|
October 2001
By James Lawlor
Oregon: Dealing with Measure 7. In July, just before the
legislature adjourned, the house Committee on Land Use and Regulatory Fairness
held four hearings on a bill, H.B. 3998, that would require a vote on Measure
7, the regulatory takings initiative approved by the voters last November. Next
year is an off year for the legislature, says chapter newsletter editor Karl
Mawson, AICP, so the committee should have ample time to consider input from
interested parties.
Measure 7, which was opposed by the chapter, requires landowners
to be compensated if the value of their property is reduced by a state or local
law or regulation. The measure specifically cites regulations related to protecting
wildlife habitat, open space, wetlands, and historical and archeological resources,
along with regulations aimed at providing low-income housing. Several cities
and counties promptly challenged the constitutionality of Measure 7, and on
February 22, a trial court issued an injunction barring it from going into effect.
That case is currently on appeal to the Oregon Supreme Court.
H.B. 3998 would put a new initiative before voters. The substitute
measure would raise the bar for compensation. A regulation would have to lessen
the value of a property by at least 25 percent. Also, landowners would not be
eligible for compensation for restrictions imposed before they bought the property.
Compensation could be in the form of cash, income tax credits, property tax
abatements, development rights transfers, land swaps, or density bonuses. The
bill calls for establishment of a compensation board to rule on claims.
As of late August, the chapter had not taken a formal position
on H.B. 3998. Possible positions, says Mawson, include offering conditions to
be attached to implementing legislation or urging an alternative initiative
that would address the economic benefits landowners derive from land-use regulation.
Montana: Exactions bill defeated. A bill that would have
put onerous restrictions on local government exactions is dead, thanks to the
efforts of the Montana Association of Planners. H.B. 587 would have established
detailed nexus and proportionality specifications for exactions imposed in connection
with subdivision approvals.
According to MAP legislative committee chair Robert Horne, AICP,
the bill, which was pushed by home building and real estate interests, broadly
defined "exactions" to include fees, payments, conditions, easements,
and property dedications. One provision required the governing body to issue
a written determination that the proposed subdivision created a specific need
that would be addressed by the exaction.
Although the bill was narrowly approved by a house committee,
MAP was able to persuade legislators that the measure as drafted placed an excessive
burden on local government.
In other action, MAP succeeded in substantially amending a bill
that would have barred local governments from citing local growth policy provisions
as a reason to deny subdivision approval. The substitute language hammered out
by the bill's sponsors and MAP legislative committee members requires subdivision
regulations to be consistent with the local governing bodies' adopted growth
policies.
South Carolina: Takings challenge ahead. Three takings
bills were introduced in the first half of the two-year legislative session,
and legislative committee chair Sharon Richardson says the chapter expects them
to come up again next year. In June, the committee reaffirmed its support of
the South Carolina APA position: "SCAPA believes that current constitutional
protections of private property rights are adequate and that new standards or
criteria for determination of a takings are not needed."
One of the three bills, H. 3995, would provide compensation in
the event of either a "constitutional taking" or "unnecessary
hardship" imposed on a landowner by government regulations. A constitutional
taking is defined as government action that requires compensation under the
U.S. or South Carolina constitutions.
Compensation could take the form of cash, measured by the fair
market value of the property before and after the restriction, or such government
actions as density increases, land swaps, or development rights transfers. The
bill establishes new procedures, including a requirement that the government
make a settlement offer or reach a decision setting forth the permitted uses
of the property within 180 days of a claim.
A second measure, S. 528, is a companion bill to H. 3995. A third, S. 88,
would require state and local agencies that administer or issue land-use regulations
to assess proposed new regulations for their effect on the use and valuation
of private property, consider alternatives that might lessen the impact, and
estimate the compensation cost of the regulation.
|