment of the council may be proper.
Like provisions may be made
for a substitute justice, and when such substitute acts, he shall receive the
compensation which would have been paid him had the principal acted, and which
compensation shall be deducted from salary or allowance made to the principal.
The town of Haymarket may
combine with the county of Prince William for the use of one trial justice and
one substitute trial justice for such combined town and county, in such manner
as may be provided by the laws of the State of Virginia relating to trial
justices; and if the town of Haymarket and the county of Prince William shall
at any time combine for the use of one trial justice and one substitute trial
justice for the said town and the said county, the laws of the State of
Virginia relating to trial justices, so far as applicable, shall control and
not this section of this charter. [Repealed]
(19) The council may appoint or select such other officers as may be necessary, including a business manager for the town, and fix their salaries and define their duties.
(20) All ordinances, resolutions and bylaws passed by the council take effect at the time indicated in such ordinances, resolutions or bylaws, but in event no effective date shall be set forth in any such ordinances, resolutions or bylaws passed by the council, the same shall become effective thirty days from its passage.
Article IX. Additional Powers.
§ 1. In addition to powers elsewhere mentioned in this charter and the powers conferred by general law and the Constitution, the town shall have the following powers:
(1) To compel the abatement and removal of all nuisances
within the town or upon property owned by the town without its limits at the
expense of the person or persons causing the same or of the owner or occupant
of the ground or premises wherein the same may be, and to collect said expense
by suit or motion or by distress and sale; to require all lands, lots and other
premises within the town to be kept clean and sanitary and free from stagnant
water, weeds, filth, and unsightly deposits, or to make them so at the expense
of the owners or occupants thereof, and to collect said expense by suit or
motion or by distress and sale; to regulate or prevent noisome or offensive
business within the said town, or the exercise of any dangerous or unwholesome
business, trade, or employment therein; to regulate the transportation of all
articles through the streets of the town; to compel the abatement of smoke and
dust, and prevent unnecessary noise; to regulate the location of stables and
the manner in which the same shall be constructed and kept; to regulate the
location, construction, operation, and maintenance of billboards and signs; and generally to define,
prohibit, abate, suppress, and prevent all things detrimental to the health,
morals, aesthetics, safety, convenience and welfare of the inhabitants of the
town; and to require all owners or occupants of property having public
sidewalks adjacent thereto to keep the same clean and sanitary, free from
weeds, filth, unsightly deposits, ice and snow, and any obstruction.
(2) To extinguish and prevent
fires, and to establish, regulate and control a fire department or division; to
establish and designate from time to time fire limits, within which limits
wooden buildings shall not be constructed, added to, enlarged or repaired, and
to direct that any or all future buildings within such limits shall be
constructed of stone, natural or artificial, concrete, brick, iron or other
fireproof materials; to enact stringent and efficient laws for securing the
safety of persons from fires in halls and buildings used for public
assemblages, entertainments or amusements. [Repealed]
(3) To direct the location and
construction of all buildings for storing explosives or combustible substances;
to regulate the sale and use of gunpowder, nitroglycerin, fireworks, kerosene,
gasoline, and other like material; to regulate or prevent the exhibition of
fireworks, the discharge of firearms, and the making of bonfires within the
corporate limits of said town. [Repealed]
(4) To provide for the
preservation of the general health of the inhabitants of said town, make
regulations to secure the same, inspect all foodstuffs, and prevent the
introduction and sale in said town of any articles or thing intended for human
consumption which is adulterated, impure, or otherwise dangerous to health, and
to condemn, seize, and destroy or otherwise dispose of any such article or
thing without liability to the owner thereof; to prevent the introduction or
spread of contagious or infectious diseases, and prevent and suppress disease
generally; to provide and regulate hospitals within or without the town limits,
and if necessary to the suppression of disease, to enforce the removal of
persons affected with contagious or infectious diseases to hospitals provided
for them; to provide for the organization of a department or bureau of health,
to have the powers of a board of health for the town, with authority necessary
for the prompt and efficient performance of its duties, with the power to
invest any or all of the officials or employees of such department of health
with such powers as the police officers of the town have, to establish
quarantine ground within or without the town, and establish and enforce such
quarantine regulations against contagious and infectious diseases as the
council may see fit, subject to the laws of the State and the United States. [Repealed]
(5) To provide
for the care, support and maintenance of children and of sick, aged, insane, or
poor persons and paupers. [Repealed]
(6) To provide and maintain, either within or without the town, charitable, recreative, curative, corrective, detention or penal institutions.
(7) To regulate poultry or other fowl, hogs, dogs or other animals being kept in or running at large in the town, or any thickly populated portion thereof, and to subject the same to such taxes, regulations and penalties as the council may think proper.
(8) To prevent the riding or
driving of horses or other animals at an improper speed; to prevent the flying
of kites, throwing of stones, the setting off of fireworks or engaging in any
sort of employment in the public streets which is dangerous or annoying to
passersby, and to prohibit and punish the abuse of animals. [Repealed]
(9) To establish markets in the town and regulate the same and to enforce such regulations in regard to the keeping and sale of fresh meats, vegetables, eggs, and other green groceries, and the trade of hucksters and junk dealers as may be deemed advisable.
(10) To prevent any person having
no visible means of support, paupers, and persons who may be dangerous to the
peace and safety of the town from coming to town from without the same; and to
expel therefrom any such person who has been in the town less than twelve
months. [Repealed]
(11) To exercise full police powers and establish and maintain a department or division of police.
(12) To restrain
and punish drunkards, vagrants, and street beggars; to prevent and quell riots,
disturbances, and disorderly assemblages; to suppress houses of ill fame and
gambling houses and punish operators and inmates of the same; to prohibit and
punish the carrying of concealed weapons within the town; to prevent and punish
lewd, indecent, and disorderly exhibitions in the town. To prohibit and punish
gambling and betting disturbances of the peace, disorderly conduct, and public
swearing and cursing, within the town. [Repealed]
(13) To prohibit
and punish mischievous, wanton, or malicious damage to school, church, and
public property, as well as to private property. [Repealed]
(14) To prohibit
minors from and punish them for frequenting, playing or loitering in any public
poolroom, billiard parlor, or bowling alley, and to punish any proprietor or
agent thereof for permitting same. [Repealed]
(15) To compel
persons sentenced to confinement in jail for any violation of the laws or
ordinances of the town to work on the public streets, parks, or other public
works of the town; and on the requisition of the Mayor it shall be the duty of
the sergeant of the town or the sheriff of Prince William County to deliver
such persons to the duly authorized agent of the town for such purposes from day
to day as they may be required. For the purpose of carrying into effect the
police regulations of the town, the town shall have the use of the county jail
of Prince William County for the safe keeping and confinement of all persons
who shall be sentenced to Imprisonment under the ordinances of the town. [Repealed]
(16) To enjoin and restrain the violation of any town ordinance or ordinances, although a penalty is provided upon the conviction of such violation.
(17) To pass and enforce all by-laws, rules, regulations, and ordinances which it may deem necessary for the good order and government of the town, the management of its property, the conduct of its affairs, the peace, comfort, convenience, order, morals, health, and protection of the citizens and their property, and to do such other things and pass such other laws as may be necessary or proper to carry into full effect all powers, authority, capacity or jurisdiction, which is or shall be granted to or vested in said town, or in the council, court of officers, thereof or which may be a necessary incident to a municipal corporation.
(18) To do all things whatsoever necessary or expedient and lawful to be done for promoting or maintaining the general welfare, comfort, education, morals, government, peace, health, trade, commerce, or industries of the town, or its inhabitants.
(19) To offer and pay rewards for the apprehension of criminals.
(20) To provide
by ordinance a system of meat and milk inspection, and appoint milk and meat
inspectors, agents, or officers to carry the same into effect; to prevent,
license, regulate, control, and locate slaughter houses within or without the
corporate limits of the town; and for such services of inspection to make
reasonable charges; and to provide reasonable penalties for the violation of
such ordinances. [Repealed]
(21) To
establish, organize, administer or contribute to the support of public schools
and libraries, subject to the general laws establishing a standard of education
for the State. [Repealed]
(22) To inspect,
test measure and weigh any commodity or commodities or articles of consumption
for use within the town; and to establish, regulate, license and inspect
weights, meters, measures, and scales. [Repealed]
(23) To make and
enforce ordinances, insofar as not prohibited by the general laws of this
State, to regulate, control, license and/or tax the manufacture, bottling,
sale, distribution, transportation, handling, advertising, possession,
dispensing, drinking and use of alcohol, brandy, rum, whiskey, gin, wine, beer,
lager beer, ale, porter, stout, and all liquids, beverages and articles
containing alcohol by distillation, fermentation or otherwise. [Repealed]
(24) To require
every owner or operator of motor vehicles residing in the town, on a date to be
designated by the council, to annually register such motor vehicles and to
obtain a license to operate the same by making application to the treasurer of
the town, or such other person as may be designated by the council; to issue
such license, and to require the owner to pay the annual license fee therefor
to be fixed by the council, provided that the license fee shall not exceed the
amount charged by the State on such machines. The council shall have the right
to require the operator of the motor vehicle to attach a proper license plate
on a conspicuous part of the motor vehicle and to keep same thereon in plain
view for common observation. The council may prorate such license fee over
periods of not less than three months. [Repealed]
(25) Insofar as
not prohibited by general law, to control, regulate, limit and restrict the
operation of motor vehicles carrying passengers for hire upon the streets or
alleys of the town; to regulate the use of automobiles and other automotive
vehicles upon the streets; to regulate the routes in and through the town to be
used by motor vehicle carriers operating in and through the town and to
prescribe different routes for different carriers; to prohibit the use of
certain streets by motor trucks; and generally to prescribe such regulations
respecting motor traffic therein as may be necessary for the general welfare
and safety. [Repealed]
(26) To make and enforce and effect by ordinances any and all the laws of this State.
(27) To put into force and effect
by ordinances any and all the foregoing powers, and any other powers and
authority of the council given by this charter, or any State law, or any
amendments thereto; and to prescribe punishment for the violation of any town
ordinance, rule or regulation, or of any provision of this charter, the penalty
not to exceed five hundred dollars ($500.00) fine or twelve months'
imprisonment in jail, or both. [Repealed]
(28) The enumeration of particular powers by this charter shall not be deemed to be exclusive, and in addition to the powers enumerated herein or implied hereby, or appropriate to the exercise of such powers, it is intended that the Town council shall have and may exercise all powers which, under the Constitution and laws of this State, it would be competent for this charter specifically to enumerate.
Article XI. Miscellaneous.
§ 1. (1) If any clause, sentence, paragraph, or part of this act shall for any reason be adjudged by a court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, impair or invalidate the remainder of the act, but shall be confined in its operation to the part of the act directly involved in the controversy in which the judgment shall have been rendered.
(2) This act may be referred to or cited as the Haymarket
Charter of 1950 2022.
2. That § 2 of Article III, § 1 of Article VIII, and § 1 of Article X of Chapter 540 of the Acts of Assembly of 1950 are repealed.