Musclebound
Citizen
Deputy Senate President
Senator
Aventura Resident
Homeland Security Department
Musclebound
Dep. Senate President
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2025
- Messages
- 42
- Thread Author
- #1
CONGRESS OF THE
COMMONWEALTH OF REDMONT
A BILL TO
AMEND THE CONSTITUTION TO ENSHRINE REAL LOCAL GOVERNANCE
The people of the Commonwealth of Redmont, through their elected Representatives in the Congress and the force of law ordained to that Congress by the people through the constitution, do hereby enact the following provisions into law:
PART I — PRELIMINARIES
1. Short Title and Enactment
(1) This Act may be cited as the 'Realer Town Rights Amendment Act'
(2) This Act shall be enacted immediately upon its signage.
(3) This Act has been authored by Musclebound with text from Real Town Rights Amendment Act
(4) This Act has been sponsored by Representative Musclebound and co-sponsored by Representative MJL and Representative Spy Beer
2. Reasons and Intent
(1) The Commonwealth ought provide local governments with fundamental rights and privileges under the constitution;
(2) The Executive has in the past used its existing discretion in ways that would unduly harm residents of towns, such as by imposing an auction tax involving town plots without congressional approval;
(3) Many players find purposes in their towns, and these players deserve constitutional protections;
(4) Providing constitutional legislative authority to towns will allow them to function more autonomously;
(5) The Congress seeks to enshrine the following guarantees into the constitution regarding towns:
(a) A guarantee that Towns cannot be dissolved by the mere whim of the Executive;
(b) A guarantee of the ability to lawfully build, zone, and create properties within the town;
(c) A guarantee that only the towns may tax or collect fees based upon properties owned in their jurisdictions;
(d) A guarantee that Towns may create and enforce local laws relating to properties, businesses, and actions in the towns;
(e) A guarantee for Towns for permissions to effectuate transfers of properties without reliance upon Federal Authorities;
(f) A guarantee against unjust discrimination for residence in a town;
(g) A guarantee against undue Federal intervention in affairs properly left to a town.
(6) To more clearly define what is already present in towns and establish new rights guarantee.
(7) The Congress seeks to amend the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Redmont to address these concerns and achieve these goals.
PART II — AMENDMENTS
3. Amendment
(1) The Constitution shall be amended by inserting the following Part IV in the Constitution.
PART IV – TOWNS
32. Recognition
(1) Towns are autonomous local governments of the Commonwealth.
33. Establishment & Dissolution
(1) A Town may be established or dissolved only by an amendment to this Constitution. No Town may be dissolved by Executive action nor by ordinary statute. Current recognized towns are:
(a) Town of Aventura
(b) Town of Oakridge
34. Town Constitutions and Local Vesting
(1) Each Town shall have a Constitution, which shall lay out and serve as a foundational document for the government of that Town. Local Executive power may vest in a Mayor, or to other offices within a Town as delegated by a Town's Constitution. Legislative power over local matters is vested in each Town legislature. Town bylaws, as applicable, have force within Town limits and/or on Town residents.
35. Zoning & Development
(1) Towns may create, zone, merge, and delete plots; set and enforce building standards; and approve or deny construction and designs.
36. Property Administration
(1) Towns may evict for cause, conduct auctions, and effectuate transfers of property within Town limits without reliance on federal authorities.
37. Taxation & Fees
(1) Towns shall possess the authority to impose the same property-based fees that the Federal Government is authorized to levy.
(2) By Act of Congress, authority may be delegated to Towns to levy such additional fees, taxes, or fines as Congress may prescribe
38. Local Execution
(1) Towns may create executive offices and services to administer bylaws, issue permits, and enforce compliance, including by municipal fines consistent with due process.
39. Residency & Equality
(1) No person shall face unjust discrimination for residing, or seeking to reside, in a Town. Town residents enjoy equal protection of Commonwealth law.
40. Town Domain
(1) The Town Domain includes, without limitation:
(a) land use, zoning, building, and property administration;
(b) municipal services, public spaces, and events;
(c) local roads, transport, signage, and traffic within Town limits;
(d) public safety and welfare within Town limits;
(e) Town finance, budgets, procurement, and property-based taxes and fees applied to or arising from ownership of town plots;
(f) any reasonable action undertaken to protect Town Domain, provided no such action extends to matters reserved under subsection
(2). Notwithstanding (1) and §§41-46, the Town Domain does not include, and no Town bylaw, office, or fee may regulate, license, or tax: financial services, mergers & acquisitions, antitrust, bankruptcy, accounting, and financial reporting. These remain reserved exclusively to the Commonwealth and are administered by the Department of Commerce, whether or not inside Town limits.
(3) For the purposes of this Part, "property," "plots," and "property administration" mean real property and Town plots only, and do not include shares, securities, business ownership interests, financial instruments, or the incorporation, dissolution, or bankruptcy of business entities, all of which remain reserved under subsection (2).
41. Home-Rule Presumption
(1) Town bylaws governing the Town Domain are valid and supreme within Town limits unless displaced under §§42-46 or reserved to the Commonwealth under §40(2).
42. Non-Interference and Territorial Integrity
(1) Federal departments may not operate, regulate, or enforce within areas under Town Domain unless the Town consents. No part of this section shall infringe on federal authority with respect to criminal law enforcement, election administration, running animal shelters and hospitals, Charter rights under Section 35, and the Department of Commerce's regulation, registration, auditing, licensing, and oversight of the matters reserved under §40(2). In addition, the Commonwealth may not take territory away from a town unless the town passes a bylaw allowing it.
43. Express, Narrow Preemption Only
(1) Department policy or executive order shall not displace a Town bylaw. An Act of Congress may override an existing Town bylaw within the Town Domain when it:
(2) Nothing in §§43-45 shall require an Act of Congress, a court finding, or a compelling-interest justification for the Commonwealth or the Department of Commerce to act within the matters reserved under §40(2).
44. Extraterritorial Effects Test
(1) A Town bylaw falls outside the Town Domain only if the Federal Court, in a special proceeding brought to challenge the bylaw, finds by a preponderance of the evidence that the bylaw imposes a material obligation on non-Town residents outside Town limits, directly regulates inter-town or interstate commerce beyond a de minimis effect, or materially impacts fundamental rights granted to citizens under this Charter.
45. Standard of Review
(1) Any federal action must be a compelling government interest that would give cause to supersede local authority and or bylaws.
46. General Applicability Laws
(1) General Statutes shall apply in Towns and shall be construed to avoid unnecessary intrusion into the Town Domain.
47. Elections
(1) Towns governments shall take the form of a representative democracy, with each town having a Mayor and a Council. Town elections shall be fair and facilitated by Federal departments as provided by law. Towns may set reasonable candidacy and voting requirements consistent with Commonwealth law.
48. Budget & Grants
(1) Towns control their treasuries and budgets. Towns may receive grants from the Federal government by law but are not owed recurring federal appropriations.
49. Judicial Review
(1) Courts may resolve conflicts between Town and federal law consistent with §§40–46 and this Constitution.
50. Continuity
(1) Existing Town constitutions and Town bylaws remain in force unless inconsistent with this Part or other constitutional provisions, or if subsequently repealed and/or amended by the towns.
(2) All federal laws and Department of Commerce regulations governing the matters reserved under §40(2) remain in force within Towns.
51. Grandfather Clause
(1.) All acts of congress passed prior to the date of the passing of this constitutional amendment are grandfathered in for the purposes of §§40(2) and 41-46.
PART IV - Local Government
32. Local Governments
Towns are autonomous local governments of the Commonwealth.
(1) Establishment & Dissolution
A Town may be established or dissolved only by an amendment to this Constitution. No Town may be dissolved by Executive action nor by ordinary statute. The current recognised towns are:
(a) Town of Aventura
(b) Town of Oakridge
(2) Structure
Each Town shall have a Constitution that establishes its basic representative and democratic system of local government. Executive authority may be assigned to a Mayor or another local office as determined by the Town’s Constitution. Legislative authority over local matters rests with the Town’s legislature.
(3) Jurisdiction
The Town Constitution and all Town bylaws must be consistent with this Constitution and federal law. The Town Constitution and bylaws shall apply within the Town's jurisdiction, which shall be the following applicable only within the territory of a Town or the residents of that Town:
- land use, zoning, building standards, and property administration;
- local taxes, fees, and revenues arising from Town property or bylaws;
- local services, permits, and enforcement, including municipal fines;
- business regulation within Town limits (excluding financial services, mergers & acquisitions, antitrust, bankruptcy, accounting, financial reporting);
- public spaces, events, transport, roads, and traffic;
- public safety and local welfare matters (excluding Federal Criminal Code);
- town governance, elections, and offices;
- matters predominantly internal to the Town’s jurisdiction.
The Commonwealth may not remove territory from a town’s jurisdiction without a Town bylaw authorising such removal.
33. Elections
Town elections shall be free and fair, facilitated by Federal departments as provided by law. Towns may set reasonable candidacy and voting requirements consistent with Commonwealth law.
34. Appropriations
Towns retain full authority over their treasuries and budgets. While they may receive federal grants as provided by law, they are not entitled to ongoing or guaranteed federal funding.
(2) All subsequent sections shall be renumbered appropriately.
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