Petroglyph Trails Master Plan Application

The January 12, 2012, Planning & Zoning Commission (PZC) Meeting will consider an application for Master Plan zoning of the Petroglyph Trails subdivision, approximately 210 acres.  This is located on the I-25 Frontage Road, north of Hwy. 165.  (See site map here.)  It borders on the Placitas Trails and Anasazi Meadows subdivisions.

Here is the Master Plan application.  Here is the County Development Department staff report, which the PZC uses in forming its recommendation.  Here is the Legal Notice for the Jan. 12 meeting.

This Master Plan is for mixed use of commercial, light industrial, single family residential and higher density residential.  According to the Staff Report, most of the property falls within the “I-25 Frontage/Bernalillo Interface Overlay District”.  In the Placitas Area Plan this district is designated to include these mixed usages, with a transition to ordinary single family house zoning on the border with present residential subdivisions.

 

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Tax bill SNAFU update – December 9

As of today (12/9), the CORRECTED property tax bills have not been received.  Yet the deadline for payment is tomorrow.  It seems that we are obligated to pay incorrect tax amounts.

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LARGE SCALE PROPERTY TAX ERRORS IN PLACITAS

LARGE SCALE PROPERTY TAX ERRORS IN PLACITAS

 by Floyd Cotton

When Placitas residents began receiving their property tax bills on November 2, 2011, it soon became obvious that many bills contained erroneous tax rates for items related to the Eastern Sandoval County Arroyo Flood Control Authority (ESCAFCA).   There were widespread over and under billings.

Acting for the greater community, this writer (with help from others) wrote a letter to County officials, which brought the errors to their attention. (see text of letter below)

This writer met with key officials from the Office of the Treasurer and the Office of the Assessor.  After discussing the matter with me and after looking at the letter, they agreed that some property owners were over-billed and that some were under-billed.  They said they would mail corrected tax bills to affected property owners in the near future.

One particular item of discussion with the County officials had to do with payment of bills under protest and the possibility of having to file a civil suite as prescribed on the FAQ Card (frequently asked questions) that were mailed with the original tax bills.  They informed me that civil suits could only come into play if and when the County and the property were unable to resolve a disputed issue prior to the specified deadline (January 10, 2012).

I made a follow up telephone call to the Assessor’s Office on  November 21 and was told that the tax rate re-calculations for Placitas had been completed and were being sent to the Treasurer’s Office.

TEXT OF LETTER TO COUNTY OFFICIALS FOLLOWS:

November 9, 2011

 

Mr. Daryl Madalena

Chairman, Sandoval County Commission

P.0. Box 40

Bernalillo, NM  87004

RE: NM DFA Order dated 9/1/2011, Setting Property Tax Rates – 2011 Tax Year

 Dear Chairman Madalena,

This is to respectfully request your assistance in resolving a matter of obviously improper or wrongful implementation of the above-referenced Order directed to you by Secretary Thomas E. Clifford, PhD, New Mexico Department of Finance & Administration.

Specifically, Property Tax bills sent to myself and, to my direct knowledge, to scores of other residential and nonresidential property owners within the unincorporated area known as Placitas, New Mexico, Zip Code 87043, contain tax rates that are not in compliance with the above referenced Order from Secretary Clifford.

Attached to the Secretary’s Order was a Certificate that contains the appropriate 2011 tax rates for Sandoval County.  http://nmdfa.state.nm.us/Certificate_of_Property_Tax.aspx

According to the DFA certificate, all Placitas owners of residential and nonresidential properties should have been billed 0.500 mills for operations of the Eastern Sandoval County Arroyo Flood Control Authority (ESCAFCA).  Further, the limit of 0.500 mills for the 2011 tax year is set forth explicitly in the New Mexico statute, signed into law on April 6, 2011, that excluded the entire Placitas area from ESCAFCA (HB 306, Section 7(A)(2)). (For convenient reference, the ESCAFCA operations rate for Placitas is posted at the bottom of the DFA Certificate, on line 52, spanning columns B through F)

1.   I and many other Placitas residential property owners have received tax bills in which the rate for ESCAFCA operations is stated as being 0.66 mills;

2.  Many owners of nonresidential properties in Placitas have received tax bills in which the rate for ESCAFCA operations is stated as being .585 mills; and

3.  Many other Placitas property owners were not billed at all for the ESCAFCA Debt Service at the specified rate of 2.401 mills.

Some billing rates for ESCAFCA operations exceed what both the DFA order and the aforesaid statute allow.  Others were not billed for debt service. To clarify further, HB 306 excluded all of Placitas (consisting of voting Precincts 5, 28, 55, and 56) plus the portion of Algodones (Precinct 6) east of I-25 from ESCAFCA; but Section 7 of that same Act allowed ESCAFCA to impose an operating levy on the excluded area for tax year 2011 only, provided that the levy rate not exceed 0.500 mills.  ESCAFCA did, indeed, set its 2011 operating rate for the excluded area (Placitas Precincts 5, 28, 55 and 56) at 0.500 mills, and it is that rate, and nothing higher, that the DFA order allows the County to impose for ESCAFCA operations.  Properties in the excluded area are still obligated to pay for currently authorized debt until that debt is paid.

An extremely important matter attendant to the above-described tax rate irregularities is that County rules (as set forth in the Frequently Asked Questions accompanying each tax bill) seem to require each property owner whom the County has billed incorrectly to seek redress via a civil suit petition to the District Court, and to do so within a very limited time period.  It would be inequitable to burden scores of property owners with the time and expense that such action entails to correct generalized mistakes made by the County itself.  Therefore, I request on behalf of myself and other Placitas area property owners that you and the Commission issue orders and/or instructions to appropriate County Officials and Staff to review all the property tax bills for Placitas and to bring the rates for ESCAFCA operations into conformity with the DFA order and the aforementioned New Mexico statute.

An encouraging recent development is that while gathering documentation for this correspondence, I contacted and was re-contacted by senior officials in the office of the Sandoval County Treasurer and the Office of the Assessor.  After researching the issues raised herein, officials in those offices advised me that they now understand the fact that an as yet to be determined number of Placitas property owners were billed at incorrect tax rates for ESCAFCA operations.  They have also given assurances that they are working to promptly identify all of the incorrect billings and will issue corrected property tax bills.

However, due to the deadlines for action imposed by the County for citizens to seek redress, I and many other Placitas property owners are eager to receive your prompt reply to the issues raised in this correspondence.

Sincerely,

Floyd E. Cotton

32 Desert Mountain Road

Placitas, New Mexico 87043

(505) 771-9463

cc:

Thomas E. Clifford, Secretary NM DFA

Orlando Lucero, Sandoval County Commission            Lorraine Dominguez, Treasurer

Don Leonard, Sandoval County Commission                Phillip Rios, County Manager

Don Chapman, Sandoval County Commission              Tom Garcia, Assessor

Glenn Walters, Sandoval County Commission

 

 

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Sandoval County and Cashwell Developers Game Placitas

Sandoval County and Cashwell Developers Game Placitas

by Bob Gorrell

November 22, 2011

 

Over the years Sandoval County has enjoyed the ever increasing downhill flow of cash from the property tax rich Placitas Area.  It has a new plan to speed this flow by increasing the density of homes and without regard to existing residents.  If you have not yet been aware of the new and loosely drafted Clustering Ordinance, it is time to pay attention as you may soon have one of these developments next door to you.

In what follows, I will show that the Cashwell cluster housing zoning application creates an average density about 450% greater than existing surrounding housing densities.  Unfortunately, this is being accomplished through the proverbial devil in the details.  The Sandoval Planning and Zoning Commission had planned to continue to hear comment and deliberate on the Cashwell Application, that seemingly already has staff approval, on Thursday, December 8, 2011 at 6:00PM.  However that meeting has been postponed, and the next PZC meeting is scheduled for January 12, 2012.  It is not sure at this time if the Cashwell Application will come up for hearing then.

A major question concerning any application for Cluster Housing Special Use zoning is this: What is the maximum number of clustered housing units allowable on the specific property?  This question must presently be answered by the Sandoval County Planning and Zoning Commission (PZC) and the County Commission, due to the present Cashwell application to re-zone for 65 clustered housing units on an 87 acre property.  The Sandoval County Zoning Ordinance (SCZO), approved by the Sandoval County Commission in April, 2009, lacks adequate specifics to answer this question.  For Cluster Housing applications in the Placitas Area, the only two applicable bits of county legislation are to be found in the Placitas Area Plan (PAP) and the SCZO:

 “Developers should be allowed to cluster housing units on a smaller single family lot size. A cluster development should be allowed to cluster on 50% of the total predevelopment parcel. However, undevelopable area such as slopes greater than 40% as well as arroyos should not be considered as part of the gross parcel.” (PAP, page 64) (emphasis added)

“Although, an SU district for a clustered housing development may be authorized only if the total number of dwelling units in that development does not exceed that which would have been allowed if the site were developed under its previous zoning designation.” [SCZO 10(D)(3b)] (emphasis added)

On October 10, 2008, the PZC conducted a workshop aimed at developing language on cluster housing in both the PAP and SCZO.  I wrote a discussion brief for that workshop, and distributed copies at that meeting.  My brief outlined the need for definition of “building areas”, set-backs, minimum lot sizes, etc.  County staff had assured citizens that though full specificity regarding these would not appear in the PAP, they would be included in the zoning ordinance revisions that followed.  But that was not the case.  The PZC Chair announced at that meeting that instead these specifics would be considered on a case-by-case basis for each application for cluster housing zoning.  As a result only the above very vague wording appeared in the PAP and SCZO.

The lack of definition of undevelopable area in PAP and SCZO does not relieve an applicant for cluster housing SU zoning from the obligation of addressing this in the application, since both PAP and SCZO require that this determine the maximum number of housing units.  As the Cashwell application does not adequately address this issue, it is therefore incomplete.  In the following I will recommend ways in which this issue can be addressed, both by the applicant and by County Staff and Commissions.

It should be noted that the description of “undevelopable area” in the PAP uses a totally skewed example: “slopes greater than 40%”.  Obviously slopes greater than 40% are unbuildable, but in the same way that 600 mph is an unsafe speed for I-25.  So is 200 mph, or even 100 mph.  I can only speculate how this 40% figure was chosen for this example in the PAP.  Perhaps it was pulled from my previously mentioned brief, which among other examples cited that of Asheville, North Carolina, which then allowed development on up to 40% slopes, but only if the maximum housing zoning density was reduced by 90%!  Asheville has since modified their ordinance to prohibit development on slopes greater than 25%[1].

Due to the lack of adequate specifics in county law, legitimate determination of maximum number of clustered housing units on a property must be based primarily upon interpretation of the term “undevelopable” in the PAP and the phrase “would have been allowed if the site were developed under its previous zoning designation” in the SCZO.  Interpretation of this language must properly be guided by two considerations: 1) What adequately preserves the character of the area in which the property is located; and 2) What is reasonably considered developable by other regions with similar characteristics.

Attention to the first of these considerations is mandated in both the PAP, for properties in the Placitas Area, and just as emphatically in the SCZO for the county as a whole.  A primary goal identified in the PAP is “maintaining the semi-rural landscape and existing development patterns” of the Placitas Area.  As to the second consideration, because cluster housing does not yet exist to any significant extent in the unincorporated parts of Sandoval County, some guidance ought to be sought outside the county for what is and is not buildable.

One obvious feature of an area’s character is the general density of housing units.  When considering the application for Cluster Housing re-zoning on the Cashwell property, a prominent factor must therefore be the density found in adjoining and nearby developed areas.  One can map a square mile that includes the “S Curve” on NM165, which is located one mile north of NM165, and which for the most part is “built out”.  It contains about 100 homes.  The terrain within this square mile (640 acres) of existing development is far less severe than that of the Cashwell property.  Its density of one home per 6.4 acres is therefore representative of this aspect of the character of the area.  Clearly the application to build 65 cluster homes on 87 acres on the Cashwell property, meaning one home per 1.3 acres, would produce a development that is far more dense.  Cluster housing developments will by definition include some areas that have higher density than under standard residential zoning.  But the property as a whole, including “open space” areas, should not so greatly exceed the housing unit density of the general area, if that area’s character is to be preserved.  The Staff Report on the Cashwell application suggests that the density is acceptable here, because standard zoning for the West Placitas Community District, where the Cashwell property is located, sets the minimum residential lot size as 1 acre, which in the abstract would allow for 87 such lots on the Cashwell property.  But given the average density in the area, this in fact would not preserve “existing development patterns”.

The existing development patterns in the Placitas Area, as indicated by the sparse density of housing units, is largely due to the terrain attributes in the region.  It must be noted that the terrain on the Cashwell property is among the most challenging in Placitas.  In general, the following terrain attributes of the Placitas Area have dictated the sparse densities due to risks of negative return on investment and/or unacceptable liability:

  • Building in water courses and small set-backs from them.  These areas are now defined by FEMA as flood plains, which makes this land effectively unbuildable.
  • Building upon Placitas Area soil types and steep slopes.  Placitas soils liquefy easily and erosion occurs rapidly with soil saturation.  Liquefaction can occur more easily by the disturbance and de-consolidation of soil.  Hard surfaces like roofs and drives increase soil saturation surrounding structures.
  • Most soils in the Placitas Area liquefy and flow rapidly when saturated and if on slopes greater than 10%.
  • Most homes in the Placitas area are built on slopes of less than 10%, as well as most drive ways and other functional areas surrounding homes.
  • Erosion control becomes almost impossible upon slopes greater than 20%.  For example, to prevent erosion of property, most Placitas developments incorporate detention ponds.  A small ten foot diameter detention pond that is two feet deep and with a weir one foot below rim on a 30% slope has a face on the downhill side of four feet plus!  Without a hardened face such as concrete, this pond will fail and take with it the slope it was to protect and including that upon which a home may be bearing.

Considering SCZO 10(D)(3b) (quoted above), if these and related factors were applied to a subdivision plan for the 87 acre Cashwell property, which has a good deal of slope greater than 20%, a number of arroyos, and soil conditions at least as challenging as in other parts of Placitas, it is unlikely that any more than 30 to 35 acres would be considered properly developable, which under present zoning would allow for that same number of homes.  And, this does not take into account that this would still be significantly more dense than the one home per 6.5 acres in the surrounding area.

Given that cluster housing is essentially new in unincorporated Sandoval County, the county must look for guidance from other sources, such as the zoning ordinances in other communities.  Slope is a major driver in the definition of what is undevelopable, and guidelines set down by both official and non-official professional organizations are available.  The following and the previously mentioned Ashville ordinance, are samples of these sources focused on what is allowable where steep slopes are present:

 

  • DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT – Does not define maximum slope, but does require a site analysis test for buildable areas having slopes greater than 10%.
  • Missoula, MT –  Defines buildable areas as 25% or less slope.  Note:  Building in this area usually required removal of bedrock.
  • Smart Communities (www.smartcommunities.ncat.org) –  For a slope of 25 percent or greater, 80 percent must remain as open space with no more than 20 percent being altered or developed.
  • Carmel, CA –  Determining Buildable Area: For the purposes of calculating allowable building volume and floor area, the buildable area of a lot shall be the lot area, minus continuous portions of the site, occupying at least 10 percent of the site area, with a slope greater than 30 percent.
  • Harrison, NJ – Buildings may be constructed in accordance with the regulations of the applicable zoning district except that the minimum lot area shall not be less than two acres, and provided that no portion of the building is constructed on a slope where the grade exceeds 20%.
  • State of New Jersey’s Water Quality Management Planning rule (N.J.A.C. 7:15)  — The applicant shall demonstrate through site plans depicting proposed development and topography that new disturbance is not located in areas with a 20 percent or greater slope.  [Municipalities may include additional restrictions for 20 percent slopes or include restrictions for lesser slopes, at their discretion, as long as the minimum requirements above are met.]
  • 10 Towns Watershed Committee as a prototype for adoption by its municipal government members. — On slopes of 25% or greater, no development, re-grading or stripping of vegetation shall be permitted. Any disturbance for roadway crossings or utility construction in areas of 25% slopes or greater are considered variance conditions and the applicant must affirmatively demonstrate that the roadway or utility improvements are necessary in the sloped area. The sloped area to be developed, re-graded or stripped of vegetation shall be drawn on the development plans for each individual lot.
  • Lehigh Valley Planning Commission –15% to 25% slopes are only suitable for low-density residential, limited agricultural and recreational uses. Over 25% Only used for open space and certain recreational uses.
  • Cranbury Township Ordinance # 03-11-07: AN ORDINANCE REGULATING THE INTENSITY OF USE IN AREAS OF STEEPLY SLOPING TERRAIN TO LIMIT SOIL LOSS, EROSION, EXCESSIVE STORMWATER RUNOFF, THE DEGRADATION OF SURFACE WATER AND TO MAINTAIN THE NATURAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DRAINAGE PATTERNS OF LAND.  — The applicant shall demonstrate through site plans depicting proposed development and topography that new disturbance is not located in areas with a 20 percent or greater slope.
  • Shenandoah, VA; – Prohibits construction on slopes greater than 20 percent and replaces  the previous ordinance that allowed building on lots with slopes of up to 40 percent with a special use permit (SUP).
  • Van Buren County – (2) No site disturbance shall be allowed on slopes exceeding twenty-five (25%) percent
  • Chimney Rock Village  – As the definition of steep slope indicates, any proposed development whose average natural slope is less than 15% is not subject to the regulations for permitted density as set forth herein.  Any proposed development which meets the definition of steep slope and whose average natural slope is above 30% is subject to the most restrictive site density.
    • (A) 15.0% to 19.9% slope: 1 dwelling unit per 3 acres.
    • (B) 20.0% to 24.9% slope: 1 dwelling unit per 5 acres.
    • (C) 25.0% to 29.9% slope: 1 dwelling unit per 7.5 acres.
    • (D) 30.0% slope and greater: 1 dwelling unit per 10 acres.

Summarizing the provisions of the thirteen above samples reveal that all impose restricted use on “steep slopes”; one imposes additional conditions for slopes greater than 10%; three impose additional conditions for slopes greater than 15%; seven or 54% impose additional conditions for slopes greater than 20%; two following implementation of their original slope ordinances later revised them to more restrictively make slopes greater than 25% non-buildable, and do not allow even soil disturbance on slopes greater than 25%.

These significant facts cannot be ignored:

1)      Twelve or 92% impose additional conditions for slopes greater than 25%.

2)      All thirteen impose additional conditions for slopes greater than 30%.

3)      All thirteen either completely disallow or reduce “buildable” areas by 80 to 90% within areas defined as steep slopes.

CONCLUSION:

It would be prudent for Sandoval County to adopt a steep slope ordinance that may need to vary for certain areas.  Soil types vary within the county and consequently so does the natural angle of repose of slopes.  Santa Fe County has a 30% maximum slope for development, but its soil types are far more stable than those found in Placitas and around Rio Rancho, although the soils found in the Jemez may be similar to those in Santa Fe County.

Maximum buildable slopes within the Placitas area should not exceed 20% without significant restrictions, and possibly, due to our unstable soil types, not exceed 15%.  A simple observation and sampling of existing developments within the Placitas area could determine the predominate voluntary limits of buildable areas.  Statistical analysis of the sample set would then conclusively define the market driven maximum slope, and would provide solid foundation for the implementation of PAP goals, particularly “maintaining the semi-rural landscape and existing development patterns” of the Placitas Area.  This in turn would work towards providing a usable definition of the crucial term “undevelopable”.  The housing unit calculation necessary for Cluster SU applications would then become a mathematical solution, as it should be.

Safety Illustration:

Slope failures may be triggered by construction practices. Development on slopes commonly requires construction of a flat site on which to put a house. With the cut-and-fill technique, material is removed from the uphill part of the site and placed on the downhill portion to form a level surface. The fill material may compact and settle later, and cause cracking of foundations and walls. The extra load of a building may trigger a slope failure on unrestrained fill. Retention walls and pre-compaction of fill may lessen the potential for that type of slope failure. Construction excavation may over-steepen slopes, increasing the chance for slope failure. Fill material may settle, causing cracking in buildings.

 

 

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PZC Meeting re:Cashwell – October 27, 2011

Report: Cashwell Re-Zoning Hearing, Oct. 27, 2011

by Orin Safier

On Oct. 27 the Sandoval Planning & Zoning Commission (PZC) held the second part of the hearing on the latest application for Cashwell Re-Zoning for Cluster Housing.  No final decision was made, and this matter is scheduled to be taken up next at the Dec. 8 PZC meeting.

I will first report the end result of this meeting, then briefly report some of what led up to it.  This result was announced by Chairman Arango, who said that he had reached these conclusions due mainly to a previous conversation with the County Attorney and Michael Springfield, Director of the Development Department.  Here are the main points Arango laid out:

1)      All that the County Commission is deciding, if it gives approval to the application, is that the applicants (Cashwell and associates) have permission to do cluster housing on the property, not what the full details would be of what is built there.  Therefore the applicants do not have to produce a full subdivision plat at this time.  This goes against the recommendation previously made by the County Staff (that is, the Development Department) in its Staff Report that this platting would be required for the application to proceed further.  The applicants did promise at this meeting that subdivision platting, dividing the property into building lots, would eventually be done – though they made no promises about whether that would be done any time in the foreseeable future.

2)      The applicants would also not be required at this time to prove 100 year water supply.  (This had also been recommended in the County Staff Report.)  Arango said that a study by Shoemaker and Associates, produced in 2008 when Cashwell submitted the first application, was adequate to address the water issues as regards the re-zoning application.  (That study, though, did not go into detail about water availability, and in fact expressed skepticism about the availability of water of adequate quantity and quality at the Cashwell property.)

3)      The applicants’ attorney had argued that Section 19F of the Zoning Ordinances, Zone Map Amendment Guidelines, do not apply to the present application.  Arango said that the County disagrees, and that the applicants need to address these issues before the application can proceed.  Specifically, the applicant needs to provide more information about:

a.       Accessibility – The application states that there is a “working agreement” with adjacent property owners to the north of the Cashwell property as to building a road off of Overlook Road, accessing the ridge top.  However George Hidy, past president of the Overlook Homeowners Assoc., testified that no such agreement existed, at least not with the HOA or the developer Bob Poling, who owns an easement where that new road would go.  Applicants’ attorney had raised questions during the hearing as to whether Poling’s easement could block construction of a county road there, and even whether Poling was current on property taxes for his easements.  Arango said that applicants must provide either proof of access to build a road off Overlook road, or show how to build alternative roads to the ridge coming off Hwy. 165, or show that applicants have entered into good faith negotiations with Poling to get access through the easement.  Emergency services, that is the Fire Department, must also weigh in on whether the road plans meet standards.

b.      Liquid Waste – Though Arango maintained that the applicants need do nothing more to address water facilities, they do need to specify more adequately liquid waste facilities.  Ken DeHoff, who lives on Pine Court on the west end of the ridge, had presented detailed objections to the vague liquid waste plan in the application, and Arango indicated that the applicants need to address these objections in more detail.

c.       General Compatibility – Provision 19(F)(5) of the Zoning Ordinance requires: “The general compatibility of the proposed amendment with actual or prospective permissive zoning use of adjacent properties”  Arango said that this was inadequately addressed in the application.  Specifically, the question of how plans to build on the ridge-top would affect visibility, both from Hwy. 165 (south) and Overlook (north), must be addressed.  The applicants should produce pictures showing how this might look from these different perspectives.  The implication is that this should be compatible with other building in the area.

d.      Lots – Though Arango said that the applicants would not be required to do a subdivision platting at this time, they must make clear how the property would divide into “lots”.  The application mentions mainly “building envelopes” rather than lots, so it was unclear even the general nature of later subdivision.  Arango said that County Staff would be preparing a letter to the applicants specifying what is needed to make clear the nature of the lots.  This would then also make clear how much of the development as planned would be “common open space”. 

e.      Open Space – In addition to the concern about the amount of open space after lots are specified, Arango raised the concern of Ken DeHoff regarding placement of liquid waste facilities on the “common open space”.  DeHoff raised the issue as to whether, if such facilities were located there, that would conform with the definition of “common open space” in the Zoning Ordinances.  Whether or not that designated area would be used for waste treatment needs to be spelled out by the applicants.  In addition, the use of the open space as a “wildlife corridor” needs to be clarified.  Gerald Barkdoll pointed out in his comments that it makes no sense to have a wildlife corridor where there is no connection to other open spaces.  Arango indicated that the applicants need to more adequately address their claim that this cluster housing development helps preserve wildlife corridors.

f.        In the Zoning Ordinance Section 10(D)(3)(c)(2) for Cluster Housing, it specifies that: “Common Open Space may form one or more areas within the development, provided that at least one area is at least 60% of the total Common Open Space.”  Arango said that once the lot areas are calculated, and excluding such features as driveways that cannot be part of open space, it must show that this 60% requirement is met. 

g.       Number of Houses on Ridge-Top – During the hearing the applicants had indicated that they are flexible on the maximum number of houses that could be built on the ridge top.  Arango said that they need to specify this in the application.  Applicants should produce a new plan map, showing the actual number of ridge-top houses planned, and also the cluster housing in general throughout the property.

h.      Setbacks – Arango pointed out that there is nothing in the application about setbacks from property lines, and between structures, which overrides what is in the Zoning Ordinance for Rural Residential/Agricultural Zoning:  “All residential and residential-related buildings and structures shall be located with a front setback of no less than twenty (20) feet, side setbacks of no less than ten (10) feet and rear setback of no less than ten (10) feet”  If applicants wish different setbacks, they need to revise their application.

In general, Arango said that in order for the hearings to proceed the applicant must address these issues, mainly involving section 19(F).  Then the applicants would also have to revisit the section 10 provisions regarding Special Use Cluster Housing.

Because responding to these requests from the Chair would require considerable work, the applicants said that they may have to seek a continuance of the proceedings beyond the Dec. 8 date.

At the beginning of the meeting Commissioner Bob Cote recused himself from participation on the Cashwell application, due to a business relation with Mr. Seavey, who represents the Cashwell applicants.

There is more to report about the citizens’ testimony, but I will save that for another forum entry.  The above gives the gist of the Chair’s instructions to the applicant.

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ESCAFCA and Your Property Taxes

I have been asked several times recently if property taxes will go down this year because Placitas and Algodones east of I-25 have been removed from the ESCAFCA boundaries. The short answer is NO, as part of the compromise bill HB 306 ES-CA taxpayers are responsible for the $6 million in bonds that were approved in 2008. Steve Barro wrote an excellent summary of what we can expect in the future and with his permission, I am including it for your information.

ESCAFCA’S PROPOSED NEW BOND ISSUE AND ITS
IMPLICATIONS FOR PLACITAS TAXES

Stephen M. Barro
June 25, 2011

At the ESCAFCA board meeting on Tuesday, June 21, the directors resolved to proceed immediately to issue the second $3 million of the $6 million in bonds that ESCAFCA voters authorized in the election of November 2008. They did so notwithstanding that $2.5 million of the initial $3 million borrowed in 2009 still sits unused in the bank, and that there is no prospect of using more than a minor fraction of it before the proposed date—this September—at which the second $3 million would become available. Under the ESCAFCA legislation that took effect in April, Placitas taxpayers are obligated to pay debt service taxes on the whole $6 million, even though Placitas is no longer part of ESCAFCA. This note summarizes the information now available on the size and duration of that obligation.
Mr. Erik Harrigan of RBC Capital presented to the board a rough, preliminary finance plan for the second $3 million bond issue. He outlined several possible approaches to marketing the new bonds, but the option that he recommended relies on financing through the New Mexico Finance Authority (NMFA). The board voted to accept this recommendation and intends to submit an application to NMFA this week. NMFA is a state agency that provides loan financing to New Mexico local authorities, generally at interest rates lower than those obtainable in the private market. The main characteristics of the proposed bond issue (clearly not yet finalized) are as follows:
• Duration of loan: 12 years. (For reasons unknown, it appears that no other duration, either shorter or longer, has been considered.)

• Repayment schedule: Large principal payments (“front loading”) in the first two years, amounting to more than $1.2 million of the $3 million borrowed. This would be followed by very low payments in the next two years, with payments then rising thereafter. Note: The rationale for this odd-sounding structure is that it would leave room for ESCAFCA to issue more bonds in 2013 and thereafter without having to raise the debt service tax rate. The premise is that ESCAFCA’s remaining voters, residents of Bernalillo and Algodones, will vote in 2012 to authorize additional debt. Placitas taxpayers would not pay for any such subsequent issues but nevertheless will be affected by the structure set up to accommodate them.

• Interest rate: Variable, with lower rates applicable to funds to be repaid in the first few years and higher rates to funds to be repaid later. RBC estimates that the average annual interest rate with NMFA financing would be 3.11 percent, but the illustrative principal and interest figures that RBC provided to the board are based on a higher assumed rate of 3.50 percent.

Based on the preliminary RBC plan, total annual ESCAFCA property taxes for Placitas taxpayers would be approximately as shown below. However, because the RBC figures for the new $3 million bond reflect conservative assumptions about both the bond interest rate and the rate of tax-base growth, it is possible that actual taxes could be somewhat lower than the amounts given here.
Tax year 2011 (property tax bills to be sent out this November):
Debt service tax rate: 2.446 mills
Operating levy (per statute): 0.50 mills
Total ESCAFCA tax rate 2.946 mills,

This translates into a tax of $289 on a home with full assessed value of $300,000. For comparison, the total ESCAFCA tax rate this year (TY 2010) is 3.104 mills, consisting of 2.444 mills for debt service and 0.66 mills for operating.
Tax year 2012
Debt service tax rate: 2.442 mills
This translates into a tax of $239 on a home with full assessed value of $300,000.
Note: Placitas taxpayers will pay no ESCAFCA operating levy in 2012 or thereafter.
Tax years 2013 to 2018
Debt service tax rate ranges between 0.9 and 1.0 mills, which translates into a tax of $88 to $98 per year on a home with full assessed value of $300,000.
Tax years 2019 to 2022
With the initial ESCAFCA $3 million bond issue completely paid off, the debt service tax rate falls to between 0.6 and 0.8 mills, or $59 to $78 per year on a home with full assessed value of $300,000.

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Should the improperly approved Fisher Sand and Gravel Operation be allowed to continue?

ln April of 2010 the Sandoval County Development quietly gave administrative approval to a Terrain Management Plan for the grading of a large parcel of land south of Hwy 165 and east of I-25.  You may have noticed over the years the large pieces of machinery and gravel mining tailings visible from I-25 and Bernalillo.  If you were one of the Placitas residents who live near this operation, you also would have noticed the dust and sound of equipment that digs and separates rock and gravel from dirt and sand.

The welfare of the public was totally ignored by Sandoval County Development, both then and now as the gravel mining operation continues.  Gravel mining requires a zoning change, approval first by the Planning and Zoning Commission, and then by the Sandoval County Commission.  By clever misrepresentation of what was going to occur on the property, or by creative interpretation of the zoning ordinance, the public was given no input.  The zoning ordinance was designed to require elected officials’ approval for any land use that may affect the public’s wealth and welfare, and only allows for administrative approval of inconsequential land uses that do not directly affect the public.

In May of 2010 Fisher Sand and Gravel took the next step, and applied for a Zoning Change from RRA to I-1 Industrial.  This revision, had it been approved, would have been in accordance with the Placitas Area Plan that allows light industrial use on the properties adjoining I-25.  However, a sand and gravel mine would have been far outside of the Placitas Area Plan’s allowed uses.

In the summer of 2010, Eastern Sandoval County residents became alarmed after learning that Fisher had applied to the NM Environmental Department to operate a Hot-Mix, Asphalt Batch plant on this property.  Residents who attended the Commission Hearing had personal experience with the smell of hot asphalt.  They also lived directly downwind from the Fisher property and voiced their concerns about potential health and noise issues at the August 27, 2010 Sandoval Planning and Zoning Commission (PZC) hearing.

That meeting had on its agenda item TU-I0-00l, a request by Fisher Sand & Gravel, for a Temporary Use in the RRA (Rural Residential Agricultural) Zone to allow a portable asphalt plant and sand and gravel screening operation for a period not to exceed 24 months.  During that meeting, Placitas residents Jim Beverly and Floyd Cotton brought additional information to the PZC.  Beverly and Cotton presented documentary proof that the Fisher application was fraudulent.  This proof was in the form of a report by a New Mexico licensed surveyor showing that the property boundaries and distances contained in the application were contrived. The property maps that were a part of their application to Sandoval County and the NM Environment Department had also been deliberately altered so as to falsely show that their application met the required one quarter mile separation from residential properties in the area.  The Fisher officials who testified at the hearing declined to provide any response to the documentation provided by residents Beverly and Cotton.  Nor were they required to do so by the Commission.  Even so, the Commission did not vote to disapprove the Fisher application.  Instead the Commission tabled the application at the insistence of Planning Department Director Mike Springfield.  Later, the state, presumably realizing the false information, rejected the application and Fisher withdrew request TU-I0-00l for a temporary use permit.

The irony to all of this is that Fisher Sand and Gravel have continued their sand and gravel screening operation, still today, and without a permit.  On October 27, 2011 the PZC will hear a revision to the Zoning Ordinance that provides additional language intended to ensure that future grading can be approved administratively only within narrow parameters.  This will ensure that sand and gravel mining will occur only by approval of elected officials and their designees and not under the guise of simple grading.  However, there remains an elephant in the room:  Why does the county continue to allow Fisher to operate the sand and gravel mine illegally?

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Redistricting in Sandoval County

Redistricting in Sandoval County

 

by Jerry Saxton

 

As an aid to the redistricting of our County Commissioner Districts each commissioner appointed one member from his District to a watchdog group. Commissioner Orlando Lucero appointed me as his representative. As representatives, we were each asked to attend as many of the District meetings as possible, to assist in listening to constituents input, and to keep our individual Commissioners informed of issues. The primary reason for redistricting is to make each District have approximately the same population. Our own District 1 was the District that had grown the least in the last ten years. Our current District is almost 20% short of the desired population size. Thus our District would be the District that needed to be changed the most. In addition to meeting the population criteria, each District needed to meet four other criteria: must not dilute minority voting strength; must preserve communities of interest whenever reasonable; must be contiguous; and must be compact.

 

I attended all of the meetings except the one in Cuba. In general the meetings were sparsely attended with our own meeting being the one best attended as might be expected given the number of motivated and interested people in our area. Many individuals expressed a personal preference for one plan or another. It is obvious that you cannot please everyone.

 

The arguments which carried the most weight were those that could be applied to a community as a whole. The communities and pueblos to the northeast of Placitas do most of their shopping in or near the town of Bernalillo. Thus Pena Blanca, while it may appear far away to some of us, would much prefer to be in District 1 since their typical travel in our county is along interstate 25. There are no major roads to the west that connect the precincts along the interstate to the rest of their current District 5; so that any commissioner in District 1 would be relatively close to them compared to any commissioner living in the western or central part of District 5. There seemed to be a consensus that the redistricting of 10 years ago was not in their best interest. Thus a plan A1 was born and could be adopted if the commissioners would agree to support it.

 

Even though the addition of the precincts to the northeast seems to add a large area, additional population still had to be added to District 1 in order to meet the population goals. This is accomplished in plan A1 by adding some of the densely populated precincts that are adjacent to the town of Bernalillo to the west. Plan A1 also causes some ripple effects in the other Districts. The county hired an expert group to vet all of the plans including A1.

 

There are perhaps thousands of ways that plans meeting the population, compactness, and contiguous goals could be developed. The difficult part is meeting the community and minority guidelines. As to what plan the commissioners will finally accept I really do not know. However, I personally do not expect any of the plans with large changes to get much consideration.

 

 

 

 

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CASHWELL: P&Z HEARING PROCEDURE

REMARKS ON THE COUNTY PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION’S PROCEDURE FOR HEARING THE CASHWELL REZONING REQUEST

Presented at the Planning and Zoning Commission (PZC) meeting, August 25, 2011

Stephen M. Barro

October 2, 2011

This is a slightly edited version of remarks presented at the PZC hearing on the Cashwell matter, with some material added (shown in brackets) to clarify the context.  The hearing is to continue on October 27, 2011.  As yet, there has been no word on whether the PZC intends to make any changes in its procedure.

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.  My name is Steve Barro.  I live at 1 Alto Court in Placitas.  I was going to comment on certain negative aspects of the proposed Cashwell development and on aspects of the Cashwell plan that do not meet the tests set forth in the zoning ordinance, but under the circumstances I believe that the procedural issues have priority, and those are the only things I am going to talk about.  I think the process we are going through right now illustrates the importance of the points that attorney Paul Livingston made at the beginning of this proceeding, [when he requested that the Cashwell matter be considered in a full quasi-judicial hearing, as the law requires.]

The Cashwell representatives and their County staff allies have spoken for over an hour and a half.  You have allowed them to offer an organized, uninterrupted presentation [in support of their application for Special Use zoning that would allow a clustered housing development on the Cashwell property.]  We, the opponents [of the rezoning request and the proposed development], who represent the overwhelming preponderance of opinion in the Placitas community, are being limited to fragmentary two- to five-minute remarks.  And on top of that, you apparently are ready to give the applicants the last word as well as the first.

Now, I have had the pleasure of reading the New Mexico Supreme Court decision in the Albuquerque Commons case, in which Mr. Flynn-O’Brien [the Cashwells’ attorney] played such a prominent role.  With respect to quasi-judicial procedure, the prominent themes in that decision are fairness, justice, and due process.  You are giving us none of those.  If you wanted to be fair, you would give our side the same one- to two-hour opportunity to present our own coherent, organized case, and then the full opportunity to rebut, point by point, everything that the applicants have had to say.  Short of that, this hearing does not come close to being fair or to giving us the due process that the law requires.

When Cashwell came up in 2009, we in the community did not know or understand our procedural rights in this matter.  This time we know them.  So I’m going to offer you a prediction.  If you go ahead and go through this process in the manner that Chairman Arango has outlined, without giving us equal time or an equal opportunity, I predict that this time Placitas residents will not roll over; that we will pursue the procedural question before all relevant bodies and in all relevant forums, however long it may take.  Thank you for your attention.

Posted in Zoning and Land Use | 1 Comment

CASHWELL ISSUE ANALYSIS

ISSUE ANALYSIS: THE CASHWELL PROPOSAL FOR A CLUSTERED HOUSING DEVELOPMENT

Stephen M. Barro

October 4, 2011

The Cashwell family, owner of a 103-acre tract along highway NM 165 in the heart of Placitas, has applied for Special Use (SU) zoning that would allow a clustered housing development, including homes on small, urban-type lots and a row of closely spaced houses along the property’s highest ridge.  The Sandoval County Development Department is supporting the application.  Placitas residents overwhelmingly oppose it because of its incompatibility with the surrounding neighborhoods, its conflicts with the Placitas Area Plan, the negative precedent it would set for future development, and the flawed manner in which the County is reviewing it.  The County Planning and Zoning Commission is now considering whether to recommend approval of the Cashwells’ request to the final decision maker, the County Commission.  How this case is resolved may determine not just what happens to a particular Placitas property but also how key zoning principles will be interpreted and how land-use decisions will be made henceforth in Sandoval County

Background

This is the third application for rezoning submitted on behalf of the Cashwell family by Mr. Knight Seavey, an Albuquerque developer who runs a firm called Insite Works PC.  The first application (2008) was for master planned (MP) zoning that would have allowed a combination of residential development and a commercial center along highway NM 165.  The County held up consideration of the request pending completion of the Placitas Area Plan (PAP).  That plan (adopted May 2009) disapproved commercial activity at the Cashwell location but endorsed the principle of clustered housing.  Accordingly, the Cashwells’ second application, again for MP zoning, centered around a plan to build 75 clustered housing units, densely grouped on lots as small as 7,500 square feet.  It also “reserved” the acreage originally designated for commercial use, presumably to allow for future attempts at getting such use approved.  Despite strong opposition from Placitas residents, both the County Development Department and the Planning and Zoning Commission (PZC) approved this application, only to have it denied by the Sandoval Board of County Commissioners (the “County Commission”) in July 2009.  The Cashwells appealed the denial and prevailed in District Court, largely because the County Commission’s procedures were flawed.  The matter was remanded to the County Commission, setting the stage for the present third application.

Shortly after the remand, Sandoval County amended its zoning ordinance to, among other things, explicitly recognize clustered housing as a Special Use.  Placitas residents asked that specific definitions of acceptable forms of clustered housing be included in the ordinance and proposed standards that would have ruled out the present Cashwell approach; but the County chose instead to omit specifics, leaving it to County staff and the PZC to decide on a discretionary basis, case-by-case, what forms of clustering to support.  Consequently, the present Cashwell application, as the first to be submitted under the new provisions, sets up a critical test of how clustering will be interpreted.  What is at stake is not just the zoning of the Cashwell tract (important as that may be, given its size and central location) but also, more significantly, what new residential patterns may emerge in Placitas (and elsewhere in the County) under the clustering rubric, and how that change may transform our community.

What Would Rezoning Allow? What Would Happen If Rezoning Were Denied?

The current application requests Special Use (SU) zoning to allow construction of 65 clustered homes on an 87 acre portion of the 103-acre Cashwell tract.  (Once again, the 16 acres originally earmarked for commercial use are excluded, leaving the door open for future attempts to get such use approved.)  Seventeen of the clustered homes would be lined up in a closely spaced row along the property’s highest ridge top, parallel to highway NM 165.  Each would be built within a 7,500 square foot “building envelope”—that is, on a lot of about one-sixth of an acre.  Another 34 homes would be built in clusters on lower ground, also on 7,500 square foot lots.  Only the building envelopes would be held as fee simple property by the homebuyers; the land around and between them would be held in common by the owners of homes in each cluster.  The remaining 14 homes would be of a different type, situated on contiguous lots of one-eighth of an acre or less.  County staff have characterized them as attached residential units, but the applicant has said that though they would be small and very close together, they would not share common walls.  What is clear is that these units, whether attached or not, would resemble no existing housing anywhere in the vicinity.

Apart from the 65 proposed homes, the Cashwell site plan also includes several vaguely described nonresidential office structures on five acres near the property’s western edge.  The application emphasizes that a large fraction, 61 percent, of the 87-acre area would be preserved as open space, but much of that space is steeply sloped or occupied by arroyos, hence presumably unsuitable for home construction and destined to remain undeveloped regardless of how the property is zoned.  Most of the proposed development would be accessed directly from highway NM 165, but the 17 ridge-top homes would be reached, according to the site plan, via a connection to the main road serving the neighboring Overlook subdivision.

Cashwell representatives have argued that to reject SU zoning would be to deprive the owners of the right to use and develop their property; but that assertion is groundless.  If the present application were rejected, the property would retain its current CD-WP zoning (Community District, West Placitas).  That zoning allows an owner to develop his/her property by building single-family homes on lots of one acre or more.  In fact, housing compatible with CD-WP zoning (formerly RRA, or rural residential/agricultural, zoning) is precisely what the Cashwells initially proposed.  Their 2008 plan called for 49 single-family homes on one- and two-acre lots.  Although the commercial portion of that plan was rejected, the residential portion was not.  If SU zoning is denied, the Cashwells will still have the same right as they and all other West Placitas property owners have today, namely, the right to develop their land under the CD-WP rules.

The County’s Review Process and the Application’s Current Status

As this is written, Sandoval County is part way through its review of the Cashwell application.  Although objections have been raised to the review process (by this author, among others), County officials thus far are adhering to their customary method of dealing with a zoning request: first, County Development staff review the application and report to the PZC; second, the PZC holds a hearing at which the application is presented but citizens are afforded only minimal opportunity to comment and present opposing views; and third, if the PZC votes to recommend approval, the County Commission itself holds a hearing that may result in a final decision.

The Staff Report was submitted to the PZC on August 16, 2011.  In it, the County Development Department expresses support for the requested rezoning, just as it did with the Cashwells’ previous application.  The Report asserts that the proposed clustered housing development complies with the Placitas Area Plan (PAP) and the Sandoval County Zoning Ordinance (SCZO)—claims that opponents strongly dispute.  It also deems the application to be essentially complete, whereas opponents point to important missing items.  But the Staff Report also contains a new and unexpected element that could turn out to be significant: an apparent staff recommendation (there is some ambiguity) that the Cashwells should be required to comply with certain provisions of the County Subdivision Ordinance as well as those of the SCZO—most significantly, provisions pertaining to water—as a condition for approval of rezoning.

The Cashwell request had been scheduled for a PZC hearing on July 21, but the hearing was deferred because the Cashwells had failed to hold a legally required pre-application public meeting.  That public meeting took place on August 12, following which the PZC took up the matter on August 25.  That evening, County Development staff laid out their conclusions, Cashwell representatives presented a lengthy explanation and justification of the proposed development, and several members of the public (all opposed to the Cashwell request) were afforded a few minutes each to express their views.  Because the hour grew late and not all interested members of the public had been heard, the PZC chairman adjourned the hearing and announced that it would resume at the Commission’s October 27 meeting.

If the PZC votes to recommend approval of rezoning, as it did in 2009, the matter would be forwarded for consideration by the County Commission.  That body’s decision would be final, unless challenged in District Court.

Why Is There Opposition?

An overwhelming majority of Placitas residents oppose the present Cashwell development plan, just as they opposed the 2008 and 2009 versions.  The opposition stems partly from objections to specific features of the proposed development and partly from broader concerns about what approval would mean for the area’s future.  Moreover, apart from the substantive issues, concerned citizens have become increasingly aware that the County’s process for adjudicating the Cashwell request falls far short of the due process that New Mexico law requires.  The main objections to specific features are summarized here; the broader concerns and procedural aspects are addressed under the next heading:

  • Clustered houses on the ridge top.  The feature that has drawn the sharpest negative reaction is the plan to build a row of closely spaced clustered homes along the ridge top.  Contrary to what both the PAP and SCZO require, such action would ruin rather than protect some of the finest views in Placitas; it would damage the local environment rather than preserve it.  Because the dense array of ridge-top structures would be jarringly different from the area’s existing housing patterns, it cannot be reconciled with the SCZO criteria that “compatibility of property uses” be maintained in the area and that the area’s “integrity and character” be preserved.
  • An inversion of the purpose of clustering.  The nominal reason for adding clustering provisions to the PAP and SCZO was to give developers incentives to preserve open spaces and scenic views and to reduce ridge-top incursions, but the Cashwell application stands the clustering concept on its head.  Instead of resulting in less ridge-top construction, the Cashwells’ approach to clustering would result in much more; instead of protecting and preserving view sheds, the proposed approach would obliterate them.  Some Placitas residents do support the clustering concept and would favor a clustering plan that actually advances the stated PAP goals, but not a destructive clustering plan like the one now before the County.
  • Attached and small-lot homes.  No attached or tightly spaced residential units and no fraction-of-an-acre lots exist anywhere in the vicinity.  Such units would be incompatible with all existing housing in the surrounding neighborhoods.  Introducing them would diminish the community’s attractiveness to present and prospective residents and reduce the values of nearby properties.  To allow so patently inappropriate a form of housing would contravene the PAP directive “to promote housing types consistent with existing development pattern[s] and subdivisions in the West Placitas area.”
  • More clustered units than the law allows.  The SCZO states that no more units can be built in a clustered development than could have been built on the same parcel under the existing zoning.  Neither the Cashwells nor County staff have tried to specify the latter number.  Instead, they have repeatedly made the absurd claim that the Cashwells would be allowed under the existing CD-WP zoning to build one home per gross acre of the 87-acre parcel—this notwithstanding that much of the land is taken up by arroyos and steep slopes and that some acreage would be needed for roads and utilities.  Qualified local real estate professionals and developers have estimated, taking topography into account, that the feasible number of one-acre lots on buildable land is closer to 30 or 35 than to the 65 proposed in the Cashwell plan.
  • The unaddressed issue of water.  The SCZO states that the County shall not approve a zoning change unless satisfactory provision has been made for water.  The Cashwell plan makes no provision for water at all. It does not say how water would be obtained, or how the well-documented quantitative and qualitative inadequacies of the area’s natural water resources would be overcome.  Nearby property owners have well-founded concerns that attempts to draw water for the Cashwell tract would impair their own water supplies.  The applicants have asked to be allowed to deal with water issues after rezoning occurs, but the law unambiguously requires that this be done before any zoning change can be approved.
  • The open door for future commercial development.  The ploy of excluding 16 acres along highway NM 165 from the proposed residential development signals the Cashwells’ intent to keep trying, as many times as may be necessary, to obtain approval for commercial development of that land.  The present plan’s inclusion of nonresidential structures and the application’s repeated references to planned nonresidential activities support that inference.  Well aware of this threat, area residents would be skeptical of any plan for the Cashwell tract that does not definitively foreclose the commercial option.

In addition to objecting to these and other aspects of what the Cashwells propose, opponents have identified major points that the application fails to address.  Among the missing items are (a) evidence of an agreement to allow a connection to the Overlook access road—without which the present Cashwell plan would be infeasible; (b) information that the SCZO requires regarding locations of water tanks, drainage facilities, landscaping, and other features; (c) an assessment, also required by the SCZO, of economic impacts on adjoining properties, (d) a plan for  the special wastewater treatment facilities needed to serve the proposed small residential lots; and (e) most important, evidence as to the availability of water—the factor that will ultimately determine how many residences the property can support.  Lacking these items, the application should be deemed incomplete, hence not yet ready for consideration by the cognizant County bodies.

Note:  If the PZC were to concur with the County staff recommendation to require compliance with provisions of the Subdivision Ordinance as a precondition for considering SU zoning, some gaps in the application might be filled.  Most importantly, the Cashwells would be obliged to conduct a full-scale water study, including the drilling of test wells, and to provide additional information on such matters as liquid and solid waste systems, access, terrain management, cultural property protection, and fire protection.  With that additional information in hand, the County would be better situated than it is now to make an informed decision about the proposed development.

Broader Implications

Much more is at stake in the Cashwell case than a decision affecting one particular property.  How this zoning dispute is resolved will have broad implications for the future of Placitas, and indeed all unincorporated parts of Sandoval County.  Allowing tightly clustered, ridge-top, small-lot, and/or attached housing on the Cashwell tract would set a precedent, encouraging other property owners to submit similar proposals (at least once the local economy recovers).  One can foresee requests to allow clusters of attached or closely packed units even on, say, five- or ten-acre parcels in the midst of established subdivisions.  Were such development to occur, the attributes that make the Placitas area attractive and special could gradually be erased.

Further, apart from the issue of clustering, a Cashwell success in obtaining Special Use zoning would send a troubling message.  It would signify that a developer can propose uses incompatible with County ordinances and plans, submit a flawed and incomplete application, receive a review that reflects the developer’s interests but ignores opposing views, and still win the approval of County decision makers.  The protections supposedly afforded by existing zoning classifications and provisions of the Area Plan would be shown to be ineffective, easily breached by a request for SU or MP zoning.  Property owners and developers would have broad leeway to build as they please, notwithstanding lack of compatibility with what exists and the adverse effects on the “integrity and character” of the community.

Finally, how the PZC and County Commission decide the Cashwell case—what procedures they follow—may be more consequential in the long run than the substantive decision itself.  The Planning and Zoning Commission’s customary practice has been to deal with zoning issues in informal hearing mode: County staff summarize their report, the applicant presents its plan, members of the public get to comment briefly, and the PZC then makes its decision.  Generally, there has been a presumption in favor of a property owner’s request for a zoning change.  Citizens have now learned, however, that New Mexico law prescribes more evenhanded quasi-judicial proceedings and offers due-process protections that Sandoval County has up to now ignored.  The New Mexico Supreme Court’s decision in Miller v. Albuquerque narrowly limits acceptable justifications for a zoning change, of which the one most pertinent to the present case is that the requested change should benefit the community.  Its 2008 decision in the Albuquerque Commons case defines what constitutes an acceptable quasi-judicial procedure and lays out the rights of parties to zoning cases.  The latter include the right to legal representation, to present and rebut evidence, to have the matter decided on the basis of evidence in the record, and to be heard by an impartial tribunal that has not had ex parte contacts.  The Cashwell case could become the instrument for compelling County bodies to conduct full due-process proceedings and to apply the Miller standards, not just in the present instance but in all future contested zoning cases.  The result, if that approach succeeds, would be to transform land-use decision making in Sandoval County, strengthening residents’ protections against all forms of inappropriate development.

Threat and Opportunity

The nature of the threat posed by the Cashwell application is evident:  It is that the County might approve an ill-conceived plan to build the wrong kind of housing in the wrong place; that further destructive developments in Placitas might follow; and that, as a result, our community might become a less desirable place to live than it is now.

But the Cashwell case also presents an opportunity.  The proposed form of clustered housing is so egregiously inappropriate, so at odds with the goals and criteria stated in the Area Plan and zoning ordinance, that the applicants probably could not prevail in a fair proceeding.  Moreover, a fair and thorough review of the issue could draw the PZC and/or the County Commission into looking again at questions left unresolved when the zoning code was last amended:  What forms of clustering should be deemed acceptable?  What minimum lot sizes should be required?  How steep a slope is developable?  What spacing of homes should be permitted on a ridge top?  Had these matters been settled then, the Cashwells might have come up with a plan for their land more in keeping with the neighborhood, and the present zoning dispute (as well as others sure to follow) might have been avoided.

Although the procedural aspects might strike some as formalities, they are in fact centrally important—fully as important as the substantive issues concerning the pending application.  If the PZC’s hearing procedure goes unchallenged and that body is left to deal with the matter in its customary one-sided manner, the case against rezoning will never be laid out in detail or entered into the record, and the Cashwell plan—all its faults notwithstanding—might well be approved.  Given the legal foundation now in place, a real opportunity for change exists; but change will not occur automatically.  Concerned citizens will have to demand that the County follow proper quasi-judicial procedure and offer full due-process protections, and then to be prepared, if necessary, to pursue the matter in multiple forums.  This appears to be the most promising approach now available to warding off unwanted forms of development and securing the future of our community.

*     *     *     *     *

 All views expressed in this paper are solely those of the author.  They do not necessarily reflect the positions of the Eastern Sandoval Citizens Association or its Board of Directors (although it would be pleasant if they did).  

Posted in Zoning and Land Use | 5 Comments