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May 1999
By James Lawlor
Virginia: Growth bills falter. As feared, the 1999 session
of the Virginia General Assembly was not a good one for growth management advocates.
Of 15 growth-related bills the chapter tracked, 11 were buried in committee.
Among the bills supported by the chapter was one that would have allowed all
counties to restrict building permits if planned capital improvements were deemed
inadequate.
One bill that made it through, with the chapter's approval, allows local governments
to require special-use permits for certain kinds of residential developmentcluster
development, town centers, and development on steep slopes. The legislature
also extended for another year a legislative committee charged with studying
development patterns. An amendment added two items to the committee's agenda:
conditional zoning and the growth of exactions.
According to the Coalition of High-Growth Counties, centered in northern Virginia,
developer organizations had the upper hand in this session. The coalition promises
to be back, better organized, next year. So will the APA chapter, says legislative
chair Debrarae Karnes. A task force appointed at the chapter's annual meeting
in March will study the need for new tools to manage growth in the state and
report to the chapter leadership by July.
Iowa: Unfinished business. In March, I reported that a legislative commission
had proposed a measure to discourage urban sprawl and encourage coordinated
planning. The proposal became a study bill (SSB 1963), which was approved by
the senate's Small Business, Economic Development and Tourism committee, chaired
by state senator Mary Lundby. Lundby was also the cochair of the legislative
commission.
The study bill was referred to the senate's Local Government committee, which
converted it to a regular bill, SF 293, making a few changes in the process.
Meanwhile, state representative Edward Fallon introduced another growth bill
in the house, HF 340. That measure, which is based on the legislation enacted
in Tennessee last year, caught the eye of the senate Local Government committee,
which then decided to scrap SF 293 and substitute a version of the Fallon bill,
S 3158.
Senator Lundby says she cannot support the new bill because it's more reform
than the legislature is likely to digest, and senate leaders have put it on
the "unfinished business" calendar. At this point, says legislative
committee chair Erik Lundy, the chapter hopes the measure will get some work
over the summer and come up again next year. Meanwhile, he notes, several pending
bills concerning annexation and limits on cities' powers to condemn agricultural
land could have an impact on comprehensive planning legislation.
Illinois: Help on the way? A bill that would help local governments
develop land-use regulations embodying smart growth principles stands a good
chance of reaching the senate floor, chapter legislative committee chair Sharon
Caddigan, AICP, reports.
The measure, an amendment to SB 907, which was a placeholder bill, is sponsored
by state senator Kirk Dillard of Hinsdale. Its genesis was a request by the
Chicago-area Metropolitan Planning Council asking that APA's Growing Smart staff
draft a bill to help local governments prepare growth strategies.
The bill would authorize the state Department of Commerce and Community Affairs
to make technical assistance grants to counties and municipalities for the purpose
of developing and implementing comprehensive plans and other land-use regulations.
It would also authorize the department to prepare model ordinances and technical
publications to aid local governments, and to conduct training programs.
South Carolina: Takings on the table. Legislative committee chair Sharon
Richardson reports that representatives of several organizations, including
the chapter, have been meeting with state Sen.Philip Levantis since January
to discuss smart growth issues.
The chapter is also following two takings bills that are under consideration
by the legislature. One would require compensation for a loss of property value
caused by regulatory actions. The chapter has taken a position formally opposing
the measure. The other bill would authorize agency directors and administrative
law judges to grant variances to resolve takings complaints against state agencies.
At press time, the chapter had not taken an official position on the bill.
Texas: Licensing flap. A bill introduced in March by state senator Chris
Harris has stirred debate in the chapter, president David Gattis, AICP, reports.
SB 1362 would require all municipal planners to be licensed by the state real
estate commission. So far, Gattis says, response has been evenly divided between
those who think planners should be licensed but not by the real estate
commission and those who oppose the whole idea of licensing.
Another issue is vesting. The chapter has joined with the Texas Municipal League
to combat efforts to revive the state's vested rights law. In the last session
of the legislature, Gattis reports, the law was repealed more or less by accident.
The chapter's position is that the repeal should remain on the books because
there were many practical difficulties in implementing the law. Developers,
meanwhile, argue that the law is necessary to ensure that the rules of the game
do not change in mid-project. A bill to reinstate the vesting law, HB 1704,
has been reported out of committee.
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