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May 2001
By James Lawlor
Florida: Slow going. Almost halfway through the nine-week
legislative session, no concrete proposals have been offered for reforming the
state's growth management laws, chapter executive director Marcia Elder reports.
A bill addressing full-cost accounting and school facilitiestwo of Gov. Jeb
Bush's prioritieshas gone through several revisions while the governor's office
considers input from various interest groups.
Meanwhile, the senate's Comprehensive Planning Committee has
delayed releasing a bill of its own, Elder says. On the house side, the Local
Government Committee has been working on a measure that will tackle a number
of planning issues not addressed by the governor's proposal, raising the likelihood
of horse trading later in the session.
The delay in releasing definitive proposals also seems to have
delayed the chapter's formal response to the Growth Management Study Commission's
report. As of late March, a promised position paper had not yet materialized.
As noted here last month, the chapter supports some of the proposals that have
been put forth, but is troubled by others, particularly the de-emphasis of the
state comprehensive plan.
Utah: Beyond annexation. Although the chapter's big
victory in the legislative session was annexation law reform, that's not all
the good news, says legislative chair Wilf Sommerkorn, AICP. He recently sent
along a list of 14 other successful bills of interest to planners.
The list includes H.B. 112, which is aimed at discouraging
SLAPP suits (strategic lawsuits against public participation); H.B.71, which
provides $100,000 to help rural counties prepare general plans; S.B. 98, which
exempts telecommunications facilities from local subdivision regulations; and
S.B. 158, which requires local governments to treat manufactured home subdivisions
in the same way as conventional subdivisions.
New Mexico: Takings bill defeated. The chapter, working
with the New Mexico Municipal League, the New Mexico Association of Counties,
and environmental groups helped to defeat H.B. 618, which would have required
landowners to be compensated if a regulatory program reduced the value of their
property by 25 percent or more. According to chapter vice-president Lora Lucero,
AICP, the bill specifically included land-use planning and zoning in the category
of regulatory programs.
The chapter also fended off another attempt to weaken the state's
subdivision law. H.B. 77 would have created a two-lot loophole and would have
permitted the oil and gas industry to get around local regulations. At the same
time, H.B. 464, which would have required municipalities that adopt comprehensive
plans to ensure that their land-use regulations and decisions are consistent
with the plan, died in the house Judiciary Committee.
Two joint house-senate "memorials" are also of interest.
One such measure, H.J.M. 15, requests that state universities develop outreach
programs to aid local governments with land-use planning and zoning. No money
is appropriated for the project, however. Another memorial, H.J.M. 41, requests
the state's Local Government Division to inventory municipal and county land-use
planning procedures and enforcement capabilities. Lucero says the division plans
to hire a summer intern to work on the inventory.
Colorado: Growth management advances. S.B. 148, the
growth management bill favored by the chapter, passed the senate March 23 and
has been introduced in the house, reports chapter legislative cochair Elizabeth
Telford, AICP. The bill's sponsor, Sen. Ed Perlmutter, addressed a meeting of
the Colorado Forum in mid-March, where he urged interest groups to support the
measure. Telford says Perlmutter is concerned that some environmental groups
do not think the bill is "green" enough.
Texas: Flurry of bills. Even the prospect of dealing
with legislative redistricting has not reduced legislators' enthusiasm. By March
9, the deadline for filing, 5,539 bills had been introduced, reports the chapter's
immediate past president, David Gattis, AICP.
According to Gattis, the chapter is tracking almost 150 bills. Among them:
H.B. 25, which would remove the current municipal exemption from the state's
property rights preservation law, and subject all municipal actions to takings
assessments; H.B. 1030, which would require the state to establish a program
to identify and preserve abandoned cemeteries; H.B. 2117, which would limit
development moratoriums to 120 days; S.B. 243, a compromise impact fee bill
worked out by the Texas Municipal League and the Texas Association of Builders;
and H.B. 984, which would exempt religious organizations from subdivision planning
requirements.
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