
|
December 2005 The Statehouse By James Lawlor Michigan: Zoning Law Reorganization Advances. H.B. 4398, legislation to streamline Michigan's zoning enabling acts, passed the House in early June and is currently in a Senate committee. The bill repeals three current laws covering cities and villages, counties and townships, and replaces them with a single enabling act. The existing acts have similar provisions in many instances, but the act for cities and villages is organized differently from the other two. Generally, the bill is a recodification of existing law, but would provide uniform provisions for the three units of local government, except where differing provisions are necessary due to the organization of local boards. The Michigan Association of Planning, the state's APA chapter, took a leading role in pushing this legislation along. Some of the advantages it cited for the recodification include ease of amending the law when change becomes necessary; simplified legal citation; uniform public hearing requirements; and elimination of archaic language. On the eminent domain front, S.B. 693, which would bar the taking private property for transfer to a private entity for the purpose of general economic development or enhancing tax revenue, passed the Senate November 9. Such a transfer is deemed not to be for a public use under the state constitution. To establish that any taking was for a public use, the government would have to establish extreme public necessity; that the property will be devoted to the use of the public after its taking; or that it was selected on the basis of independent public significance or concern, including blight, rather than the private interest of the entity to which the property is eventually transferred. The MAP's executive board adopted a 14-page policy statement on the takings doctrine and the exercise of eminent domain October 5, which it presented to the legislature's local government caucus. The statement supports the state supreme court's 2004 holding in Wayne County v. Hathcock that the taking of property for the purpose of transferring it from one private party to another, solely to promote economic development, does not qualify as a public use under the state constitution. The statement says the association supports legislative efforts to codify the Hathcock decision, as long as that legislation does not bar local government from using eminent domain to eradicate blight. The paper also states that eminent domain should be used only after all other reasonable methods of acquiring land for a public use have been explored and have failed.
The concept behind the initiative appears to be similar to that of Oregon's Measure 37, which was invalidated by a state trial court last month. The Farm Bureau's government relations director, Dan Wood, denies that the thrust of the proposal is the same as Measure 37, pointing out that the organization's proposal would be retrospective in application. Wood said the Farm Bureau's beef with environmental regulations centers on habitat designations, waterway buffers and tide gate removal. Bureau members feel private landowners should not be expected to pay for a public benefit, Wood continued, calling it "environmentalism on the cheap." The draft measure also would require government agencies to provide incentives or systems for environmental restoration. Regulations necessary to protect public health and safety would be exempt from the compensation requirement. Environmental and growth management advocates fail to see much difference between the Farm Bureau's proposal and Measure 37. Aaron Ostrum, executive director of Futurewise (formerly 1000 Friends of Washington) said the initiative would create loopholes for developers to exploit. "The bottom line is it's good for irresponsible developers and it's bad for our quality of life," he declared.
Legislators are working on a draft bill to be introduced in the 2006 session that would modify the procedures for taking property for redevelopment and economic development. The working draft provides that a redevelopment plan must include a determination that the proposed use for a property taken is a public use or for economic development. If a municipality acquires land for economic development, the decision to take land must be approved by a two-thirds vote of the local legislative body. Owners of land taken for economic development would be entitled to compensation of at least 150 percent of the property's fair market value, calculated without reference to any increase or decrease in the value of the property attributable to the redevelopment project or the eminent domain process.
A bill (A.B. 155) barring counties and municipalities from requiring removal of a nonconforming building, structure or fixture by means of an amortization ordinance has passed the legislature and is awaiting the governor's signature.
|
| |