Contract Zoning: Let’s Make a Deal
April 1, 2003
Kenneth B. "Ken" Hoffman- Boston
When the owners of an energy company wanted to build a 700-megawatt,
natural-gas-fired electric generating facility in Bellingham, Massachusetts, on
land not zoned for such use under local zoning by-laws, it made a deal with the
town. The town would rezone the land and
issue all necessary permits, and the company would give the town $8 million to
defray the town’s anticipated share of the cost of a new high school.
It sounded like a deal made in heaven. While the town meeting, the local legislative
body, had previously rejected the rezoning, a town-appointed task force
recommended industrial development on the property as a way to increase the
town’s tax base. The task force
specifically recommended rezoning the parcel from suburban and agricultural use
to industrial use and noted that the subject land was a viable setting for an
industrial operation since it was adjacent to other industrial land and was
separated from residential areas by wetlands and, the town needed a new high
school. The existing high school was
said to be in “deplorable” condition.
The deal promised to be a good one for the town and for the power plant
owner.
The annual town meeting agreed. It voted by the required two-thirds vote to
rezone the land in response to the power plant’s owner’s offer of “a gift of $8
million” to pay for a new high school.
Once the rezoning occurred, the power plant owner spent a purported $7
million to develop plans for the plant.
Not all were happy with the deal, however, and following the granting of
a special permit to the developer by the local zoning board, a number of
citizens sued to overturn the town meeting rezoning. After a trial in the Land Court of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the Court overturned the town meeting action
primarily on the basis of illegal contract zoning. While the matter is now pending before the
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, there is a lesson here for developers who
attempt to “buy” land- use approvals believing they are engaging in a winning
strategy for themselves and for the municipality in which they wish to build a
project.
The Land Court judge found that “but for the gift” the town
meeting had the power and authority to rezone the land and that were the
$8-million gift not in the picture, there would “be little doubt that the . . .
rezoning was valid.” Where then did the
developer go wrong?
Contract zoning is not defined in Massachusetts law. It is legal in some states and disfavored in
others. Contract zoning, according to
the Court, quoting from a land-use treatise is, “the process by which local government
enters into an agreement with a developer whereby the government extracts a
performance or promise from the developer in exchange for the agreement to
rezone the property . . .” Anyone
familiar with how most development projects are approved, the notion of developers making promises of funds or site
improvements as part of the development and permitting process is hardly
unique. From Boston to Los Angeles,
developers are required to improve roads, install traffic lights, and make
contributions to scholarship funds and aid other community programs. Few projects in the City of Boston survive
permitting without a memorandum of understanding with the community listing the
benefits package that the developer is expected to provide in exchange for support
by the community for the project. Absent
such support, the project may have little chance of official approval. In Boston and surrounding communities,
“linkage” payments are common and include such things as affordable housing set
asides. These linkage requirements are
frequently published as part of the zoning regulations. Against this background in Massachusetts and
elsewhere, why did the Court draw the line against contract zoning in the Town
of Bellingham, and how could the power plant developer have avoided the loss of
$7 million in development costs in a belief that it had made a deal that both
sides were eager to and did, in fact, keep?
The Court said the fatal mistake made by the town and the
developer was that the $8-million gift was “extraneous consideration” for a
zoning vote. The money was not intended
to mitigate any land use impacts of the project. Unlike linkage payments, which as the name
implies, bear some connection between the project and its impact on the
community, the Bellingham case was devoid of such connection. In fact, a significant fact cited by the
judge in the Bellingham case was that the power plant would have virtually no
impact on school enrollment. Further,
during the town meeting vote on the rezoning, the Court found there was “little
discussion about the rezoning article.”
In the end, the Court appeared to believe that the town meeting had not
done its job in considering the land-use issues raised by the rezoning article
or in the alternative, that the town had sold its soul for money. Either way, the Court said that by so doing,
the town’s actions were “offensive to public policy.”
What could the developer have done to avoid the Court’s
determination that without a link to the project, the payment and hence the
rezoning were illegal? The town may not
have rezoned the land absent the promised contribution to its number one
priority, a new school. Thus, finding a
“linked” contribution sufficient to excite the town meeting would have been
very difficult.
The better course for the developer of the power plant may
have been to address the need for a new high school through a tax mechanism,
the developer agreeing not to a gift, but to a interim assessed value of the
plant and its equipment once constructed that would yield, over a finite
period, the revenue which the town required and could earmark for school
construction. Perhaps other mechanisms
could be found to create linkage to offset other costs likely to be incurred by
the town which prevented the town from funding a new high school. Payments for the transfer development rights
and other similar devices come to mind.
However, the most enduring lesson for the developer
exemplified by the Bellingham case is that in jurisdictions where “contract
zoning” is not the rule, the promise of money may speak too loudly, drowning
out more critical concerns about the use of land. Perhaps those in the business of real estate
development, unlike the power plant operator, realize that there is no short
cut to zoning approvals, at least not in New England. Putting a thumb on the scale while a
municipality weighs the benefits of rezoning is a cautionary tale and one that
can be costly for developers who are too eager to make a deal.
For more information, call Ken Hoffman, toll free, at
1-888-688-8500.