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January 2000
By James Lawlor
Florida: Speedup. Forget about a deliberate and careful
review of the state's growth management act. The review process described in
this space last month has been placed on the fast track by the administration
of Gov. Jeb Bush, chapter executive director Marcia Elder reports.
In late November, at a meeting of regional planning council directors, state
representative George Albright (R-Ocala) outlined a plan to reduce state influence
over the comprehensive planning process. Albright, who chairs the finance and
taxation committee, had already filed a placeholder bill, H.B. 139, that would
strip the state department of community affairs of power to review proposed
changes in local comprehensive plans. Gov. Bush has directed the department
to help Albright with the final drafting of the measure, which is expected to
be introduced later this month.
The new game plan rules out the deliberate review and consultation that should
take place before a wholesale overhaul of the comprehensive planning process
is contemplated, says Elder. Charles Pattison, executive director of 1000 Friends
of Florida, agrees, warning of the unintended adverse impacts that could result
from hasty changes.
Both the chapter and 1000 Friends have expressed concern about the speedup
to the Bush administration.
Wisconsin: In the budget. They do things differently in Wisconsin. It
is not uncommon for the biennial budget bill to contain the sort of substantive
provisions that, in other states, would be the subject of freestanding bills.
Thus, Act 9 of 1999, the state's budget for fiscal years 1999-2001, approved
by Gov. Tommy Thompson in late October, contains a number of planning-related
provisions.
Notable among them, says chapter legislative counsel Richard Lehmann, AICP,
are definitions of "smart growth areas"; a new definition of the comprehensive
plan; procedures for adopting a comprehensive plan; and Section 1606, which
requires that all local government actions affecting land use be consistent
with the comprehensive plan.
The state's budget appropriates a total of $3.5 million over the two years
to help local governments pay for planning activities. Of that sum, $1.5 million
is earmarked for developing comprehensive plan elements. The rest is targeted
to the preparation of transportation elements.
First in line for transportation planning grants, the bill states, are localities
whose plans consider the interests of neighboring or overlapping jurisdictions,
address comprehensive planning goals, identify smart growth areas, provide for
implementation, will be completed within two and a half years, and provide opportunities
for public participation in the planning process.
An informal task force that included chapter representatives developed the
comprehensive plan definition that was a feature of the governor's original
budget bill, Lehmann notes. But the smart growth provisions resulted from negotiations
among such diverse interests as the state home builders chapter, 1000 Friends
of Wisconsin, and various municipal associations.
Arizona: Growing Smarter report. The commission created by the 1998
Growing Smarter Act issued its final report in September. At this writing, however,
it was not clear whether the report, now in the hands of an ad hoc legislative
committee, will result in legislation this year. And, according to Corey Cox,
AICP, the chapter's vice-president for legislative affairs, while the report
contains much to be praised, it also has some troubling aspects that prevent
the chapter from supporting it in its entirety.
The chapter was represented on most of the commission's eight subcommittees,
Cox says, but concentrated its efforts on the subcommittee that reviewed city
and county planning laws. That group recommended that a process be set up to
foster joint development planning between municipalities and counties, that
statutory language covering vested development rights be clarified, and that
consistency be required between city and county plans. The final report includes
only the first of these recommendations.
On the plus side, the report calls for establishing a conservation stewardship
trust to preserve lands with high ecological, scenic, cultural or historic value.
It encourages legislation to help buy development rights for agricultural and
open land, and to encourage infill development. It also urges greater citizen
participation in the planning process.
The report also includes several troubling recommendations, Cox says. One of
those recommendations would require local governments to seek property owners'
consent before limiting their land to open space or agricultural use. Another
would waive charges and expedite takings claims.
It's anyone's guess at this point whether the legislature will accept any of
these recommendations, or whether it will leave the whole issue up to the voters.
The Sierra Club is now pushing a slow-growth voter initiative to be placed on
the November 2000 ballot.
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