Does someone have to live in a Mississippi natural gas district to serve on its board of commissioners?
Plain-English summary
A commissioner of the Caledonia Natural Gas District asked the AG whether someone could serve on the District's board of commissioners while living outside the District's geographic boundaries.
The District was created by local-and-private legislation enacted by the Mississippi Legislature in the 1988 session, with amendments in 1989, 1990, 1997, and 2021. The 1997 amendment (carried forward in subsequent versions) said the District's powers "shall be vested in and exercised by a board of commissioners consisting of five (5) residents of the district." That language was clear: the five commissioners had to be District residents.
The AG enforced that residency requirement: a non-resident was not qualified to serve. The opinion also noted three threshold limits on the AG's authority:
1. AG opinions are prospective only, so the AG could not opine on whether a current commissioner had previously violated the residency rule.
2. The AG does not interpret local rules and regulations the District itself promulgates.
3. Whether a particular individual is or is not a resident is a fact question, which the AG cannot decide.
A footnote noted that the residency requirement appeared to have been in place since the District's formation: the original legislation contemplated the Board being comprised of the Mayor of Caledonia and four "residents of the district," with later elections to choose "the resident members of the board."
Currency note
This opinion was issued in 2021. Subsequent statutory amendments, court decisions, or later AG opinions may have changed the analysis. Treat this page as historical context, not current legal advice. Verify current law before relying on any specific rule, deadline, or remedy mentioned here.
What the opinion said for each audience, at the time
For Caledonia Natural Gas District commissioners and prospective commissioners
In 2021, the rule was simple: you had to live in the District to serve on the board. If you moved out of the District after election or appointment, your service was potentially in jeopardy under the residency requirement, though the specific consequences were a separate question not addressed in this opinion.
For the District's board and election officials
When commissioners' seats came up for election (or appointment, depending on the procedure), eligibility had to be checked against the District's geographic boundary. Commissioners' addresses had to be inside the District, and commissioners moving out potentially became unqualified.
For other Mississippi natural gas districts and similar special districts
Many Mississippi special districts (utility districts, drainage districts, water districts) are created by local-and-private legislation with their own enabling acts. The applicable residency or qualification rules vary district-to-district. Each district's commissioners and members should consult its specific enabling legislation, not assume that other districts' rules apply.
For courts handling residency challenges
The opinion confirmed that residency was a fact-specific question. In a contested case, the court (not the AG) would determine whether a specific commissioner was actually a District resident, considering domicile factors like primary home, voter registration, driver's license, family location, and intent to remain.
For citizens served by the District
The residency requirement is meant to ensure that the people governing the District have a personal stake in its operation. They live where they vote on rates, infrastructure, and policies. The 2021 opinion enforced that legislative design.
Common questions
Q: What is the Caledonia Natural Gas District?
A: A special-purpose unit of local government providing natural gas service in and around Caledonia, Mississippi (in Lowndes County). It was created by the Mississippi Legislature through local-and-private legislation in 1988, providing gas distribution to residents and businesses within its defined service area.
Q: How is "resident" defined in this context?
A: The opinion did not give a specific definition, leaving residency to be determined factually under Mississippi's general residency / domicile rules. Generally, residency is the place where a person actually lives with the intent to remain. Proof typically includes a primary residence in the District, voter registration in the District, and absence of a competing primary residence elsewhere.
Q: What if someone owns property in the District but doesn't live there?
A: Property ownership alone does not equal residency. The 1997 amendment used "residents," not "property owners" or "qualified electors of the area." Someone with a vacation home or rental property in the District but a primary residence elsewhere would not be a "resident" for board membership purposes.
Q: Did the residency requirement exist before 1997?
A: Per the footnote in the opinion, yes. The original 1988 enabling legislation contemplated a board with the Mayor of Caledonia and four "residents of the district." After the District began serving 100 or more users, an election was to be held among users to vote upon "the selection of the resident members of the board." So the requirement of residency for board members was structural from the beginning.
Q: What happens if a non-resident has been serving?
A: The AG could not address that. The opinion was prospective. If a current commissioner was suspected of being a non-resident, the matter would have to be resolved through the District's own procedures or through a quo warranto proceeding in court (a special action questioning a person's right to hold office).
Q: Does this opinion apply to other Mississippi gas districts?
A: Only by analogy. Each gas district's enabling legislation has its own qualifications. The 2021 opinion is specific to the Caledonia Natural Gas District. But the principle (residency requirements in enabling legislation are enforceable) applies broadly.
Background and statutory framework
Mississippi authorizes natural gas districts through general statutes (Title 77, Chapter 11) and through local-and-private acts of the Legislature. The Caledonia Natural Gas District was created by a local-and-private act in the 1988 session, as the AG opinion notes.
Local-and-private legislation in Mississippi creates specific districts with specific terms. The legislative design is intentional: each district can be tailored to local conditions, including the geographic boundaries of service, the composition of the governing board, the powers exercised, and the qualifications for board membership.
The 1997 amendment to Caledonia's enabling act standardized the board composition: five commissioners, all residents of the district. This format has been preserved through subsequent amendments (1990, 1997, 2021). The 2021 amendment was being enacted around the same time as the opinion, which is why the opinion cites H.B. 1436 of the 2021 Regular Session.
The AG's three-part disclaimer (prospective opinions only, no interpretation of local rules, no fact determinations) is standard for AG opinions touching local entities. Section 7-5-25 establishes the limits, and the AG opinions consistently apply them: the office gives state-law guidance, not adjudication of specific people's specific situations.
Citations and references
Statutes:
- Miss. Code Ann. § 7-5-25, AG opinions limited to prospective state-law questions, no fact determinations or local-rule interpretation
Local-and-Private Legislation:
- Caledonia Natural Gas District enabling act (1988 Regular Session, as amended in 1989, 1990, 1997, and 2021)
- H.B. 1869, 1997 Regular Session (added the five-resident requirement)
- H.B. 1436, 2021 Regular Session (continued the residency requirement)
Prior AG opinions cited:
- MS AG Op., Brett (May 31, 1988), AG does not interpret local ordinances, resolutions, regulations or rules
Source
- Landing page: https://attorneygenerallynnfitch.com/divisions/opinions-and-policy/recent-opinions/
- Original PDF: https://attorneygenerallynnfitch.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/D.Myers_May-14-2021-Qualifications-for-membership-on-Board-of-Commissioners.pdf
Original opinion text
May 14, 2021
Donald F. Myers, Commissioner
Caledonia Natural Gas District
6200 Wolfe
Columbus, Mississippi 39705
Re: Qualifications for membership on Board of Commissioners
Dear Mr. Myers:
The Office of the Attorney General has received your request for an official opinion.
Question Presented
Can a person who lives outside the Caledonia Natural Gas District (the "District") serve on the Board of Commissioners?
Brief Response
No. Only District residents are qualified to serve on the District's Board of Commissioners (the "Board").
Applicable Law and Discussion
Pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated Section 7-5-25, this office can only issue official opinions on matters involving prospective actions. An official opinion can neither validate nor invalidate a past action. Moreover, while the District's enabling local and private legislation empowers the District to promulgate rules and regulations related to the election of Board members, our office does not interpret any such rules or regulations. MS AG Op., Brett at *1 (May 31, 1988) ("Under the provisions of Section 7-5-25, Miss. Code of 1972, this office may not interpret local ordinances, resolutions, regulations or rules."). Finally, whether a particular individual is a resident of the District is a fact question that this office also cannot address.
As your request notes, the District was formed through local and private legislation enacted by the Mississippi Legislature during the 1988 Regular Legislative Session. Since that time, the District's enabling legislation has been amended several times, in 1989, 1990, 1997, and 2021.
To date, the law provides as follows, added by amendments made during the 1997 session:
From and after the effective date of House Bill No. 1869, 1997 Regular Session, the powers of the Caledonia Natural Gas District shall be vested in and exercised by a board of commissioners consisting of five (5) residents of the district.
H.B. 1436, Reg. Sess. (Miss. 2021) (emphasis added). This language clearly requires that the Board consist of only individuals who reside within the District.[1]
If this office may be of any further assistance to you, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Sincerely,
LYNN FITCH, ATTORNEY GENERAL
By: /s/ Phil Carter
Phil Carter
Special Assistant Attorney General
[1] Based on our review of the legislation in effect prior to the 1997 amendments, there appears to have always been a requirement for Board members to be District residents. Following the District's formation, the Board was comprised of the Mayor of Caledonia and four "residents of the district." After gas service within the District commenced and began serving at least 100 users, a Board election was to be called, where users could "vote upon the selection of the resident members of the board . . . ."