Oklahoma Code § 11-22-105.1

Title 11. Cities And Towns: Displacing private company providing solid waste
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collection service - Notice and hearing - Acquisition by purchase,

donation, or condemnation - Judicial review of report of
commissioners.
A.  Pursuant to Section 2-10-102 of Title 27A of the Oklahoma
Statutes, it is the policy of this state to regulate the management
of solid waste in order to protect the public health, safety and
welfare.  For this purpose and for purposes of this section, the
management of solid waste shall be a matter of statewide interest.
B.  No municipality shall displace or pass an ordinance to
displace a private company providing solid waste service without
first:
1.  Holding at least one public hearing seeking comment on the
advisability of the municipality providing such service;
2.  Providing at least forty-five (45) days written notice of
the hearing, delivered by first-class mail to all private solid
waste companies which provide service in the municipality; and
3.  Providing public notice of the hearing.
Following the final public hearing held pursuant to this section,
but in no event longer than one (1) year after the date of the
hearing, if the municipality elects to provide such solid waste
services and displace the private solid waste services company, the
municipality shall purchase by condemnation the private solid waste
services as set forth in this section.
C.  A municipality shall have the authority to acquire by
purchase, donation, or condemnation such interests in any private
company providing solid waste services operating within the limits
of the municipality.  The municipality shall give the owner of the
displaced private solid waste company the opportunity to sell the
displaced private solid waste services to the municipality at an
agreed upon or negotiated price or the municipality may acquire the
business by condemnation as provided in this section.
D.  If the municipality seeks to condemn the displaced private
solid waste services, the district judge of the county in which the
displaced services are located, upon petition of either party, shall
direct the sheriff of the county to summon three disinterested
freeholders, to be selected by the judge as commissioners, and who
shall not have a conflict of interest.  The commissioners shall be
sworn to perform their duties impartially and justly.  The
commissioners shall inspect the company and the displaced services
and consider the injury which the owner may sustain by reason of the
condemnation, and they shall assess the just compensation to which
the owner is entitled.  The commissioners shall make a report in
writing to the clerk of the court, setting forth the quantity,
boundaries, and just compensation for the property or services
taken, and amount of injury done to the business, either directly or
indirectly, which they assess to the owner.  The report shall be
filed and recorded by the clerk.

E.  Immediately upon payment to the clerk of the court of the
sum assessed by the commissioners, the municipality shall be
authorized to provide solid waste services in the area serviced by
the owner of the business.  If the owner refuses to cease providing
the solid waste services pursuant to this section, the court shall
issue an order, upon proof, enjoining the owner from providing the
solid waste services in the areas subject to such condemnation.
F.  The report of the commissioners may be reviewed by the
district court, on written exceptions filed by either party in the
clerk's office within thirty (30) days after the filing of the
report.  The court, after a hearing, shall make such order as right
and justice may require, either by confirmation, rejection, or by
ordering a new appraisement on good cause shown.  In the event a new
appraisement is ordered, the municipality shall have the continuing
right of possession obtained under the first appraisal, unless and
until its right to condemn has finally been determined otherwise.
Either party may, within sixty (60) days after the filing of such
report, file with the clerk a written demand for a trial by jury, in
which case the amount of damages shall be assessed by a jury, and
the trial shall be conducted and judgment entered in the same manner
as civil actions in the district court.  If the party demanding the
trial does not recover a verdict more favorable to such party than
the assessment of the commissioners, all costs in the district court
shall be taxed against such party.  If, after the filing of
exceptions to the report of commissioners as provided in this
section, the municipality shall fail to establish its right to
condemn such business, the owner shall be restored to possession of
the business, or part thereof, and the municipality shall pay the
owner for any damages sustained through the occupation by the
municipality.  If such damages cannot be determined by amicable
settlement, the damages shall be determined by jury trial in the
same proceedings.
G.  Either party aggrieved may appeal to the Supreme Court from
the decision of the district court on exceptions to the report of
commissioners, or jury trial.  The review or appeal shall not delay
the work of the municipality in question if the award of
commissioners, or jury, as the case may be, has been deposited with
the clerk for such owner.  In no case shall the municipality be
liable for the costs on the review or appeal unless the owner of the
business shall be adjudged entitled, upon either review or appeal,
to a greater amount of damages than was awarded by the
commissioners.  The municipality shall in all cases pay the cost of
the commissioners' fees and expenses, for their services, as
determined and ordered paid by the judge of the district court in
which such case is pending.  However, poundage fees and condemnation
fees shall only be paid by the municipality in the event of appeal
resulting in a jury verdict in excess of the commissioners' award.

Under no circumstances shall any poundage fees or condemnation fees
be assessed against the recipient of the award.  In case of review
or appeal, a certified copy of the final order or judgment shall be
transmitted by the clerk of the court to the county clerk and be
filed.
H.  As used in this section:
1.  "Displace" or "displacement" means a municipality's
provision of a service which prohibits a private company from
providing the same service and which the company is providing at the
time the decision to displace is made.  Displace or displacement
does not mean:
a. competition between the municipality and private
companies for individual contracts,
b. situations where a municipality, at the end of a
contract with a private company, does not renew the
contract and either awards the contract to another
private company, or, decides to provide for such
services itself,
c. situations where action is taken against the private
company because the company has acted in a manner
threatening to the public health, safety and welfare
of the citizens of the municipality or resulting in a
substantial public nuisance,
d. situations where action is taken against the private
company because the company has materially breached
its contract with the municipality, or
e. entering into a contract with a private company to
provide solid waste collection so long as the contract
is not entered into pursuant to an ordinance which
displaces or authorizes the displacement of another
private company providing solid waste collection;
2.  "Just compensation" means the value of the business taken,
and in addition, any injury to any part of the business not taken.
Any special and direct benefits to the part of the business not
taken may be offset only against any injury to the business not
taken.  If only a part of the business is taken, just compensation
shall be ascertained by determining the difference between the fair
market value of the whole business immediately before the taking and
the fair market value of that portion left remaining immediately
after the taking; and
3.  "Solid waste" means all putrescible and nonputrescible
refuse in solid, semisolid, or liquid form including, but not
limited to, garbage, rubbish, ashes or incinerator residue, street
refuse, dead animals, demolition wastes, construction wastes,
roofing material, solid or semisolid commercial and industrial
wastes including explosives, biomedical wastes, chemical wastes,
herbicide and pesticide wastes, organics, scrap materials, and

materials that are destined for recycling, reuse, conversion, or
processing, whether source separated or not.

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