|
May 2000
By James Lawlor
Washington: Tax cap headaches. A state trial court judge
ruled in mid-March that I 695, an initiative passed by voters last November,
was unconstitutional, reports legislative cochair Paul Stewart, AICP. The measure
would have capped the state automobile excise tax at $30 per year and given
voters the power to disapprove proposed increases in state and local taxes and
fees.
As of late March, the legislature was still mired in a special session called
because the two houses could not agree on a budget that would accommodate the
$750 million revenue loss caused by the excise tax cap. On March 22, the house
of representatives did manage to pass a bipartisan budget proposal. But the
bipartisanship may be little more than a fig leaf, according to state senator
Valoria Loveland (D-Pasco).
Loveland was quoted as saying that the ink was barely dry on the houses
budget proposal before members began lobbying to save their pet projects. Loveland
and other senate Democrats are unhappy that the house plan uses more than $40
million in sales tax revenues from the general fund to pay for transportation
projects. They would prefer to take money from the states $1.3 billion
reserve fund.
The state supreme court is scheduled to hear an appeal of the I 695 ruling
in June. But legislators say they are committed to keeping the excise tax cap,
no matter how the court rules. There is considerably less sentiment for saving
the voter approval proviso for new taxes and fees, however.
New Mexico: The fun isnt over. The state constitution limits the
length of the legislative session in even-numbered years to 30 days. That restriction
has resulted in many special sessions. This year is no exception. Following
his veto of the budget bill, Gov. Gary Johnson called a special session to begin
in late March.
In addition to the budget bill, lawmakers in the special session are expected
once again to consider the religious freedom restoration act, which failed to
pass during the regular session. Similar legislation has been used in other
states, to attack local regulations governing location of religious buildings.
During the regular session, chapter vice-president Lora Lucero reports, the
chapter and its allies managed to get a resolution passed urging the state transportation
department to consider aesthetic elements when building or upgrading state highways.
The chapter also helped to kill companion takings bills, a measure that would
have weakened the subdivision law, and two bills that would have affected municipalities
extraterritorial planning authority.
The subdivision bill would have made it easier to create two-parcel subdivisions
easier and barred local governments from merging subdivided lots without an
owners consent. The two takings bills would have required landowners to
be compensated for any government action that reduced the value of land by 25
percent or more.
The planning bills would have granted extraterritorial residents the right
to vote in municipal elections, and would have barred municipal governments
from engaging in extraterritorial planning unless they had a comprehensive plan
in place.
New York Metro: Zoning reform in the works. The chapter's zoning committee,
chaired by Carol Rosenthal, is studying a proposal for a major zoning revision.
The proposal is expected to reach the city council by the end of the summer,
says chapter president Mitchell Silver, AICP.
Among other things, the proposed revision would affect the assembly of land
by preventing floor area from being transferred across zoning district boundaries.
It would also limit building height and require that towers cover a minimum
of one-third of the lot. Some planners have questioned whether these restrictions
would result in unduly "blocky" buildings, Silver says.
Questions have also been raised about criteria for granting special permits
to project that demonstrate "design excellence," and about the extent
of the proposed rules for medium-density residential districts, he says.
|