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40 <br />4M <br />r <br />a <br />restrictive view, a county would not have the home rule power to fund an <br />t appropriate countywide service or improvement by the imposition of <br />special assessments within municipal areas without municipal consent <br />regardless of preemption of municipal authority. See § 403.706(1), Fla. <br />Stat. (grants to counties, with certain exceptions, the power to provide for <br />a solid waste disposal facility countywide). Also, section 335.04(1)(a) <br />constitutes an assignment of responsibility by the state of a transportation <br />function to the County. <br />The enumerated power to create a municipal service benefit unit serves a distinct <br />purpose and function in that it is a mechanism by which a county can secure <br />municipal consent for the Imposition of assessments for those services and <br />improvements for which no municipal preemption has occurred and thereby <br />eliminate the potential opting -out by a municipality of the established countywide <br />service or program by the adoption of an inconsistent municipal ordinance. <br />5,7 DEVELOPMENT OF FUNDING ALTERNATIVES <br />Based on the evaluation of funding alternatives, the following chart (Figure 6) <br />provides a summary of the potential revenue sources and will serve as the basis <br />for the allocation of project costs to their respective beneficiary groups. The <br />subsequent correlation of beneficiary groups to specific revenue sources, based <br />on the results of the benefits analysis, is developed in Section 6.0. <br />'chapter 8$•130, Laws of Florida, the Solid Waste Management Act of 1988, amending the provisions of section <br />403,706(1), Florida 5latutes. included the ad valorem assessment provisions of section 197 3632. <br />