Why Would The City Grant A Variance?

Published: June 7, 2021, 5 a.m.

b"

On today's show we\\u2019re talking about when an approval is not really an approval.

\\n

You think that once you\\u2019ve got your zoning approval, or a development agreement with the city for a particular property, you\\u2019re good to go. The vast majority of the time, that\\u2019s the case. But in the rarest of instances, you can experience a reversal of that approval.

\\n

I\\u2019m increasingly of the opinion, that these occurrences are in fact not that rare. Why would I say that? Well, because it has happened to me on one occasion so far in my career and I know of it happening one two other occasions to friends of mine. Then there are the highly publicized cases that make the headline news like the property at 200 Amsterdam Avenue in NYC.

\\n

That case was a 52 story residential tower in Manhattan. The developer received it\\u2019s building permit after a lengthy process with the board of standards and appeals. Local residents objected to politicians after the building was already under construction. A court case followed and NY State Supreme Court justice W. Franc Perry ruled that the developer had improperly deceived the zoning department when it applied for the 52 story tower. The court ruled that the building was illegally high and ordered the illegal floors already constructed to be removed. That would mean demolishing about 20 floors of construction. The ruling was appealed and the appeals court countered that the state Supreme Court should have deferred to the BSA\\u2019s \\u201crational interpretation\\u201d of zoning regulations.

\\n

You\\u2019re a real estate investor, a developer, or merely a purchaser of a new unit in a project that is to be built. You expect that when the city says yes, they mean yes.

\\n

In the latest incarnation of a municipal flip-flop, we have a new development subdivision held by one of our team members. There is a signed development agreement. But in the past three months the city has changed their zoning code and eliminated the R4 zoning from their code. The approved site plan would not be approved if we applied today, but the application was started before the change in the zoning. We had been told that the application would be grandfathered. So the application continued and the engineering of the entire plan was completed assuming the building permit would be approved with the final zoning plat approval. The last step in the process to seal the deal is a vote by city council to ratify the signed development agreement.

\\n

But somewhere along the way, the lawyers for the city reviewed any new development agreement that didn\\u2019t comply with the new zoning to see if there was a mechanism to terminate the agreement. Indeed the city fully intends to terminate the agreement. This will require a redesign of the subdivision in order to comply with the new zoning density.

\\n

The approval process is not straightforward. As we reported a few weeks ago, the city of Caldwell in Idaho is implementing a moratorium on new development applications for 120 days. The risks are not only achieving your desired plan, but time. Time delays are routine in the zoning process and as we have seen, even after all the approvals are granted and the project is under construction, it\\u2019s still possible for obstacles to appear.

\\n

It is for that reason that in our development applications we aim whenever possible to submit an application that complies fully with the zoning and has zero variances. If we\\u2019re going to ask for a variance, it\\u2019s got to be for a really good reason. It won\\u2019t be to get an extra 5%. It\\u2019s not worth risking the entire project for such a small gain.

\\n

If there is a variance to be granted, you have to ask a simple question. What does the community get as a benefit as a result of granting the variance? If the only benefit is that the developer gets to make a bit more money, then that may not be good enough a reason. There has to be a win for the community.

"