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August 1999
By James Lawlor
Pennsylvania: Wish list. More than a dozen planning code
amendments have been dropped into the legislative hopper, past chapter president
Michael Kaiser, AICP, reports. Kaiser chairs a subcommittee that is studying
growth management issues for the chapter. The challenge, he adds, is to be sure
that any planning law update incorporates policies that are important to the
chapter.
Among those policies: mandatory consistency between zoning and comprehensive
plans, consistency among various levels of government, incentives for intergovernmental
cooperation, state authorization of techniques such as transfer of development
rights and traditional neighborhood development, and concurrency of development
and supporting infrastructure. APA Growing Smart coordinator Stuart Meck, AICP,
is working with the subcommittee to draft legislative language embodying these
concepts.
This year, says chapter legislative committee chair Fred Wilder, AICP, legislators
are showing more interest in planning issues than in the past. In large part,
he believes, they are responding to citizen concern over sprawl and a lack of
effective tools to deal with it. Local governments in Pennsylvania lack legal
authority to manage growth and have limited authority to impose impact fees.
The main measure under consideration is S.B. 300, which would authorize intergovernmental
planning cooperation, adequate public facilities requirements, and transfer
of development rights, among other provisions. In addition, a package of bills
has been introduced in the house (H.B 13, 14, and 15). The chapter is concerned
because the senate bill does not clearly assign planning responsibility to the
various levels of local government, does not clarify the status of comprehensive
plans, and does not include a mechanism for ensuring concurrency between development
and infrastructure.
Another shortcoming, Wilder says, is the bill's lack of support for training
planning commissioners and zoning board members. The chapter believes that legislators
should earmark at least a dollar a year per state resident to support local
planning. That would come to $11.8 million, 10 times more than current state
support for planning.
The chapter plans to be ready with its own proposals for new legislative language
by the time the legislature returns from its summer hiatus in September. It
also plans to hold an educational session for legislators sometime during the
month, Wilder says.
Massachusetts: Trying again. An advisory committee representing a number
of interest groups, including the chapter, is working with legislators to craft
revised smart growth legislation, reports Lyn Billman-Golemme, AICP, vice-president
for legislation and policy. The bill, S. 987, is an outgrowth of the "Growing
Smart" bills introduced in previous sessions, she says.
The legislation contemplated by the committee, which includes representatives
from the Massachusetts Municipal Association, associations of planning directors
and planning boards, realtors, and home builders, would help communities to
develop comprehensive plans, provide technical assistance, and offer financial
incentives for smart growth.
The chapter also is tracking a group of bills sponsored by Sen. Bruce Tarr
that would authorize cities and towns to permit cluster development and planned
unit developments by right. The chapter endorses the concept as long as the
state law is not overly prescriptive, Billman-Golemme says.
Texas: Vesting bill signed. Before hitting the presidential campaign
trail, Gov. George W. Bush signed several planning-related bills, reports chapter
president David Gattis, AICP. The measures include: H.B. 1704, which readopts
vesting provisions for development projects; S.B. 138, the religious freedom
act; and S.B. 89, which makes substantial modifications to code provisions regarding
annexation. The vesting and religious freedom legislation has been discussed
in previous columns.
The annexation law requires cities to adopt three-year annexation plans. Land
not annexed within that time may not be annexed for another five years. All
city services must be provided within 30 months of annexation. In addition,
says Gattis, the law limits "flagpole" annexations by prohibiting
annexations of strips of land that are less than 1,000 feet wide.
Gov. Bush also vetoed two planning-related bills. H.B. 2045, which the chapter
opposed, would have amended the state's impact fee law to provide a 50 percent
credit for taxes and user fees imposed to pay for capital improvements. Thus,
a local government could never collect more than half of the maximum fee, Gattis
notes. Both the chapter and the Texas Municipal League opposed the bill, reasoning
that the tax credit outweighed the positive aspects of the bill.
The chapter had taken no position on the other vetoed bill, H.B. 247. It would
have authorized cities to use neighborhood associations' volunteers to spot
health and safety violations visible without entering private property.
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