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December 2000
By James Lawlor
North Carolina: Flood hazard act softened. The Flood Hazard
Prevention Act signed into law in August is a lot easier on local governments
than the original draft, reports chapter legislative liaison David Knight. For
instance, S. 1341 allows the lowest habitable floor of structures to be at the
base level of the 100-year floodplain instead of two feet above.
The law also gives local governments priority for federal clean water loans
if they enact a floodplain ordinance. The measure bans salvage yards, solid
waste disposal facilities, and chemical storage and hazardous waste management
facilities in floodplains, although it is silent on the subject of animal confinement
operations.
Also passed by the legislature: S. 1328, which sets a goal of preserving one
million acres of open space over the next 10 years without, however, however,
appropriating funds for acquisition. Finally, the legislature extended for another
year a moratorium on new billboard construction along a 155-mile stretch of
Interstate 40 through the center of the state.
Florida: Watchful waiting. A casualty of the hectic closing
days of this year's legislative session was the Florida Land Title Protection
Act, which would have changed the legal boundary between privately owned uplands
and the publicly owned waterways they border from the high water to the low
water mark. H. 1807 passed the house but died in a senate committee.
Florida Attorney General Bob Butterworth warned in a recent chapter newsletter
that the bill's sponsors are likely to try again next year. Butterworth notes
that the change would amount to a "land grab," placing huge amounts
of now public land in private hands." It would result in the loss of huge
numbers of cypress trees along shorelines, ban fishermen from many lake and
river banks, and effectively prohibit local governments from regulating riparian
development.
Executive director Marcia Elder says the chapter is carefully tracking the progress
of the Governor's Growth Management Study Commission, which is headed by Mel
Martinez, chairman of the Orange County Commission. On October 25, the growth
commission heard presentations on growth management programs in Maryland, New
Jersey, and Austin, Texas. Over 60 planners have volunteered to serve on the
commission's technical advisory committees and to act as resources for the commission,
Elder notes.
New Jersey: Licensing issue. The chapter is concerned about
a bill that passed the state senate early in October, legislative committee
cochair James Girvan, AICP, reports. S.B. 1013 would exempt certain state employees
who practice planning as part of their job from the state's licensing requirement.
A recent interpretation of the civil service law makes licensing mandatory for
such employees, Girvan says. The bill introduced by Sen. Gerald Cardinale was
an attempt to address the problem.
The chapter is concerned that the bill would produce a two-tier system, allowing
certain planners to practice without the benefit of a license, and working against
the best interests of the profession and the general public. Sen. Cardinale
did not respond to the legislative committee's offer to work out a better solution,
Girvan says.
Chapter leaders are urging members to let assembly members know of their concerns.
California: High points. Chapter executive director Sande
George recently provided a scorecard on some the bills the chapter has been
following closely. One bill is S.B. 2095, which the chapter supported Gov. Gray
Davis signed in September. It encourages the use of recycled water for landscaping
and other nonpotable uses.
The governor also signed A.B. 1396, which the chapter supported as well. It
offers one-time fiscal relief for cities, counties, and special taxing districts,
sending a total of $212 million back to the local governments. The governor
vetoed another chapter-backed bill, S.B. 1637, which would have capped local
government contributions to the state's Educational Revenue Augmentation Fund.
In his veto message, Gov. Davis argued that localities were already getting
significant fiscal aid from the state.
Two chapter-supported bills that would have provided funding for
regional planning efforts and grants for general plan updates, A.B. 1968 and
A.B. 2774, failed to pass the assembly. Two bills died on Gov. Davis' desk.
A.B. 83 would have barred local governments from requiring a business license
or imposing a business tax on employees; A.B. 1992 would have permitted the
disclosure of tax information to officials of a charter city.
The governor also vetoed A.B. 2075, which would have allowed business owners
to change logos on on-premises signs without requiring compliance with a new
sign ordinance. A senate amendment would have made it clear that new sign ordinances
could require removal of nonconforming signs--with a proper amortization period.
The sponsors objected that they had not intended the bill to grant that authority.
As a result, the chapter and municipal organizations asked the governor to veto
the bill.
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