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1. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Welcome to The Plan Commission and BZA Quarterly Land Use Update
January 23, 2008
2. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. QuestionsEmail:ipevents@purdue.edu
3. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Welcome to the Program Mark Spelbring, Extension Educator, Parke Co. Plan Commission Member
KK Gerhart-Fritz, AICP
The Planning Workshop
Video Credit – Greg Dale
4. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Video Seminar Series Sponsors Purdue Cooperative Extension Service Land Use Team
Indiana Planning Association
Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc.
Ball State University, College of Architecture and Planning
5. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Seminar Series Endorsed by Indiana Association of Cities & Towns
Association of Indiana Counties
Indiana Rural Development Council
Metropolitan Indianapolis Board of Realtors
6. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Outline for this Evening KK Gerhart-Fritz Presentation
Questions
Videotape Segment with Greg Dale
Discussion, Review, Questions
7. Welcome to the Plan Commission & BZA 2008 Land Use Update
Video Seminar Series
K.K. Gerhart-Fritz, AICP
8. What I’ll Discuss: What is Planning?
Who Does What?
Indiana Code Considerations
Tools
Common Issues
Questions & Answers
9. Top 10 Reasons to Join the BZA or Plan Commission 10)There is no initiation fee for this club
9) Don't have to wear a fez at planning conventions
8) Free take-home scrap paper after every meeting
7) You want to prove Hoosiers can count ballots better than those Florida plan commissions
6) The secret handshake
10. Top 10 Reasons to Join the BZA or Plan Commission 5) You help economy by keeping lawyers working
4) The optometrist says you have "20/20 vision"
3) You're waiting for a Hollywood producer to spot you on the local cable access channel
2) Secretly hoping they'll name a zoning district after you
1)All the perks -- like the huge salary
11. What is planning? Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary:
Plan (the noun): "a method for achieving an end…. A goal .…. A detailed formulation of a program of action…. an orderly arrangement of parts of an overall design or objective”
Plan (the verb): "to devise or project the realization or achievement of …. To arrange the parts of…. To have in mind or intend"
12. What is planning? Multiple choice -- raise your hand:
Planning is:
a) A process
b) A product
c) Both
13. A Process and a Product... The planning process can be just as important as the final plan document, if not more so!
Why is this true?
14. Why do communities plan? conservation of natural resources, farmland preservation, infill development and redevelopment, growth management, provide good transportation network, fiscal decision-making, think about future generations, provide recreation choices, historic preservation, a variety of housing, good drainage, public safety, good schools, utility access, NIMBYs and LULUs….
15. Why Plan? It’s about being PROACTIVE, instead of REACTIVE!
Even if local officials don’t plan, other groups are still doing it (utilities, state hwy, etc.)
Everyone may have a different reason for planning -- that’s okay!
Planning’s fundamental goal is to improve your community
16. Why Plan -- Good Times Manage growth
Plan for prosperity, more growth
Make sure there are adequate resources
Preserve resources
17. Why Plan -- Bad Times Plan to use scarce resources wisely
Can’t afford not to!
18. Philosophy of Planning One reason communities plan is to ensure the needs of the whole community are considered, not just benefits to individuals.
Community planning is based upon a concept of the public interest.
Some flexibility in the use of individual land is given up in exchange for creating a community in which the interests of all are considered.
19. You are a Public Official & a Planning Policymaker! Public officials:
trustees of the future
responsibility to help prevent growth patterns that result in wasteful and inefficient use of public resources
When communities plan:
they establish and implement a public policy for the community
they create a guideline for decisions on development
20. Government Framework Planning & Land Use Control -- Local
Parameters Set by Enabling Act -- State
21. Local Planning Structure Governing Body
County Commissioners
Town Council
City Council
Plan Commission
Board of Zoning Appeals
22. Local Governing Body Role – Law Making
Elected
Power to adopt comprehensive plan
IC 36-7-4-509
Power to adopt zoning ordinance
Power to approve rezonings
Power to adopt subdivision ordinance
Appoints some board & commission members
23. Plan Commission Role -- The Land Use Experts
Appointed/serve by virtue of position
Prepares Comp Plan (IC 36-7-4-501)
Prepares Zoning Ord (IC 36-7-4-602a)
Prepares Subdivision Ord (IC 36-7-4-701b)
Provides Zoning Map Recs (IC 36-7-4-602b)
Provides Comprehensive Plan Recs
Subdivision Plat Approval
24. Types of Plan Commissions Advisory -- May be county or municipality
Area -- County joins with at least 1 municipality
Metropolitan -- Indianapolis
25. Types of Plan Commissions Planning laws differ depending on type:
Membership, appointments (also differs depending on type of local govt) and size of commission
Area plan allows no use variances
Cities/towns forbidden an ETJ in Area plan counties
26. Board of Zoning Appeals Role -- Quasi-Judicial “Relief Valve”
Appointed
Power to Hear Appeals of Administrative Decisions
Power to Grant Variances from Zoning Ordinance
Power to Grant Special Exceptions/ Conditional Uses
27. Other Players Fiscal Body
Planning Staff
Citizens
Applicants
28. Fiscal Body Role – Financial Support
Appropriate funds for operation
County Council or City/Town Council
May appoint members and may be one member of Plan Commission
May appoint member of BZA
29. Planning Staff Role – Administration of the Law
Staff for Plan Commission and BZA
Administers zoning ordinance
Interprets zoning ordinance
Keep records and maps
Prepare staff report -- can make recommendation
Train and educate PC & BZA
Appointment – depends upon law
30. Citizen Not just a taxpayer or a voter -- get involved and be informed
Your responsibility to try to get them involved
Input through public hearings -- help them give you relevant info by explaining what you must consider
Input through comp plan -- promote public participation
31. Applicant Provide complete application
Prove their case
32. Confused? Many players on planning & zoning teams
All are public officials
Each has a job to do
Each should only do their own job
Teamwork is critical to success
Public debate strengthens government
Public bickering will destroy public trust
33. Tools You Need to Know Comprehensive Plan
Zoning Ordinance
Subdivision Ordinance
Rules of Procedure
34. Comprehensive Plan Long-range (20+ years)
Covers entire jurisdiction (and maybe more)
Traditionally addresses physical elements, but may get into economic & social
35. Comprehensive Plan Involves goal-setting
Provides context for complex decisions
Continuing interactive process
36. Indiana Code Requirements IC 36-7-4-500 series
3 things required:
Statement of objectives for future development of community
Statement of policy for land use development of jurisdiction
Statement of policy for public ways, places, lands, structures and utilities
37. Indiana Code Options Parks & recreation, flood control, transit, natural resource protection, education, farmland protection, redevelopment of blighted areas, etc.
Maps
Most Comprehensive Plans contain optional elements
38. More on Comprehensive Plans Plans should be reviewed regularly and updated periodically -- how old is yours?
Comprehensive plan is a guideline
The plan commission is responsible for the plan, but may be assisted by staff, by consultants, by volunteers, or by any combination
Ordinances should match comp plan
39. Why we have Zoning The original objective of zoning was to ensure that commercial and industrial development was segregated from residential areas.
40. Zoning Quiz Zoning is an expression of ____ power.
a)fire
b)police
c) super
Zoning came to the USA from:
a)Pre-WWI Germany
b)Communist Russia
c)Mars
41. IN the Zone Zoning has the power to regulate activity by private persons for the health, safety, morals and general welfare of the public.
42. IN the Zone Power is delegated to the state by the feds, and local governments only have power when it is delegated by the state ("enabling legislation").
The U.S. Supreme Court has upheld zoning as a valid use of police power.
43. How it Works Indiana law requires a map, showing the districts into which the jurisdiction is divided.
The text of the zoning ordinance specifies the permitted uses and developmental standards (building size regulations, setbacks, parking, etc.) for each zoning district
Must have comp plan to have zoning
44. IC 36-7-4-603 Rezoning Criteria The plan commission and legislative body shall pay reasonable regard to:
(1) the comprehensive plan;
(2)current conditions and character of current structures and uses in each district;
(3) the most desirable use for which the land in each district is adapted;
(4) the conservation of property values throughout the jurisdiction; and
(5) responsible development and growth.
45. Rezoning Process The plan commission holds a public hearing and makes a recommendation to the legislative body
The legislative body (county commissioners or town/city council) makes the final decision
Rezoning can be initiated by local government or property owner
46. BZA Cases BZA hears 3 types of cases:
1) Variance requests
Developmental standards variances
Variances of use (not available to area plan commissions)
2) Special exception /conditional use requests
3) Appeals from administrative decisions
47. BZA Caution Planning staff may file a staff report with the BZA relating to the case
No one else may contact any BZA member before the hearing with intent to influence the member's action per Indiana Code
48. Variances BZA has final authority
Relief valve for zoning ordinance
Two types:
Variances from developmental standards
Use variances (not available to area plan commissions)
49. Development StandardsVariance Criteria IC 36-7-4-918.5
the approval will not be injurious to the public health, safety, morals, and general welfare of the community
50. Development StandardsVariance Criteria the use and value of the area adjacent to the property included in the variance will not be affected in a substantially adverse manner
51. Development StandardsVariance Criteria the strict application of the terms of the zoning ordinance will result in practical difficulties in the use of the property
52. Adding Extra Variance Criteria Indiana Code says your local ordinance may establish a stricter standard than the "practical difficulties" standard:
The variance granted is the minimum necessary.
The variance granted does not correct a hardship caused by an owner, previous or present, of the property.
53. Use Variances -- Not for Area Plan Commissions 1st 3 criteria are same as developmental standards variance. Additionally:
the strict application of the terms of the zoning ordinance will constitute an unnecessary hardship if applied to the property for which the variance is sought
the approval doesn't interfere substantially with the adopted comprehensive plan
54. Subdivision Control Ordinance One of the 2 major implementation tools for your comprehensive plan -- What is the other one?
A basic way that your community can control how growth occurs
Have the most impact in undeveloped areas
55. SCO for Orderly Growth IC 36-7-4-702 says the subdivision control ordinance must specify standards, specifically:
(1) minimum width, depth, and lot area
(2) public way widths, grades, curves, and the coordination of subdivision public ways with current and planned public ways; and
(3) the extension of water, sewer, and other municipal services.
56. Other Standards State law says the subdivision control ordinance may also include standards for:
the allocation of areas to be used as public ways, parks, schools, public and semipublic buildings, homes, businesses, and utilities
any other standards related to the purposes of that chapter of law
57. What is a subdivision plat? Communities define differently
In some places every parcel split is a subdivision and must go through the process, in others, there are exceptions to the subdivision process
58. Types of Subdivisions Major -- usually a lot number threshold and public infrastructure extensions (i.e., roads, sewer)
Minor -- typically approved by a plat committee
59. The Subdivision Process Plan Commission makes final decision (no trip to legislative body except for right-of-way dedication)
May delegate authority to a plat committee
Typically review and recommendation from a technical committee
60. Subdivision Criteria Each community may set own standards -- take advantage of this!
Make sure ordinance says standards are minimums
61. Subdivisions not Subjective If a proposed subdivision plat meets all the ordinance standards, the plat must be given primary approval
62. BZA & PC Common Issues Rules of Procedure
Findings of Fact
Public Hearings & Dealing with the Public
63. Rules of Procedure Indiana Code requires them
Contents: applications, notice, conduct of hearings, attendance of members, conflicts of interest, ex parte communication, behavior of all participants, etc.
Make sure you have copy
Follow them!
64. What’s in Rules of Procedure? Meeting times and Duties of officers and staff
Establishment of committees
Order of business
Definition of interested parties
Notice requirements
Hearing procedures
Time limits on testimony
Application procedures (deadlines, fees, etc.)
65. What’s in Rules of Procedure? Continuances
Conflicts of interest
Decisions
Commitments and conditions
Amendments
Suspension of rules
Communications outside of meetings
66. Findings of Fact Indiana Code requires them
Base on criteria, with a “because”
Must adopt
Develop at hearing
Make applicant address
Worksheet for board/commission
Staff recommendation
67. Public Hearings & Dealing with the Public Months of effort (and a good proposal) can be lost in a few minutes if the public hearing gets out of hand
68. Public Hearings & Public Meetings A public meeting is simply a meeting that is open to the public; the public may attend and observe, but the audience does not have to be allowed to participate or make comments.
A public hearing is a formal proceeding to receive public comment on a particular matter, such as a rezoning or a comprehensive plan.
69. A Word About Public Hearings Legal requirement and obligation to your citizens
Not an ideal forum for communication -- more formal and structured than a public meeting
Public hearings specified by law may not be enough -- we aren't just trying to meet the minimum legal standards
70. A Word About Public Hearings Purpose is to hear testimony -- not a forum for public debate.
If you do it right, you can also use a public hearing for education and to gain support for the plan
If you desire dialogue, discussion or negotiation, schedule a public meeting first
71. Chairing the Public Hearing
72. Chairing the Public Hearing
73. Typical President’s Routine Welcome and introduction of body
Explain purpose of meeting and ground rules
Explain what is on the agenda and how the meeting will work (time limits, etc.) -- warn them about any continuances
74. Typical President’s Routine Deliver a "play by play" or translation for the audience, when necessary ("that ends the applicant's presentation, now he can only respond to questions") and repeat/rephrase all questions
Keep control of the meeting -- be firm when necessary and make sure all remarks go through you (not between opponents and proponents).
75. Member’s Role at the Hearing Be familiar with the material -- don't open your packet at the meeting
Have a public discussion -- don't pass notes or whisper
Explain yourself -- why are you voting this way?
Make sure your input is meaningful
76. Oh Behave! Display and demand good manners
Discuss this behavior as part of President’s opening remarks:
Address all comments and questions to the Plan Commission President
Address everyone with title of respect (Mr. Ms. etc.)
77. Decision-Making Concerns After a public hearing, the plan commission must arrive at a decision or recommendation.
The issues often are complicated, and decision-making is likewise difficult.
78. Decision-Making Concerns Peer Pressure --
Do not want to offend colleagues or appear to be unconventional or uncooperative.
Represent a variety of views, so there is no reason why decisions should always be unanimous.
79. Decision-Making Concerns Public Pressure --
Difficult to make unpopular decision, especially in small towns.
Audience isn’t always right; it doesn’t represent the community as a whole.
Proposed land use changes generate emotional responses from many people.
80. Decision-Making Concerns Developer & Business Pressure -
Represents a particular view, aimed at reducing their costs and increasing their profits.
Community does not have to accept inappropriate development in order to provide profits for a developer.
81. Decision-Making Concerns Political Pressure --
Occasionally elected officials will lobby plan commissioners for votes.
Plan commissions are intended to be independent bodies -- commission members are obligated to cast votes that promote good planning.
82. Decision-Making Concerns Compromise --
Want to find a middle position between developers and opponents.
Can leave everyone unhappy
Developers quickly learn the compromise game, asking for more than they want or expect, in order to end up with the project they initially desired.
Regular compromise won't result in good development.
83. Decision-Making Concerns Outside influences --
Members interact with people in their daily lives who wish to influence their opinion or vote
Good practice to refrain from discussions, because interferes with due process and inconsistent with the goals of the open meeting law.
If contact can't be avoided, explain that it will be reported at the public meeting.
84. Living with Your Tools You must live by your ordinances, rules and comp plan
BUT – You can propose changes!
Amendments are not that hard to do
Be responsive to changing conditions
85. Review your Responsibilities 1)To represent the rest of the community.
How does the community give you direction (2 ways)?
2)To educate yourself and others on the issue(s).
3)To support the process and recognize the roles of the other participants.
4)To make a defensible decision.
86. Things You Aren’t Required to Do by Indiana Law... Loading up on sugar and caffeine before the meeting.
Turning off your cell phone during the public hearing.
Reading all staff reports.
Visiting the site in person.
Not snoring in the wee hours if a case is still being heard.
Making an annual report to the legislative body.
87. Do Your Homework Review staff report before the meeting
Check background documents (Comp Plan, Zoning Ordinance, SCO, etc.)
Visit the site
Arrive on time
88. Some Rules to Live By It isn’t “your job” to make applicant’s case -- it’s their job to prove they deserve it
There is no maximum number of conditions that can be attached to an approval, but if there are lots, you may want to reexamine whether the application is really ready and justified
Your job will be easier for you (and everyone else) if everyone understands what you must legally base your decision on
89. Are you Tough Enough? You can not legally decide requests based on compassion, only on whether the required criteria are met
This does not mean that a PC or BZA member should be cold, mean or rude with an applicant, just that your compassion should not guide your decision
90. Other Assistance American Planning Association, Indiana Chapter’s Citizen Planner Training Manual
Download FREE, www.indianaplanning.org/citizen
10 chapters specific to Indiana for citizen planners
DO IT YOURSELF (NO TRAINER)
Nitty Gritty Training Sessions
American Planning Association, Indiana Chapter Annual Conferences
91. Citizen Planner Training Manual 1: Plan Commission Basics
2: BZA Basics
3: Avoiding Pitfalls
4: Communications
5: Rules of Procedure
6: Ethics
7: Comprehensive Plans
8: Zoning Ordinance
9: Subdivision Control Ordinance
10: Site Plan Review
92. Questions?
94. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. QuestionsEmail:ipevents@purdue.edu
95. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Situations for Discussion Following are 2 situations for local discussion.
Each site choose 1 to discuss briefly
Be ready to share the discussion and any conclusions at your site
96. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Issue # 1 You have a strong relationship with the official (Mayor, Commissioner) who appointed you to the Plan Commission. That official sees you as “their person” on the Commission and calls you to discuss issues to be sure you have “their” perspective.
How do you handle this?
Adapted from Greg Dale’s presentation
97. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Issue # 2 Your recently adopted comp plan stresses tourism. It promotes providing services to support tourism. It promotes protecting scenic highway corridors for tourists and residents. Thousands of people visit a state park in your county, where most cell phones don’t work.
A special exception petition is filed to build a cell tower near the park, along the highway leading to it, which can improve cell service in the park.
How would you respond?
Adapted from Greg Dale’s presentation
98. Discussion at Sites Report back on Question 1
Report back on Question 2
Questions? E-mail during videotape
ipevents@purdue.edu Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution.
99. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Let’s Go To The Videotape Greg Dale presented information on Land Use Update, September 4, 2003, called Ethical and Defensible Decision Making
This videotape can be obtained from members of Purdue Land Use Team
We will just show part of it to let you see what’s available
100. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Greg Dale’s Decision Checklist Notice
Opportunity to be heard
Full Disclosure
Unbiased Decisions
Timely Decisions
Complete Records
Clear Rules
101. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. More Information Sources Purdue Land Use Team Publications
Land Use Team Web Site
www.ces.purdue.edu/landuse/
Indiana Planning Association
“Blue Book” – legal reference
102. Purdue University is an Equal Opportunity/Equal Access institution. Q & A, Evaluation, Programs Next Quarterly Land Use Update Monday, March 3, 7:00 p.m.
Third Program, Thursday, June 19
Fourth Program, Thursday, Sept. 11
Thanks to Mike Ferree, Coordinator
Safe and Warm Trip Home