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Municipal Government

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Title: Municipal Government


1
Municipal Government
  • Land Use Planning

2
Purpose of Land Use Planning
  • To guide growth and change in a municipality in
    an orderly way that promotes the public interest
    while protecting property rights.

3
U.S. planning in context
  • Some countries have little or no planning.
    Others, Canada, for example, centralize planning
    at provincial levels.
  • Planning in the U.S. occupies a middle ground,
    decentralized to the local level, within a state
    framework.

4
A matter of balance I
  • Competing interests
  • A property owner may see an opportunity to make
    money by enlarging a parking lot for a
    restaurant.
  • The lot could subject nearby residents to
    additional noise and night lighting, and they may
    have concerns about safety and privacy.

5
A matter of balance II
  • Local decision makers must decide how much
    regulation is needed
  • To protect the public adequately
  • Without infringing unduly on property rights.
  • This cant be done ad hoc, case by case.
  • Therefore, principles and procedures are
    established for the sake of consistency and
    fairness.

6
Approaches to planning
  • Most common -- Euclidean zoning
  • Named after Euclid, Ohio
  • Supreme Court upheld Euclids zoning ordinance in
    1926
  • Based on idea of separation of incompatible
    land uses.

7
Euclidean zoning I
  • Separates land uses by intensity
  • Intensity amount of noise, traffic, pollution
    etc. generated by the use.
  • Highest intensity -- heavy industry
  • Lowest intensity -- single-family residential
  • Intermediate -- multi-family, office service,
    commercial, light industrial

8
Euclidean zoning II
  • Buffers incompatible uses
  • With uses of intermediate intensity
  • Office zones can buffer residential from
    commercial areas, etc.
  • With mitigation of impact
  • Screening with walls, privacy fences or
    vegetation
  • Setbacks from property line
  • Lighting regulations

9
Criticism of Euclidean zoning
  • Separation of uses leads to
  • Urban sprawl
  • Inefficient delivery of services Fire, water,
    sewer
  • Dependence on automobiles
  • Driving a mile for a loaf of bread
  • Major arteries cutting up neighborhoods
  • Urban crime
  • Deterioration of central cities
  • Cities empty out at 5 p.m.
  • No eyes on the street -- Jane Jacobs

10
Emerging approaches I
  • New Urbanism
  • Mixed uses
  • Commercial below, apartments above
  • Shop, work and recreate where you live
  • Walkable neighborhoods
  • Bike paths
  • Grid streets to move traffic

11
Emerging approaches II
  • Form-based zoning
  • Regulates buildings instead of uses
  • Aesthetics
  • Building height, setbacks, materials
  • Relation of buildings to public space
  • Creation of designed of public space
  • Parking
  • Streetscapes
  • Relatively new in Michigan
  • Grand Rapids, Mission Street in MP, Midland

12
The Planning Team
  • Planning Commission
  • Writes master plan, zoning ordinance
  • Acts on rezoning requests, site plans etc.
  • City or Village Council
  • Can choose whether to be final authority
  • Zoning Board of Appeals
  • Settles requests for variances
  • Staff -- the local experts
  • Consultants -- the out-of-town experts

13
Master Plan
  • One of the most important planning documents.
  • Sets overall direction for change in land uses in
    the community
  • Uses delineated in fuzzy areas
  • Can be used to support decisions that move toward
    community goals.
  • Non-motorized transportation
  • Must respond to market forces. Planning
    something doesnt make it so.

14
Use it or . . . .
  • Master plans are use it or lose it
    propositions.
  • Failure to follow the plan may discredit any
    attempt to use the plan as a defense for actions
    which may be challenged by property owners or
    developments. -- Michigan Municipal League

15
Zoning ordinance
  • Establishes the rules for land use
  • If Euclidean
  • Divides community into zoning districts.
  • No longer fuzzy -- precisely defined.
  • Controls the type and intensity of development
    allowed in each district.
  • For example, neighborhood commercial might
    include convenience stores and small retail
    establishments, but exclude gas stations, auto
    repair shops, supermarkets and malls.

16
Planning processes
  • Rezoning petition
  • Seeks to change zoning of a particular parcel.
  • If approved, allows any use on the rezonedparcel
    permitted in that zoning district.
  • Site plan
  • An engineered design for a specific use for a
    particular parcel
  • Can have full or administrative review
  • Variance (decided by Zoning Board of Appeals)

17
Useful concepts I
  • Rezoning stays with the property, not with the
    owner
  • Owner may change mind
  • New owner can change use
  • Uses permitted by right
  • Conditional uses (special uses)

18
Useful concepts II
  • Grandfathering
  • Zoning is not retroactive
  • Existing uses allowed to remain as legal
    nonconformities.
  • Should be brought into conformity over time.
  • New use can only be one permitted in the zoning
    district.
  • Limits on remodeling, rebuilding etc.

19
A new zoning tool
  • Historically, Michigan has not allowed contract
    zoning -- agreements with property owners to
    restrict the use of a property if rezoning is
    granted.
  • Instead, planning commissions had to consider the
    whole range of uses permitted under a zoning
    district.

20
Conditional Rezoning
  • A recent change to state law allowed conditional
    rezoning.
  • A property owner can voluntarily propose limiting
    the use of a piece of property.
  • If accepted, the agreement is legally binding on
    the property owner.
  • If the agreement is broken, the property reverts
    to the previous zoning.

21
Zoning Board of Appeals
  • Required in every community that has a zoning
    ordinance.
  • Council can act as ZBA
  • Or can appoint one.
  • Has final authority over requests for variances.

22
Variances
  • Variances are requests to be allowed to break the
    law.
  • Most should be denied.
  • Two kinds
  • Use -- permits a use not otherwise allowed in a
    zoning district
  • Dimensional -- permits encroachment in required
    setbacks, parking requirements, building height,
    etc.

23
Use Variance
  • Petitioner is usually required to show
  • Compliance with the law would cause unnecessary
    hardship for the owner
  • Due to circumstances unique to the property.
  • The problem shouldnt be self-created.
  • The variance should do substantial justice both
    to the property owner and to others.

24
Dimensional variance
  • Petitioner is usually required to show
  • Compliance with the law would cause practical
    difficulties for the property owner
  • Due to circumstances unique to the property
  • The problem shouldnt be self-created.
  • The variance should be the minimum required to
    solve the problem.

25
Why ZBAs should say no
  • Eventually, the offhand granting of variances
    harms the communitys ability to enforce the
    ordinance.
  • Poorly supported decision can over time have the
    effect of destroying the credibility of the
    zoning ordinance.

26
Questions
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