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December 1999
By James Lawlor
Massachusetts: Two to watch. Two important bills, concerning
community development and community preservation, are advancing through the
legislature, reports Lyn Billman-Golemme, AICP, vice-president for legislation
and policy.
In October, the House-Senate Natural Resources and Agriculture Committee unanimously
approved the Sustainable Development Act and referred it to the ways and means
committees of both houses. The bill is the product of a working group, chaired
by state representative Douglas Petersen and state senator Marc Pacheco, that
has been meeting since February. The chapter was represented in the working
group.
The measure's stated purpose is to encourage development that promotes safe,
healthy, and livable communities; enhances the environment; and preserves natural
resources. The bill calls for government agencies to coordinate land-use planning
with the private sector, promote alternatives to low-density development, and
address planning in a comprehensive way.
The act would make $35 million available to communities to develop new comprehensive
plans or to revise their old ones in accordance with the principles of the sustainable
development act. Plans must be developed within five years. Regional planning
agencies would be required to develop regional plans with input from municipalities.
State agencies would be required to develop spending plans that are consistent
with local and regional plans.
The Community Preservation Act is designed to provide funding for acquiring
and preserving open space, historic structures and landscapes, and low- and
moderate-income housing. Funding mechanisms in the senate version, passed in
September, are a local real estate transfer tax and a property tax surcharge.
The house bill, passed in early November, opts for a combination of the transfer
tax, park fee increases, and a special fee on certain court filings. The differences
will have to be ironed out in a conference committee.
Florida: Opinion survey. The Florida Department of Community Affairs
is surveying various interest groupsincluding the APA chapterabout
the comprehensive planning process, growth management, and future planning.
Participants in the survey, says chapter executive director Marcia Elder, include
land-use professionals, local elected officials, citizen activists, environmentalists,
and developers.
Elder notes that the department's new secretary, Steven Seibert, has made revision
of the growth management process a priority. He had intended to propose changes
to the legislature next spring, but Gov. Jeb Bush's administration decided to
study the issues longer and seek public input on current and projected policies.
As a result, the department's legislative priorities this year will shift to
emergency management and the state building code.
Meanwhile, says Elder, the chapter will be watching for the final report being
compiled by the senate's Comprehensive Planning Committee. An interim report
issued by the committee in September recommended consolidating DCA's preliminary
review period, during which the department decides whether a comprehensive plan
amendment should be reviewed, with the 30-day state and regional agency comment
period.
The report also recommended that local governments be given the option of exempting
certain areas from comprehensive plan amendment review; such areas might include
urban infill and redevelopment areas, built-out areas, and areas covered by
sector plans.
Washington: License fees lowered. Initiative 695, approved last month
by state voters, reduces the license plate fee for motor vehicles and requires
voter approval for increases. The chapter's executive committee voted in September
to actively oppose the initiative, charging that it would negatively affect
funding for state and local transportation programs. The measure was also opposed
by such corporations as Boeing and Microsoft, the state's Democratic Party,
environmental organizations, and many public officials.
The initiative limits license tag fees to $30; in contrast, the current fees
amount to 2.2 percent of the vehicle's value and can amount to several hundred
dollars per year.
Data collected by the chapter indicated that over the next two years the initiative
could mean a loss of $428 million to local transit districts, $143 million in
highway funding, and $151 million for ferry operations and capital construction
funding. Other losers will be the state air pollution control account and sales
tax equalization accounts that help municipal and county government.
Maryland: Code changes proposed. A task force appointed by Gov. Parris
Glendening has spent the past several months examining building codes and development
regulations with an eye to identifying changes that would encourage infill development
and reuse of older buildings. The group has developed several draft recommendations,
which will be forwarded to the governor after citizens have had a chance to
examine and comment on them.
The task force is composed of planners, architects, developers, county building
code officials, and elected county and municipal officials. One subcommittee
focused on reform of building codes, and the other studied development regulations.
Among the draft recommendations is one calling for an integrated state rehabilitation
code that would separate rehabilitation requirements from those for new construction.
The same recommendation would provide a tiered system of code compliance requirements
that would vary in strictness according to the amount and complexity of work
undertaken. The recommendation is based on the Nationally Applicable Recommended
Rehabilitation Provisions developed under the aegis of HUD, with the aid of
the National Association of Home Builders.
Another proposal would authorize local governments to enact a "prior use"
ordinance that allows property owners to deviate from some zoning requirements
in certain redevelopment projects. The task force is also developing a set of
smart growth models and principles to aid local governments in drafting regulations
that foster compact development. The models would include such tools as a mixed-use
overlay zone and infill development standards.
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