The Urban Lawyer,
Vol. 34, No. 4, Fall 2002
Publication Date: January 23, 2003
Robert H. Freilich, Stephanie L. Hill & Cristin E.
Keele, The Freilich Report: A High Court Seeking Balance Amidst
an Unstable Nation, 34 URB. LAW. 757 (Fall 2002).
The Supreme Court’S 2001 Term was marked by significant
decisions in the areas of the death penalty, the Americans with
Disabilities Act, school vouchers, federalism, and land use. The
Court issued a landmark liberal decision on land-use regulation
and the Fifth Amendment Takings Clause. Other liberal decisions
involved the reversal of one of the Court’s own decisions,
in holding that the execution of mentally retarded individuals
constitutes cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment,
and the expansion of First Amendment freedom of speech rights.
On the conservative side the Court expanded the scope of suspicionless
drug testing to include the screening of students who participate
in extracurricular activities, and a controversial decision was
rendered by the Court’s conservative majority in favor of
the use of public funds to finance school voucher programs.
Anthony Saul Alperin, Tahoe-Sierra—The Supreme
Court Again Rejects Per Se Rules for Regulatory Takings Claims,
34 URB. LAW. 811 (Fall 2002).
In Tahoe-Sierra, the Court continued to reject per se rules to
govern the analysis of regulatory takings claims and reaffirmed
the importance of Penn Central’s three-factor test for determining
whether government regulations result in compensatory takings
of property within the meaning of the Takings Clause of the Fifth
Amendment. The decision also underlines the importance of identifying
the “denominator” in regulatory takings analysis.
Diane K. Hook, Comment: The Religious Land Use and
Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000: Congress’ New Twist
on “Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick,” 34 URB.
LAW. 829 (Fall 2002).
Congress passed the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons
Act of 2000 to specifically prohibit various forms of religious
discrimination and exclusion. This article addresses how RLUIPA
is being used by individuals to obtain favorable land-use decisions,
whether Congress has exceeded its powers to regulate such religious
activity under the Commerce Clause, the Spending Clause, or the
Enforcement Clause, and discusses some stratagems both from the
local government’s perspective and the religious entity’s
perspective to obtain favorable land-use decisions without litigating
under RLUIPA.
Annual Review of the Law
Emerging Issues
Joseph Z. Fleming, The “United States”:
An Analysis of Federal Maritime Commission v. South Carolina
Ports Authority, 34 URB. LAW. 859 (Fall 2002).
This report is about the case that “went even farther”
and was decided “after the book was completed.” Regardless
of whether you are liberal or conservative, pro-individual rights
or pro-business rights, Federal Maritime Commission v. South Carolina
State Ports Authority of May 28, 2002, is an extremely important
decision.
Environmental Law
Linda C. Beresford, Brownfield Redevelopment:
Laws and Cases Governing the Clean Up and Associated Cost
Recovery of Contaminated Properties, Part I, 34 URB. LAW.
873 (Fall 2002).
This report summarizes developments impacting the clean up of
contaminated properties and the laws governing the cost recovery
of such remediation efforts. In addition to the Brownfields Revitalization
and Environmental Restoration Act of 2001 and new amendments to
CERCLA under the Brownfields Revitalization Act, several significant
cases changed the CERCLA cost recovery landscape, which plays
such a significant role in brownfield redevelopment.
Scott I. Steady, Brownfield Redevelopment: Laws and
Cases Governing the Clean Up and Associated Cost Recovery of Contaminated
Properties, Part II, 34 URB. LAW. 885 (Fall 2002).
This report summarizes developments impacting the clean up of
contaminated properties, including the meaning of “disposal,”
cost recovery, liability, section 104(e) responses, contribution,
bankruptcy, property value, and sovereign immunity.
Richard J. Brickwedde, 2001–02 Solid Waste Legal
Update, 34 URB. LAW. 889 (Fall 2002).
This report summarizes case law developments in the field of solid
waste.
Land Use, Planning and Zoning Law
Peter A. Buchsbaum, This Year in Federalism,
34 URB. LAW. 893 (Fall 2002).
Over the past decade, judicial federalism jurisprudence has limited
federal impacts on local land-use decisions. Although quite a
few of the key cases have not directly involved land use, their
holdings clearly have diminished the power to override local land-use
decisions.
Mitchell A. Carrel & Robert B. Foster, Sprouting
Towers: Resolving the Struggle Between Cellular Towers and Nature
Under the Telecommunications Act of 1996, 34 URB. LAW. 901
(Fall 2002).
Section 704 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 was intended
to reach a balance that both preserved state and local zoning
and land use control and promoted the growth of the personal communications
services industry through the expansion of the national wireless
communications network. For courts charged with applying and enforcing
the Act, achieving the balance between local zoning authority
and national telecommunications growth has proved elusive. Still,
during 2001, courts for the most part were able to apply the Act
as intended, mediating disputes between localities and providers
by supporting localities that hold providers to the standards
set by local zoning laws, yet protecting providers from the whims
of disgruntled boards.
Daniel J. Curtin, Jr. & Elizabeth M. Naughton, Inclusionary
Housing Ordinance Is Not Facially Invalid and Does Not Result
in a Taking, 34 URB. LAW. 913 (Fall 2002).
This article discusses a case of first impression from California,
in which a California appellate court in June 2001 upheld a 10
percent inclusionary housing ordinance on new development imposed
by the City of Napa.
Jonathan Davidson & Susan Trevarthen, 2002 Land
Use ADR Report, 34 URB. LAW. 919 (Fall 2002).
This 2002 ADR update reports on illustrative cases arising from
local government involvement in land-use mediations and state
legislative initiatives to resolve development disputes through
nonlitigation means.
Robert W. Oast, Jr., Treading Water in Slow Economic
Times and Recovering from Disaster: The Job Creation and Worker
Assistance Act of 2002, 34 URB. LAW. 927 (Fall 2002).
The focus of relevant legislative initiatives of the 107th Congress
has shifted dramatically from economic development to economic
recovery. Much of this shift has occurred in the wake of the terrorist
attacks of September 11 on the World Trade Center Towers in New
York City, the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., and the apparently
aborted attack that ended in a crash landing in Pennsylvania.
Robert J. Sitkowski & Brian W. Ohm, Enabling the
New Urbanism, 34 URB. LAW. 935 (Fall 2002).
This is the inaugural report of a newly formed subcommittee concerned
with legal aspects of the “New Urbanism,” a movement
in planning that recently celebrated its twentieth anniversary.
Simply put, New Urbanism seeks to reform conventional planning
and real estate development in many different contexts, including
new development and urban and suburban infill development. Traditional
Neighborhood Developments, or “TNDs,” are one form
of the New Urbanism. To date, only a few articles have been written
about the legal aspects of TNDs and the New Urbanism. This subcommittee
will annually update practitioners on legal developments in this
area of practice, expanding the literature on this topic.
Edward J. Sullivan, Comprehensive Planning, 34
URB. LAW. 945 (Fall 2002).
This report traces the role of the comprehensive plan in the land-use
regulatory process. It categorizes cases dealing with the legislative
requirement found in section 3 of the Standard Zoning Enabling
Act and in the enabling legislation of most states. The report’s
two theses are that: (1) the comprehensive plan has been invested
with an increasing role in judging regulations so that separate
plans are required and, once present, are a significant factor
in evaluating regulations; and (2) the judicial discussion of
comprehensive plans has shifted away from whether such plans are
required and toward the manner of their implementation. This past
year has been no exception, although there are more cases than
in past years dealing with a separate requirement of a comprehensive
plan.
Julie A. Tappendorf, Architectural Design Regulations:
What Can a Municipality Do to Protect Against Unattractive, Inappropriate,
and Just Plain Ugly Structures?, 34 URB. LAW. 961 (Fall 2002).
Although zoning regulations are intended to protect against inappropriate
uses and excessive height and bulk of structures, they generally
are not intended to protect against “ugliness” in
a community. Thus, an increasing number of municipalities have
sought ways to protect against the “uglification”
of their communities. Unlike many areas of the law in which “bright
line” standards exist, aesthetics is difficult to evaluate
because beauty has remained in the eyes of the beholder. Thus,
without carefully drafted architectural design regulations in
place, including clearly defined standards, the municipality faces
a legal challenge to the validity of its ordinance by a property
owner denied the right to build what he or she desires.
A. Dan Tarlock & Lora A. Lucero, Connecting Land,
Water, and Growth, 34 URB. LAW. 971 (Fall 2002).
This report examines some of the problems that have evolved in
our processes to manage water, land, and growth and offers some
possibilities for bridging the pervasive disconnects so that we
can move toward truly sustainable communities. Although much of
the dialogue surrounding “smart growth” is about the
future we want to create (e.g., compact, pedestrian-oriented,
mixed-use development patterns, and sustainable water supplies),
more attention needs to be focused on the process—how to
get from here to there.
Paul D. Wilson, When Sending Flowers Is Not Enough:
Developments in Landowner Civil Rights Lawsuits Against Municipal
Officials, 34 URB. LAW. 981 (Fall 2002).
In the last year or so, federal appeals courts have decided at
least six cases in which landowners responded to municipal denials
of land-use permits by counterattacking for damages. The landowners
prevailed in two of the six battles, including a case in which
the Seventh Circuit found that a town president violated the equal
protection rights of a condominium developer, even after the developer
sent the town president flowers. In this post-Olech world, five
of these six circuit court opinions focused on landowner equal
protection claims. The sixth—one of the two successful claims—concerned
the more traditional due process theory. This article discusses
these cases.
Public Education Law
Lelia B. Helms, Recent Developments
in Public Education Law: Post-Secondary Education, 2001–02,
34 URB. LAW. 995 (Fall 2002).
The effects of years of Supreme Court decisions narrowing access
to federal courts may be apparent in litigation involving postsecondary
institutions. Except for disputes over pension benefits, few age
discrimination claims were reported. Similarly the number of reported
Americans with Disabilities Act and section 504 claims involving
either students or employees appears to be decreasing, with many
of those turning on issues of Eleventh Amendment immunity. Nonetheless,
First Amendment and sex discrimination claims remain frequent
sources of litigation. Disputes over both the administration of
student financial aid and the long-term consequences of aid policies
on students increased this year, comprising almost 15 percent
of the reported cases. Despite the economic benefits of education,
the burden of debt on students grows—a result of relentless
tuition growth over the past decades. Many students spend decades
dealing with creditors over the terms of repayment for their student
loans. Also, problems between lenders appear to be more contentious.
With Case Notes on
Black v. Commonwealth • 1019
Doe v. Department of Public Safety • 1019
Volume 34 Index