MS 2022-03-W-Simmons-February-15-2022-Council-Member-Stipends-and-Reimbursements February 15, 2022

Can a Mississippi city council pay its members a monthly expense stipend or reimburse for cell phones, internet, and mileage?

Short answer: No flat stipends, yes targeted reimbursements. A $200 monthly stipend would be additional compensation, banned by Mississippi Constitution Section 96 and not permitted by Section 21-8-21 (which sets council compensation). But the city can reimburse pre-authorized travel under Section 25-3-41, can provide or reimburse cell phones for documented city business, and can reimburse the city-business portion of home internet, all if the Council finds on the minutes that the expenses are reasonable and necessary, with documentation distinguishing business from personal use.
Disclaimer: This is an official Mississippi Attorney General opinion. AG opinions are persuasive authority but not binding precedent. This summary is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Consult a licensed Mississippi attorney for advice on your specific situation.

Plain-English summary

Meridian's city council members wanted a $200 per month stipend to cover phone, internet, and mileage expenses they incur as elected officials. The city attorney asked: can we pay it? If not, can we reimburse the underlying expenses?

The AG broke it down:

Stipend ($200/month flat): No. A stipend is compensation, not reimbursement. Section 21-8-21 sets the council compensation framework: the council establishes its own pay, but increases or decreases can only take effect for the next term (after the next general election). A monthly stipend on top of compensation is "extra compensation," prohibited by Mississippi Constitution Section 96.

Travel reimbursement: Yes, under Section 25-3-41, but only for travel "first being duly authorized" and "in the performance of his official duties." That's a case-by-case factual determination by the Council before the expense is incurred. The 1995 Compton opinion clarifies the pre-authorization requirement.

Cell phones: Yes, two options. The city can issue cell phones to council members, or it can reimburse council members for the city-business portion of personal cell phone use. Either way, the Council must find on the minutes that the use is reasonable and necessary for municipal business. Personal use of a city-issued phone or city reimbursement of personal use would be an unlawful donation under Section 66.

Home internet: Yes, but only the percentage of monthly usage that is for city business, not personal use. The Council must find on the minutes that the expense is reasonable and necessary. The 2021 Hammack opinion (county supervisor home broadband) sets the framework, applied here to municipal council members.

The opinion emphasizes that all reimbursements remain subject to State Auditor review.

What this means for you

For city council members

You cannot get a flat monthly stipend on top of your council compensation. The next election is when council compensation can change, not before.

You can get reimbursed for actual, documented business expenses if the Council adopts proper procedures. Steps:

  1. Council passes a resolution or ordinance setting up reimbursement procedures
  2. For each reimbursement, you submit documentation distinguishing city business from personal use (e.g., itemized phone bills, internet usage logs, mileage logs with destination/purpose)
  3. Council finds the expenses reasonable and necessary
  4. Council approves the reimbursement and spreads it on the minutes

You won't get reimbursed for the time spent traveling between meetings or for general "being a council member" overhead. The reimbursement is for actual city business expenses with proof.

For municipal attorneys

The framework you advise the Council on:

  1. Stipends are off the table. Section 96 plus Section 21-8-21 close that door.
  2. Travel reimbursements require pre-authorization and a finding the travel is in the performance of official duties.
  3. Cell phones: Council adopts a policy distinguishing business from personal use. Either issue city phones (with personal-use restrictions and prompt reimbursement of any personal use) or reimburse personal phones based on documented business use.
  4. Home internet: Council adopts a policy. Reimbursement only covers the business-use portion. The Council determines the percentage based on facts (which the council member must document).

Get the policy in writing. State Auditor reviews will look for documented procedures and documented business use.

For city clerks

Set up the documentation systems:

  1. Cell phone bill submission process with itemized business calls
  2. Mileage log forms with destination and purpose
  3. Pre-authorization forms for travel
  4. Quarterly or monthly reimbursement schedules

The minutes need to reflect the Council's findings on each reimbursement category.

For State Auditor personnel reviewing municipal expenditures

Look for:

  1. Council policy/ordinance establishing reimbursement framework
  2. Findings on the minutes for each reimbursement category
  3. Documentation supporting business-use claims
  4. Procedures preventing personal-use reimbursement
  5. No flat stipends disguised as reimbursements (e.g., a $200/month "phone allowance" with no documentation requirement is effectively a stipend)

For municipal finance directors

Build budget categories that distinguish:

  • Council compensation (under Section 21-8-21)
  • Council travel reimbursement (under Section 25-3-41)
  • Council cell phone (city-issued phone OR personal phone reimbursement)
  • Council home internet reimbursement (business-use percentage)

Each line gets its own approval and documentation.

Common questions

Q: What's the difference between a stipend and a reimbursement?
A: A stipend is a fixed amount paid regardless of actual expenses incurred. A reimbursement repays specific documented expenses. The 2011 Turner opinion treats stipends as compensation; reimbursements as something else.

Q: Why is "extra compensation" banned by Section 96?
A: Section 96 prevents the Legislature (and political subdivisions, by extension) from granting extra compensation to public officers after service is rendered or contracts are made. The concern is favoritism, opacity, and creating undisclosed benefits beyond the established compensation framework.

Q: Can the council just raise its own compensation?
A: Yes, but only effective for the next term, not the current one. Section 21-8-21 requires the increase to be authorized at least 90 days before the next general election. Sitting council members cannot increase their own current pay.

Q: What about a "communications allowance" treated as compensation?
A: A flat allowance with no documentation requirement is effectively a stipend = compensation = banned. The opinion specifically distinguishes flat stipends from documented reimbursement.

Q: How do council members document home internet for business?
A: Reasonable approaches include time logs, percentage estimates supported by activity (e.g., "approximately 20% of home internet usage is for city email and document review"), or an explicit allocation method adopted by Council. The 2021 Hammack opinion applies the same framework to county supervisors with home broadband.

Q: Can the city give council members iPads or laptops for city business?
A: Likely yes, under the same framework as cell phones: issued for city business, with policies preventing personal use, and prompt reimbursement of any personal use. Council adopts the policy with findings.

Q: What about travel for training conferences?
A: Section 25-3-41 covers travel for official duties. Training relevant to council duties typically qualifies. Pre-authorization on the minutes is the safer path.

Q: Can the city reimburse mileage for travel within the council member's ward (e.g., constituent visits)?
A: Possibly, with pre-authorization and documentation. The 1995 Compton opinion makes this case-by-case. The Council should adopt procedures specifying what kinds of in-ward travel qualify.

Q: What about reimbursing for child care during late council meetings?
A: Outside this opinion's scope. Different framework; would require its own analysis. Typically not a permissible expense reimbursement under Mississippi law.

Q: Can a council member be reimbursed for legal fees defending against a complaint?
A: Outside this opinion's scope. Section 25-1-47 settlement authority and indemnification frameworks apply, with their own requirements.

Background and statutory framework

Mississippi's framework for council member compensation and expenses:

Compensation framework:
- Section 21-8-21 establishes the compensation rule for code-charter cities (Section 21-8 framework). Council sets compensation. Changes apply only after the next election.
- Section 96 of the Mississippi Constitution bars extra compensation: "The Legislature shall never grant extra compensation, fee, or allowance to any public officer, agent, servant, or contractor, after service rendered or contract made."

Expense framework:
- Section 25-3-41 governs travel reimbursement: pre-authorization plus official-duty requirement.
- General reimbursement principles (developed through AG opinions): reimbursements are permissible when the city receives benefit at least equivalent to the amount expended, with findings on the minutes and procedures preventing personal-use reimbursement.

The 2014 Custom opinion (cell phones for municipal officers), 2012 Norwood opinion (general reimbursement framework), 2021 Hammack opinion (county supervisor home broadband), 2011 Turner opinion (stipend vs. reimbursement), and 1995 Compton opinion (travel pre-authorization) together set out the standard analytical framework, applied here to a Meridian-specific request.

The donation rule (Section 66) is the underlying constitutional concern: any reimbursement of personal use would be donating public funds to a private benefit. The framework exists to prevent that.

Citations and references

Statutes:
- Miss. Code Ann. § 21-8-21, code-charter city compensation
- Miss. Code Ann. § 25-3-41, municipal travel reimbursement

Mississippi Constitution:
- Miss. Const. art. 4, § 96, prohibition on extra compensation

Prior AG opinions cited:
- MS AG Op., Turner (Feb. 18, 2011), stipend = compensation
- MS AG Op., Compton (Aug. 7, 1995), travel pre-authorization
- MS AG Op., Custom (Jan. 31, 2014), cell phones for municipal officers
- MS AG Op., Norwood (Mar. 12, 2012), reimbursement framework; benefit equivalent to expenditure
- MS AG Op., Hammack (Nov. 23, 2021), home broadband reimbursement framework

Source

Original opinion text

February 15, 2022

William W. Simmons, Esq.
Attorney for City of Meridian
Post Office Drawer 5514
Meridian, Mississippi 39302-5514

Re: Council Member Stipends and Reimbursements

Dear Mr. Simmons:

The Office of the Attorney General has received your request for an official opinion.

Background

Members of the Meridian City Council have requested a $200.00 per month stipend to cover expenses incurred in the execution of their duties. Council members are not provided an office and must provide their own cell phones and internet access. Further, they must cover their own automobile expenses when traveling around their districts meeting with constituents and inspecting conditions of their ward.

Questions Presented

  1. May the City pay council members a stipend of $200.00 per month to cover expenses incurred in the execution of their duties?
  2. If the answer to the first question is "no," may the City reimburse council members for mileage for all travel not related to attending luncheons, dinners, or banquets or traveling to and from council meetings?
  3. If the answer to the first question is "no," may the City reimburse council members for cellular telephone expenses or provide cellular telephones to the council members?
  4. If the answer to the first question is "no," may the City reimburse council members for the expense incurred in obtaining internet access at their homes as they are not provided with an office by the City?

Brief Response

  1. No. A stipend is a form of compensation rather than a form of reimbursement. Section 96 of the Mississippi Constitution prohibits granting city council members compensation in addition to the amount authorized pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated Section 21-8-21.
  2. The City may reimburse travel of council members, in accordance with and in the manner provided in Section 25-3-41, that is both pre-authorized and required in the performance of the official's official duties.
  3. The City may either provide council members with City cell phones or, in the alternative, reimburse council members for expenses paid for a personal cell phone if the Council finds, consistent with the facts and spread upon the minutes, that such expenses are reasonable and necessary to the performance of the council member's duties or to conduct public business of the City. Expenditures would be limited to the amount incurred by city business only and would not be authorized for personal cell phone usage.
  4. The City may reimburse internet service to the private home of a city council member if the Council finds, consistent with the facts and spread upon the minutes, that such expense is reasonable and necessary to the performance of the council member's official duties or to conduct public business of the City. The reimbursement must only cover those expenses incurred by way of city business and may not cover expenses incurred by personal internet use of the council member.

Applicable Law and Discussion

Your first question asks whether the City may pay council members a stipend of $200.00 to cover expenses. We note that a stipend is a form of compensation rather than a form of reimbursement. See generally MS AG Op., Turner (Feb. 18, 2011). Compensation for council members is provided for in Section 21-8-21 and may only be increased in accordance with requirements of Section 21-8-21(1), which provides:

The mayor and the members of the council shall be qualified electors of the municipality. The compensation for the mayor and the members of the council shall be set by the council. After the salaries of the first mayor and first council have been determined by the council of any municipality electing to come under the provision of this chapter, such salaries shall be effective immediately. Thereafter, any increases or decreases in the salary for the mayor or councilmen may be authorized by the council at any time prior to ninety (90) days before the next general election for the selection of municipal officers. Such increases or decreases shall not become effective until the next elected mayor and council takes office.

A stipend separate from the compensation allowed under Section 21-8-21 would amount to additional compensation. Therefore, it is prohibited by Section 96 of the Constitution which states, "The Legislature shall never grant extra compensation, fee, or allowance to any public officer, agent, servant, or contractor, after service rendered or contract made." By contrast, reimbursements are addressed below.

In response to your second question, Section 25-3-41 governs reimbursement of travel expenses and authorizes reimbursement for any municipal official who, "first being duly authorized," is required to travel "in the performance of his official duties." Miss. Code Ann. § 25-3-41(2). Reimbursements for all travel not related to attending luncheons, dinners or banquets or traveling to and from council meetings are not necessarily authorized. In fact, we have previously opined that whether or not travel is "in the performance of his official duties" is a factual determination to be made by the City Council on a case-by-case basis and prior to the expense being authorized and incurred. MS AG Op., Compton at *1 (Aug. 7, 1995). As such, so long as the travel to be reimbursed is pre-authorized by the Council and then found by the Council to be required in the performance of the official's duties, reimbursement would be allowed in accordance with Section 25-3-41.

Third, we have previously analyzed whether governing authorities are authorized to provide municipal officers with cell phones paid for with public funds or, alternatively, to reimburse municipal officers for the use of their personal cell phones. MS AG Op., Custom at *1 (Jan. 31, 2014). In response, we said a governing authority may, in its discretion, either provide municipal officers with cell phones or reimburse municipal officers for use of their personal cell phones "provided that such use of a mobile phone is reasonable and necessary for the conduct of municipal business." Id. (internal citation omitted). Whether a governing authority issues a mobile phone for the purpose of conducting municipal business or provides reimbursement for expenses incurred on a personal phone associated with municipal business is a determination to be made solely by the governing authority itself. Id.

In the event reimbursements are going to be provided, "the governing authority must determine, consistent with the facts, that the City will receive a benefit at least equivalent to the amount expended and then by order, resolution or ordinance duly entered on its minutes, authorize reimbursements and establish procedures that ensure that public funds are not being spent to reimburse officials for personal use." MS AG Op., Norwood at 1 (Mar. 12, 2012). To avoid an unlawful donation we said, "[i]t would be incumbent upon the municipal officer or employee to itemize those calls made in the pursuit of municipal business in his/her submission for reimbursement, along with any required supporting documentation." MS AG Op., Custom at 1 (Jan. 31, 2014). Finally, any expenses paid by the City for personal use of a cell phone issued by the municipality would constitute an unlawful donation and must be promptly reimbursed to the municipality. Id. (Internal citations omitted).

In response to your fourth question regarding reimbursements for the expenses incurred in obtaining internet access at the private homes of council members, we refer you to our recent opinion issued to William C. Hammack. MS AG Op., Hammack (Nov. 23, 2021). We said a county board of supervisors cannot expend public funds to provide broadband/internet service to a private home of a board member, "unless the Board finds, consistent with the facts and spread upon the minutes, that such expenses are reasonable and necessary to the performance of the supervisor's duties or to conduct public business of the county." Id. Moreover, the use must be reasonable. Id. (internal citation omitted).

As it was in Hammack, the obvious concern of personal internet use at a council member's private home is raised here. Consistent with our analysis in Hammack, it is our opinion that the City may determine the percentage of monthly usage of the internet service that is associated with city business, and the City may then reimburse the council member for only that amount and not for any amount incurred by personal use of the internet service in the private home. Id.

Finally, we note that as with all public expenditures, all reimbursements would be subject to review by the State Auditor.

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/ Abby C. Overby
Abby C. Overby
Special Assistant Attorney General