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March 1999
By James Lawlor
Iowa: Land-use report released. The Commission on Urban
Planning, Growth Management of Cities, and Protection of Farmland, appointed
by the state legislature in 1997 to study land-use issues, delivered its final
report and proposal for new legislation in January. The commission's 21 members
represented a cross section of citizens, local and state government bodies,
and interest groups, APA chapter president Susan Cosner says.
According to the report, the legislative proposal is intended to discourage
urban sprawl defined as low-density development on the fringes of cities that
is badly planned, uses land suitable for farming or open space, creates dependency
on automobiles, and is designed without regard to its surroundings.
Thus, the proposal includes provisions for encouraging infill development (by
raising maximum densities and allowing mixed use development, for instance)
and for redeveloping existing urban sites. The proposal also calls for establishing
urban growth areas around each city, and planned growth areas in unincorporated
parts of the counties.
The core of the legislative proposal is a requirement that each local government
adopt a "strategic development plan." The plans would be approved
by a new state board, called the Urban Planning, Growth Management of Cities,
and Farmland and Natural Area Protection of Farmland Board.
Six members of the board would represent cities and counties, with two members
coming from smaller municipalities. One member would represent the general public.
The board would also have the power to approve annexations - and, most important,
adjudicate disputes among local governments regarding their required strategic
development plans.
Iowa State University, which has been performing land-use inventories under
contract to the commission, would continue to do so under the new legislation.
The university would also be asked to track the rate of conversion of farmland
to other uses. Also, the proposal calls for state agencies to coordinate their
planning with regional and local plans.
In addition, the state would be required to update land-use inventories and
establish farmland preservation programs. All municipal annexation would be
subject to state review, and counties would be required to enact zoning codes
and to participate in joint city-county planning.
The next step, says Cosner, is probably the introduction of a bill by commission
cochair senator Mary Lundby calling for a study of specific implementing legislation.
The election of Iowa's new governor, Democrat Thomas Vilsack, has put Republicans
in a wary mood, Cosner says. Although Republicans control both houses of the
legislature, they are still fearful of enacting planning legislation that is
too far out in front of their constituents.
North Carolina: The right time? Legislative chair Tim Gauss, AICP, reports
that the chapter's legislative committee has established a working group to
consider drafting and introducing statewide planning legislation in the current
session. He notes that a number of southeastern states have recently addressed
the issue of statewide comprehensive planning. In addition, Gov. Hunt, who has
only two years left in his final term, has expressed interest in several of
the topics that could be included in a state plan.
Those issues include farmland preservation on the fringes of metropolitan areas,
alternatives to tobacco farming, and sprawl development in general. Gauss notes
that several groups, including the Sierra Club and a loose coalition of organizations
called the North Carolina Sprawl Network, have been working on growth management
issues for some time. The chapter, working with such groups, has a good chance
to get legislation enacted, or at least to establish a study commission, he
says.
A farmland preservation law is already on the books. But David Knight, the
chapter's representative at the state capital, notes that until last year no
money had been appropriated for buying at-risk farmland. In the last session,
the legislature appropriated $250,000. Gauss says the legislative committee
is likely to recommend other tools, such as urban growth boundaries and purchase
and transfer of development rights.
Georgia: Taking stock. Ten years after the passage of Georgia's comprehensive
planning act, a blue ribbon advisory committee appointed by the state Department
of Community Affairs has issued an assessment. The assessment was undertaken
at the suggestion of the APA chapter, says past president William Ross, who
was a member of the committee. The committee's recommendations have been approved
by the department and passed on to the office of Gov. Roy Barnes.
The good news, according to the committee's report, is that most counties and
municipalities in Georgia have comprehensive plans. But, says Ross, they do
not always make land-use decisions in accordance with those plans. Moreover,
there is no statutory framework to guide jurisdictions through the nuts and
bolts of establishing land-use controls.
The committee's long list of recommendations can be boiled down to a few simple
themes, Ross says. The committee recommended that counties and municipalities
be required to plan, be required to follow the plans, and have a formalized
process for amending the plans. To give local governments a strong incentive
to plan, the committee recommended that all state project funding, including
transportation funding, be tied to the creation and implementation of a comprehensive
plan.
Ross says that while Gov. Barnes appears to be strongly interested in better
comprehensive planning, he is likely to postpone action on the committee's recommendations
until next year. This session of the legislature will probably be fully occupied
with enacting the governor's proposal for a strong regional transportation authority
for the Atlanta metropolitan area, Ross says.
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