The term
city limits (or
city boundary) refers to the defined
boundary or
border of a
city. The terms
town limits and
village limits mean the same as city limits, but apply to
towns and
villages. Similarly, the term
corporate limits is a legal name that refers to the boundaries of
municipal corporations. The limits of a municipality may be expanded through
annexation.
United States of America
In the
United States, such limits are usually formally described in a state or territorial law (or an appropriate regulation) as being under the control of the
municipal corporation or
agency that constitutes the
city government. It is customary to indicate city limits with the posting of signs on major
freeways,
highways, and
arterial roads.
Property which within city limits is subject to city
taxation and city
regulation, and expects
city services. Areas outside of any city's limits are considered to be
unincorporated, and in most
U.S. states they are by default regulated and taxed by the
county. In others, areas outside of city limits fall within another type of
local government, such as the
civil township (a division of a county). Cities and towns may have
extraterritorial jurisdiction beyond their limits, typically for
zoning purposes. The distance this extends varies based on the population or area of the city, or which "class" it is considered to be under state law.
Home rule within a city's limit is usually exercised by the
mayor (
executive branch) and
city council (
legislative branch). Home rule outside the city limits is usually exercised by the
county commission (which is often both legislative and executive), or the township's
board of supervisors. Even without home rule, the county, as a unit of
state government, also has certain powers and responsibilities even within the limits of its cities, including the
sheriff that performs
evictions, runs the county
jail that all city and county
police departments take
arrested persons to, and guards the
courthouse for the county's
state court even though it is usually within the city limit of the
county seat.
Elections and
health departments are also common county responsibilities which include all cities. (City residents still pay some county taxes for these reasons.)
If a city chooses to have its own
emergency services, they only have
jurisdiction within the city limits, except for
mutual aid (typically among
fire departments) in case of
disaster.
Telephone companies also must keep track of changing city limits to ensure that calls to
9-1-1 are routed to the appropriate
public-safety answering point, if the city operates a PSAP separate from the county. Calls from
mobile phones are usually routed based on the location of the
base station rather than the
calling party, so these (along with
landline calls to non-
emergency telephone numbers) must be handled manually by the
telephone operator or
dispatcher, determining whether the caller or incident is within a particular city limit or not so that the proper authorities may be sent.
City limits may extend into more than one county, which can complicate certain matters of policing and taxation. (For example,
sales tax revenue collected in a city by one county may not be spent in another part of the city outside of that county.) Where a city merges its government with that of its county to become a
consolidated city-county, the city limits are usually considered to be expanded to occupy all of the previously-unincorporated area of the county, while other existing municipalities continue to exist but are permanently locked into their city limits without the possibility of annexation (except possibly into a neighboring county). An
independent city's limits separate it from being in any county at all. Similarly, cities and towns may or may not be considered part of the township[s] they are in.
City, town, and village limits are not usually coterminous with post office locations or
ZIP codes, and the
USPS even considers some places to be "unacceptable" for use on mail. (For example, parts of
Sandy Springs within its city limit but outside of 30328 must use "
Atlanta, GA" instead.)
School districts and other
special-purpose districts may be overlaid on cities, or cities may choose to have their own — however, these are often under other authorities.
Town limits were often a
radius from a
train depot, and several still remain this way.
United Kingdom
In the
UK, city boundaries are more difficult to define, since British cities are defined as any town - regardless of size - that has been granted
letters patent. In smaller cities such as
Wells (pop. approx. 10,000) or
Gloucester (pop. approx. 100,000) the boundary will be that governed by the
city council. In the case of larger cities such as
Birmingham (pop. approx. 1,000,000), a specific
metropolitan borough will make the definition.
Although British city boundaries are often important for defining local services such as refuse collection and planning (zoning), they play little or no role in law enforcement, schools, libraries or hospitals. Police jurisdiction and local services are generally defined by
county boundaries, and people in one county may usually decide to use hospitals, libraries and schools in another without incurring any fees.
There is no concept of local taxation in the UK, other than minor differences between
Northern Ireland,
Scotland and
England and Wales. Local government councils derive their income from
council tax and
business rates, taxes based on the values of buildings.
Planning (zoning) law around British cities is generally determined by
green belt laws, which prevent building on the countryside immediately surrounding large and medium-sized towns and cities.
Category:Local governmentCategory:CityCategory:Bordersid:Batas kotasimple:City limits