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November 1999
By James Lawlor
Connecticut: Time to study housing. In June, the legislature
passed a bill establishing a commission to study affordable housing issues.
The commission is to report to the legislature by March, says chapter legislative
chair Jose Giner.
The commission is charged with reviewing the state's statutes affecting affordable
housing, particularly the land-use appeals procedure and the extent to which
local zoning complies with state law encouraging development of low- and moderate-income
housing.
Connecticut first passed an affordable housing law in 1987, notes chapter director
and affordable housing expert Brian Miller, AICP. Miller will represent the
chapter on the 39-member commission. That law, passed during a housing boom,
required municipalities with little affordable housing to require new developments
to include low- and moderate-income units.
In practice, Miller observes, the law created more litigation than housing.
Municipalities had no positive incentive to cooperate, and many of the projects
incorporating low- and moderate-income units were bigger than local planners
envisioned. To reach the law's goal of at least 10 percent affordable housing,
he notes, some towns would have to provide for 25 percent to 50 percent more
new housing, not a likely prospect.
According to Miller, there is wide recognition in the state that the law is
not working as intended. That has led to almost annual attempts in the legislature
to gut the program or abolish it entirely. In addition, court cases over the
past several years have pointed up the conflict between requirements for provision
of low- and moderate-income housing and local governments' planning. For several
years, the chapter has been advocating that a blue ribbon commission be established
to the study the law and, it is hoped, improve it.
In other action, the legislature included a tax credit for rehabilitation of
historic homes in its omnibus tax-reform law. S.B. 1 grants a credit amounting
to 30 percent of qualified rehabilitation expenses; it may be spread over five
years. The credit is targeted to properties located in low-income or economically
distressed areas.
Illinois: Land acquisition program. On July 21, Gov. George Ryan signed
S.B. 1087, authorizing the Illinois Department of Natural Resources to acquire
open space for preservation and recreational purposes, legislative committee
chair Sharon Caddigan, AICP, reports. The law also permits the department to
buy preservation easements from landowners and establishes an Open Lands Loan
Fund in the state treasury to supply funds for local land acquisition programs.
Florida: Pre-session warmup. Preparations for next year's legislative
session are already under way, chapter executive director Marcia Elder notes.
The legislative committee has begun the annual process of drafting a legislative
platform, based on issues it thinks will be before the legislature in 2000.
Some of the matters likely to come up include a review of the local planning
process, with emphasis on the plan amendment approval process; interaction of
transportation and land-use planning; regulation of septic tanks; and school
impact fees.
New York: Change that formula. Upstate chapter legislative chair Steven
Finn reports that the distribution formula for the smart growth demonstration
projects mentioned in last month's column will not be on a strictly geographic
basis after all. At a meeting with representatives of the secretary of state
in mid-September, Finn learned that parceling out of funds would be controlled
by the legislators who originally pushed for smart growth legislation.
Finn says the change may not make much of a difference in practice because
sponsors of the legislation were fairly evenly distributed between upstate and
downstate communities.
California: Big box bill vetoed. As noted in last month's Planning News,
California Gov. Gray Davis vetoed a "big box" bill that passed the
legislature on the final day of its session.
The bill, A.B. 84, would have barred local governments from approving retail
developments of over 100,000 square feet that devote more than 15 percent of
their floor area to food and drug sales. According to chapter legislative representative
Sande George, it was strongly opposed by both the chapter and the California
League of Cities on the ground that it undermined local land-use control.
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