Comment Up
Letter to the Editor
The Palm Beach Post
February 6, 2014
Developers game system every time
Re:
“Chapel condo project evolved over time; so should this one” Monday
editorial: How do developers get a local city council to break its local
zoning laws and dump “big, controversial projects” on unhappy voters?
It just happened in the Chapel condo approval. It happens every day in
Florida. There is a method to the madness.
Step One: the developer
goes over the top and demands way too much. The proposal demonstrates
complete indifference to the applicable zoning “laws.” The neighborhood
is justifiably outraged. Neighbors are thinking: “I have to live here
too!”
Step Two: The developer “listens” to the neighbors and comes
up with a “compromise.” The new proposal still violates the zoning
code, but is not quite so outrageous. The city council begins to
“moderate.” This process can go back and forth while the developer
continues to engage in the “listening” and “compromise” dance.
Step
Three: “Win-win!” The developer scales back the proposal so that only
“moderate waivers” (according to the Post editorial) of the applicable
“laws” are required. Hard core neighborhood opponents remain angry (“The
council voted to exempt the project from our zoning code!?*”) The rest
of the neighborhood thinks, “Yes, it’s not good, but it could have been
so much worse! I guess I will have to live with this.”) The city council
says “We forced the developer to back down and compromise.” The
developer silently smiles: “Yes, I led them by the nose to where I want
to be.”
All land use boils down to politics. If you can get three
votes out of five from the council, you get your land use waiver. That’s
why many Floridians worked hard to put the Florida Hometown Democracy
amendment on the 2010 ballot. These “moderate” and not so moderate land
use violations would have gone to the voters for final approval or
rejection. That’s why the real estate industry viewed Hometown Democracy
as an existential threat and crushed it in a tidal wave of money.
Developers understand all this. Will voters ever learn?
LESLEY BLACKNER
Palm Beach
2 comments:
Amen, Lesley. Katie Mcgiveron
This is so true.
Post a Comment