Lesson 1: Chapter 20 - Land Use Controls and Property Development Flashcards
Police Power
The states’ inherent authority to create regulations needed to protect the public health, safety, and welfare.
Enabling Acts
Through enabling acts, states delegate to counties and local municipalities the authority to enact ordinances in keeping with general laws.
The increasing demands placed on finite natural resources have made it necessary for cities, towns, and villages to increase their limitations on the private use of real estate. There are now controls over noise, air, and water pollution as well as population density.
Home-Rule
A home-rule unit of government may exercise any power and perform any function pertaining to its government, including the exercise of police power by way of laws that control the use of land. Home-rule units also have greater freedom to enforce their laws, including the power to jail offenders for up to six months. Non-home-rule units derive their authority to pass land-use controls from the state government through enabling statutes.
If any ordinance of a home rule county conflicts with any ordinance of a home rule municipality, the municipality ordinance prevails. Township zoning ordinances must give way to county zoning ordinances, and townships are not empowered to pass subdivision controls or building codes.
Home-Rule In Illinois: Article VII of the Constitution of the State of Illinois
Article VII of the Constitution of the State of Illinois allows for home-rule units of government.
Any municipality with a population in excess of 25,000 and any county that has a chief executive officer elected by the people are automatically home-rule units.
However, a home-rule unit may elect by referendum not to be one. On the other hand, a municipality of fewer than 25,000 people may elect by referendum to become a home-rule unit of government. Townships are not allowed to be home-rule units.
Comprehensive Plan
Local governments, municipalities, and counties establish development goals by creating a comprehensive plan.
Also called the master plan - this is not a regulatory document but rather a guide to planning for change rather than reacting to proposals. The plan is usually long term - 20 years or longer, and often includes:
1 - a general plan that can be revised and updated more frequently
2 - plans for specific areas
3 - strategic plans
In the Comprehensive Plan, systematic planning for orderly growth consists of the following basic elements:
- Land use - i.e. a determination of how much land may be proposed for residence, industry, business, agriculture, traffic and transit facilities, utilities, community facilities, parks and rec facilities, floodplains and areas of special hazards
- Housing needs of present and anticipated residents
- Movement of people and goods, including highways and public transit, parking facilities, and pedestrian and bike way systems
- Community facilities and utilities such as schools, libraries, hospitals, recreational facilities, fire and police stations, water resources, sewage and waste treatment and disposal, storm drainage, and flood management
- Energy conservation to reduce energy consumption and promote the use of renewable energy sources
Zoning Ordinances
Local laws that implement the comprehensive plan and regulate and control the use of land and structures within designated land-use districts. Zoning is a regulatory tool that helps communities regulate and control how land is used.
No nationwide or statewide zoning ordinances exist. Zoning powers are conferred on municipal governments by state enabling acts.
Zoning Affects:
- permitted uses of each parcel of land
- lot sizes
- types of permissible structures
- building heights
- setbacks (the minimum distance away from streets or sidewalks that structures may be built
- style and appearance of structures
- density (the ratio of land area to structure area)
- protection of natural resources
Planned Unit Development (PUD)
Development where land is set aside for mixed-use purposes, such as residential, commercial, and public areas. Zoning regulations may be modified for PUDs.
Buffer Zone
Typically a strip of land separating land dedicated to one use from land dedicated to another use. Some municipalities use buffer zones to ease transition from one use to another. For example, landscaped parks and playgrounds and hiking trails are used to screen residential areas from nonresidential zones.
Zoning for Special Land Use Objectives
Many municipalities use certain types of zoning to focus on special land-use objectives. These include:
- Bulk zoning
- Aesthetic zoning
- Incentive zoning
Bulk Zoning
Also called “density zoning”, is used to control density and avoid over-crowding by imposing restrictions such as setbacks and maximum building heights, and requiring a specified percentage of open area or by restricting new construction projects
Aesthetic Zoning
Used to specify certain types of architecture for new buildings
Incentive Zoning
Used to ensure that certain uses are incorporated into developments, such as requiring the street floor of an office building to house retail establishments.
Constitutional Issues and Zoning Ordinances
The ongoing question is how a local government can enact zoning ordinances that protect public safety and welfare without violating the constitutional rights of property owners. The government provides “public hearings” for citizens to discuss zoning ordinances before they are enacted.
Commonly applied tests in determining the validity of ordinances require that:
- power be exercised in a reasonable manner
- provisions be clear and specific
- ordinances be nondiscriminatory
- ordinances promote public health, safety, and general welfare under the police power concept
- ordinances apply to all property in a similar manner
The Concept of Taking
The concept is similar to eminent domain in that it comes from the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The clause reads, “Nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” The payment is called “just compensation” - compensation that is just and fair.
In general, no land is exempt from government seizure.
Inverse Condemnation
Is an action brought by a property owner seeking just compensation for land taken for a public use where it appears that the taker of the property does not intend to bring eminent domain proceedings. The property is condemned because its use and value have been diminished due to an adjacent property’s public use.
For example, property along a newly constructed highway may be inversely condemned. While, the property itself was not used in constructing the highway, the property value may be significantly diminished due to the nearby construction of the highway. The property owner may bring an inverse condemnation action to be compensated for the loss.
Zoning Permits
Compliance with zoning can be monitored by requiring that property owners obtain permits before they begin any development. Zoning permits are usually required before building permits can be issued.
Zoning Hearing Board
Also called “boards of appeal”, have been established in most communities to hear complaints about the effects a zoning ordinance may have on specific parcels of property. Petitions for variances or exceptions to the zoning law may be presented to these boards.
Nonconforming Use
Frequently, a lot or an improvement does not conform to the zoning law because it existed before the enactment or amendment of the zoning ordinances. Such a nonconforming use may be allowed to continue legally as long as it complies with the regulations governing nonconformities in the local ordinance or until the improvement is destroyed or torn down or the current use is abandoned. If the nonconforming use is allowed to continue indefinitely, it is grandfathered into the new zoning.
Never assume that the existing nonconformities will be allowed to continue - always verify with the local zoning authorities.
Conditional-Use Permit
Or “special-use permit” is usually granted to a property owner to allow a special use of property, defined as an allowable conditional use, within that zone, such as a day care center in a residential district.
For a conditional-use permit to be appropriate, the intended use must meet certain standards set by the municipality.
Variance
Also called an “exception”, provides relief if zoning regulations deprive an owner of the reasonable use of the property. It may be sought to provide relief if existing zoning regulations create a hardship for the development of a specific property.
For example, if an owner’s lot is level next to a road but slopes steeply 30 feet away from the road, the zoning board may allow a variance so the owner can build closer to the road than setback requirements generally allow.
To qualify, the owner must demonstrate unique circumstances that make the variance necessary. In addition, the owner must prove that she is harmed and burdened by the regulations.
Any such variance is said to “run with the land”, meaning the exception is passed on to any later owners after a change has been made.
Building Codes
Most municipalities have enacted ordinances called building codes to specify construction standards that must be met when repairing or erecting buildings.
Building codes set the requirements for kinds of materials and standards of workmanship, sanitary equipment, electrical wiring, fire prevention, and similar issues.