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July 2001
By James Lawlor
Kentucky: Smart growth derby. Gov. Paul Patton announced
formation in mid-May of a Smart Growth Task Force to analyze and suggest solutions
for the state's sprawl problem, chapter vice-president Kevin Costello, AICP,
reports.
The 35-member task force has already established committees on
agriculture; wildlife and the environment; planning; transportation and corridor
management; community development and design, and economic development. Former
chapter president Marshall Slagle, FAICP, is a member of the task force, and
other chapter members are serving on committees.
At the press conference announcing the task force, Gov. Patton
noted that Kentucky grew 27 percent faster than the national average between
1980 and 1997. USA Today's sprawl index rates the Louisville metro area
ninth among cities of comparable size in excessive use of land, followed by
Lexington and the northern Kentucky-Cincinnati metro area. "We aren't just
growing fast, we're growing inefficiently," the governor said. "This
issue can't wait another year."
In the session just ended, Kentucky legislators made continuing
education mandatory for both professional planners and citizen planners, Costello
says. H.B. 55, signed by the governor March 15, requires planning staff to complete
eight hours of training within four months of employment; members of planning
commissions and boards of adjustment must complete four hours of training within
four months of appointment.
Citizen planners must attend an additional eight hours of training
within two years, and professional planners must complete at least 16 hours.
The chapter supported the legislation, Costello says.
Florida: Not much left. By the time the legislative session
ended just before midnight May 4, most of the growth management reform package
proposed by Gov. Jeb Bush and members of the house was all but dead, chapter
executive director Marcia Elder reports. Both the house and senate passed growth
management bills, but in the end the two bodies could not resolve the differences
between them.
Two elements of the package, relating to a rural land stewardship
pilot project and exemptions to the development of regional impact process,
did pass as part of other bills. Interests that had lobbied unsuccessfully last
year for exemptions from the DRI process for airports, marinas, and petroleum
storage facilities got some of their wishes this year, Elder says. Exemptions
for airports and petroleum storage were added to the house and senate transportation
bills, along with a proposal to ease billboard regulation.
In addition, a proposal by a major landowner in the Florida Panhandle
to eliminate DRI review of certain large-scale developments in rural areas passed
the senate by a voice vote and was then adopted unanimously by the house. The
chapter had opposed lifting the DRI threshold on the ground that it was bad
public policy to enact special-interest legislation to benefit one large developer.
Texas: Whew! A bill that would have limited cities' ability
to rezone property passed the senate but died in a house committee, reports
chapter legislative tracker David Gattis, AICP. S.B. 1398, which was opposed
by the chapter, would have required owner consent before municipalities could
make a zoning change that would reduce the value of a parcel by more than 25
percent.
Also killed: H.B. 25, which would have removed the municipal exemption
from the requirements of the Private Real Property Rights Preservation Act.
The result would have been to subject all municipal actions to takings assessments.
The legislature did, however, pass a bill limiting a municipality's right
to impose a development moratorium. Under S.B. 980, local officials must schedule
two public hearings on the moratorium and issue written findings that the moratorium
is required because of a shortage of public services. The bill also limits moratoriums
to 120 days.
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