§ 2793c - Designation of growth centers
§ 2793c. Designation of growth centers
(a) Regional planning commission technical planning assistance. Regional planning commissions, pursuant to section 4345a of this title, are uniquely positioned to assist municipalities with growth center planning. To this end, at the request of a municipality contemplating growth center designation, the regional planning commission shall provide technical assistance in support of that designation.
(1) Technical support shall include:
(A) preparing population, housing, and employment growth projections for a period of not less than 20 years;
(B) GIS mapping, including identification of development capacity, land use, existing and planned infrastructure and service areas, important natural resources and historic resources, and physical constraints to development and associated features; and
(C) build-out analyses for potential growth centers to document whether the geographic area of proposed growth centers will accommodate a majority of the projected growth over a 20-year period in a manner that is consistent with the definition under subdivision 2791(12) of this title.
(2) These projections and build-out analyses may be prepared on a municipal or regional basis.
(b) Growth center designation application assistance.
(1) By October 1, 2006, the chair of the land use panel of the natural resources board and the commissioner of housing and community affairs jointly shall constitute a planning coordination group which shall develop a coordinated process to:
(A) ensure consistency between regions and municipalities regarding growth centers designation and related planning;
(B) provide municipalities with a preapplication review process within the planning coordination group early in the local planning process;
(C) coordinate state agency review on matters of agency interest; and
(D) provide the state board with ongoing, coordinated staff support and expertise in land use, community planning, and natural resources protection.
(2) This program shall include the following:
(A) The preparation of a "municipal growth centers planning manual and implementation checklist" to assist municipalities and regional planning commissions to plan for growth center designation. The implementation manual shall identify state resources available to assist municipalities and shall include a checklist indicating the issues that should be addressed by the municipality in planning for growth center designation. The manual shall address other relevant topics in appropriate detail, such as: methodologies for conducting growth projections and build-out analyses; defining appropriate boundaries that are not unduly expansive; enacting plan policies and implementation bylaws that accommodate reasonable densities, compact settlement patterns, and an appropriate mix of uses within growth centers; planning for infrastructure, transportation facilities, and open space; avoiding or mitigating impacts to important natural resources and historic resources; and strategies for maintaining the rural character and working landscape outside growth center boundaries.
(B) A preapplication review process that allows municipalities to submit a preliminary application to the planning coordination group, consisting of a draft growth center map and a brief explanation of planning and implementation policies that the municipality anticipates enacting in order to guide development inside the growth center and maintain the rural character of the surrounding area, to the extent that it exists. Department and land use panel staff shall solicit comments from state agencies regarding areas of respective agency interest; evaluate the preliminary application for conformance with the requirements of this section; identify potential issues related to the growth center boundary and implementation tools; and provide recommendations for addressing those issues through adjustment to the growth centers boundary, revisions to planned implementation tools, or consideration of alternative implementation tools. Preliminary review shall be available to municipalities while they are engaged in the municipal planning process so that recommendations may be considered prior to the adoption of the municipal plan and associated implementation measures.
(C) Ongoing assistance to the state board to review applications for growth center designation, including coordinating review by state agencies on matters of agency interest and evaluating applications and associated plan policies and implementation measures for conformance with the definition under subdivision 2791(12) of this title and any designation requirements established under subsection (e) of this section.
(D) The Vermont municipal planning grant program shall make funding for activities associated with growth centers planning a priority funding activity, and the Vermont community development program shall make funding for activities associated with growth centers planning a priority funding activity under the planning grant program.
(c) Public involvement and review. Any decision to apply for growth center designation shall be made by vote of the municipal legislative body, subject to the process established under sections 1972 and 1973 of this title.
(d) Application and designation requirements. Any application for designation as a growth center shall be to the state board and shall include the following:
(1) a demonstration that the growth center proposal meets the definition of a growth center established in subdivision 2791(12) of this title;
(2) a map and a conceptual plan for the growth center;
(3) identification of important natural resources and historic resources within the proposed growth center, the anticipated impacts on those resources, and any proposed mitigation;
(4) when the secretary of agriculture, food and markets has developed guidelines in compliance with 6 V.S.A. § 8, the applicant shall demonstrate that the approved municipal plan and the regional plan both have been updated during any five-year plan readoption that has taken place since the date the secretary of agriculture, food and markets developed those guidelines, have been used to identify areas proposed for agriculture, and have been designed so as to avoid the conversion of primary agricultural soils, wherever possible;
(5) a demonstration:
(A) that the applicant has a regionally confirmed planning process and an approved municipal plan, pursuant to section 4350 of this title;
(B) that the approved plan contains provisions that are appropriate to implement the designated growth center proposal;
(C) that the applicant has adopted bylaws in conformance with the municipal plan that implement the provisions in the plan that pertain to the designated growth center;
(D) that the approved plan and the implementing bylaws further the goal of retaining a more rural character in the area surrounding the growth center, to the extent that a more rural character exists, and provide reasonable protection for important natural resources and historic resources located outside the proposed growth center;
(6) a capital budget and program adopted in accordance with section 4426 of this title, together with a demonstration that existing and planned infrastructure is adequate to implement the growth center;
(7) a build-out analysis and needs study that demonstrates that the growth center:
(A) is of an appropriate size sufficient to accommodate a majority of the projected population and development over a 20-year planning period in a manner that is consistent with the definition under subdivision 2791(12) of this title; and
(B) does not encompass an excessive area of land that would involve the unnecessary extension of infrastructure to service low-density development, or result in a scattered or low-density pattern of development at the conclusion of the 20 year planning period;
(8) a demonstration:
(A) that the growth center will support and reinforce any existing designated downtown, village center, or new town center located in the municipality or adjacent municipality by accommodating concentrated residential neighborhoods and a mix and scale of commercial, civic, and industrial uses that is consistent with the anticipated demand for those uses within the municipality and region;
(B) that the proposed growth center growth cannot reasonably be achieved within an existing designated downtown, village center, or new town center located within the applicant municipality.
(e) Designation decision.
(1) Within 90 days of the receipt of a completed application, after providing notice as required in the case of a proposed municipal plan or amendment under subsection 4384(e) of this title, and after providing an opportunity for the public to be heard, the state board formally shall designate a growth center if the state board finds, in a written decision:
(A) that the growth center proposal meets the definition of a growth center established in subdivision 2791(12) of this title;
(B) that the applicant has identified important natural resources and historic resources within the proposed growth center and the anticipated impacts on those resources, and has proposed mitigation;
(C) that the approved municipal plan and the regional plan both have been updated during any five-year plan readoption that has taken place since the date the secretary of agriculture, food and markets has developed guidelines in compliance with 6 V.S.A. § 8, have been used to identify areas proposed for agriculture, and have been designed so as to avoid the conversion of primary agricultural soils, wherever possible;
(D)(i) that the applicant has a regionally confirmed planning process and an approved municipal plan, pursuant to section 4350 of this title;
(ii) that the approved plan contains provisions that are appropriate to implement the designated growth center proposal;
(iii) that the applicant has adopted bylaws in conformance with the municipal plan that implement the provisions in the plan that pertain to the designated growth center;
(iv) that the approved plan and the implementing bylaws further the goal of retaining a more rural character in the areas surrounding the growth center, to the extent that a more rural character exists, and provide reasonable protection for important natural resources and historic resources located outside the proposed growth center;
(E) that the applicant has adopted a capital budget and program in accordance with section 4426 of this title, and that existing and planned infrastructure is adequate to implement the growth center;
(F) that the growth center is of an appropriate size sufficient to accommodate a majority of the projected population and development over a 20-year planning period in a manner that is consistent with the definition under subdivision 2791(12) of this title, and that the growth center does not encompass an excessive area of land that would involve the unnecessary extension of infrastructure to service low-density development or result in a scattered or low-density pattern of development at the conclusion of the 20-year planning period;
(G)(i) that the growth center will support and reinforce any existing designated downtown, village center, or new town center located in the municipality or adjacent municipality by accommodating concentrated residential neighborhoods and a mix and scale of commercial, civic, and industrial uses consistent with the anticipated demand for those uses within the municipality and region;
(ii) that the proposed growth center growth cannot reasonably be achieved within an existing designated downtown, village center, or new town center located within the applicant municipality.
(2) The board, as a condition of growth center designation, may require certain regulatory changes prior to the effective date of designation. In addition, the growth center designation may be modified, suspended, or revoked if the applicant fails to achieve the required regulatory changes within a specified period of time. As an option, municipalities applying for growth center designation may make certain regulatory changes effective and contingent upon formal designation.
(3) Except as otherwise provided in this section, growth center designation shall extend for a period of 20 years. The state board shall review a growth center designation no less frequently than every five years, after providing notice as required in the case of a proposed municipal plan or amendment under subsection 4384(e) of this title, and after providing an opportunity for the public to be heard. For each applicant, the state board may adjust the schedule of review under this subsection so as to coincide with the review of the related and underlying designation of a downtown, village center, or new town center. If, at the time of the review, the state board determines that the growth center no longer meets the standards for designation established in this section, it may take any of the following actions:
(A) require corrective action;
(B) provide technical assistance through the coordinated assistance program; or
(C) remove the growth center's designation, with that removal not affecting any of the growth center's previously awarded benefits.
(4) At any time a municipality shall be able to apply to the state board for amendment of a designated growth center or any related conditions or other matters, according to the procedures that apply in the case of an original application.
(f) Review by land use panel and issuance of Act 250 findings of fact and conclusions of law. Subsequent to growth center designation by the state board, an applicant municipality may submit a request for findings of fact and conclusions of law under specific criteria of 10 V.S.A. § 6086(a) to the land use panel of the natural resources board for consideration in accordance with the following:
(1) In requesting findings of fact, the applicant municipality shall specify any criteria for which findings and conclusions are requested and the nature and scope of the findings that are being requested.
(2) The panel shall notify all landowners of land located within the proposed growth center, entities that would be accorded party status before a district commission under 10 V.S.A. § 6085(c)(1)(C) and (D), and all owners of land adjoining the proposed growth center of a hearing on the issue. The panel may fashion alternate and more efficient means of providing adequate notice to persons potentially affected under this subdivision. Persons notified may appear at the hearing and be heard, as may any other person who has a particularized interest protected by 10 V.S.A. chapter 151 that may be affected by the decision.
(3) The panel shall review the request in accordance with and shall issue findings of fact and conclusions of law under the applicable criteria of 10 V.S.A. § 6086(a) which are deemed to have been satisfied by the applicant's submissions during the formal designation process, any additional submissions, as well as associated municipal plan policies, programs, and bylaws. Findings and conclusions of law shall be effective for a period of five years, unless otherwise provided. The panel, before issuing its findings and conclusions, may require specific changes in the proposal, or regulatory changes by the municipality, as a condition for certain findings and conclusions. These findings and conclusions shall be subject to appeal to the environmental court pursuant to 10 V.S.A. chapter 220 within 30 days of issuance.
(4) During the period of time in which a growth center designation remains in effect, any findings and conclusions issued by the panel or any final adjudication of those findings and conclusions shall be applicable to any subsequent application for approval by a district commission under chapter 151 of Title 10 and shall be binding upon the district commission and the persons provided notice in the land use panel proceeding, according to the rules of the land use panel, provided the proposed development project is located within the designated growth center.
(5) In any application to a district commission under chapter 151 of Title 10 for approval of a proposed development or subdivision to be located within the designated growth center, the district commission shall review de novo any relevant criteria of 10 V.S.A. § 6086(a) that are not subject to findings of fact and conclusions of law issued by the land use panel pursuant to this section.
(6) The decision of the state board pursuant to this section shall not be binding as to the criteria of 10 V.S.A. § 6086(a) in any proceeding before the panel or a district commission.
(g) Review by district commission. In addition to its other powers, in making its determinations under 10 V.S.A. § 6086, a district commission may consider important resources within a proposed growth center that have been identified in the designation process and the anticipated impacts on those resources, and may require that reasonable mitigation be provided as an alternative to permit denial.
(h) Concurrent designation. A municipality may seek designation of a growth center concurrently with the designation of a downtown pursuant to section 2793 of this title, the designation of a village center pursuant to section 2793a of this title, or the designation of a new town center pursuant to section 2793b of this title.
(i) Benefits from designation. A growth center designated by the state board pursuant to this section is eligible for the following development incentives and benefits:
(1) Financial incentives.
(A) A municipality may use tax increment financing for infrastructure and improvements in its designated growth center pursuant to the provisions of Title 24 and Title 32. A designated growth center under this section shall be presumed to have met any locational criteria established in Vermont statutes for tax increment financing. The state board may consider project criteria established under those statutes and, as appropriate, may make recommendations as to whether any of those project criteria have been met.
(B) Vermont economic development authority (VEDA) incentives shall be provided to designated growth centers.
(2) State assistance and funding for growth centers.
(A) It is the intention of the general assembly to give the highest priority to facilitating development and growth in designated downtowns and village centers whenever feasible. The provisions in this section and elsewhere in law that provide and establish priorities for state assistance and funding for designated growth centers are not intended to take precedence over any other provisions of law that provide state assistance and funding for designated downtowns and village centers.
(B) On or before January 15, 2007, the secretary of administration, in consultation with the secretaries of natural resources, transportation, commerce and community development, and agriculture, food and markets, shall report to the general assembly on the priorities and preferences for state assistance and funding granted in law to downtown centers, village centers, and designated growth centers, and the manner in which such priorities are applied.
(3) State infrastructure and development assistance.
(A) With respect to state grants and other state funding, priority should be given to support infrastructure and other investments in public facilities located inside a designated growth center to consist of the following:
(i) Agency of natural resources funding of new, expanded, upgraded, or refurbished wastewater management facilities serving a growth center in accordance with the agency's rules regarding priority for pollution abatement, pollution prevention, and the protection of public health and water quality.
(ii) Technical and financial assistance for brownfields remediation under the Vermont brownfields initiative.
(iii) Community development block grant (CDBG) program implementation grants.
(iv) Technical, financial, and other benefits made available by statute or rule.
(B) Whenever the commissioner of the department of buildings and general services or other state officials in charge of selecting a site are planning to lease or construct buildings suitable to being located in a designated growth center after determining that the option of utilizing existing space in a downtown development district pursuant to subdivision 2794(a)(13) of this title or within a designated village center pursuant to subdivision 2793a(c)(6) of this title or within a designated new town center pursuant to subdivision 2793b(c)(2) of this title is not feasible, the option of locating in a designated growth center shall be given thorough investigation and priority in consultation with the legislative body of the municipality.
(4) State investments. The state shall:
(A) Expand the scope of the downtown transportation fund, as funds are available, to include access to downtowns with the first priority being projects located in designated downtowns, the second priority being projects located in designated village centers, and the third priority being projects located in designated growth centers.
(B) Extend priority consideration for transportation enhancement improvements located within or serving designated downtowns, village centers, and growth centers.
(C) Grant to projects located within designated growth centers priority consideration for state housing renovation and affordable housing construction assistance programs.
(5) Regulatory incentives.
(A) Master plan permit application. At any time while designation of a growth center is in effect, any person or persons who exercise ownership or control over an area encompassing all or part of the designated growth center or any municipality within which a growth center has been formally designated may apply for a master plan permit for that area or any portion of that area to the district commission pursuant to the rules of the land use panel. Municipalities making an application under this subdivision are not required to exercise ownership of or control over the affected property. The district commission shall be bound by any conclusions or findings of the land use panel, or any final adjudication of those findings and conclusions, pursuant to subsection (f) of this section but shall consider de novo any of the criteria of 10 V.S.A. § 6086(a) that were not subject to the final issuance of findings and conclusions by the land use panel pursuant to that subsection. In approving a master permit, the district commission may set forth specific conditions that an applicant for an individual project permit will be required to meet.
(B) Individual project permits within a designated growth center. The district commission shall review individual Act 250 permit applications in accordance with the specific findings of fact and conclusions of law issued by the land use panel under this section, if any, and in accordance with the conditions, findings, and conclusions of any applicable master plan permit. Any person proposing a development or subdivision within a designated growth center where no master plan permit is in effect shall be required to file an application with the district environmental commission for review under the criteria of 10 V.S.A. § 6086(a). (Added 2005, No. 183 (Adj. Sess.), § 4.)