LD 1693
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Page 1 of 2 An Act to Amend the Comprehensive Planning and Land Use Regulation Laws LD 1693 Title Page
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planning district's comprehensive plan as deserving maximum
protection from incompatible development.

 
Sec. 5. 30-A MRSA §4301, sub-§§6-B, 6-C and 6-D are enacted to read:

 
6-B.__Rate of growth ordinance.__"Rate of growth ordinance"
means a land use ordinance or other rule that limits the number
of building or development permits issued by a municipality or
other jurisdiction over a designated time frame.

 
6-C.__Growth area.__"Growth area" means an area designated in
a planning district's comprehensive plan as suitable for orderly
residential, commercial or industrial development, or any
combinations of development, and into which most development
forecast over 10 years is directed.__A growth area designated for
residential development must permit development at densities of
at least 3 dwelling units per acre where public sewerage is
available or, unless limited by natural conditions, at least one
dwelling unit per acre where on-site, individual wastewater
disposal is used.

 
6-D.__Impact fee ordinance.__"Impact fee ordinance" means an
ordinance that establishes the applicability, formula and means
by which impact fees are assessed.

 
Sec. 6. 30-A MRSA §4301, sub-§9, as amended by PL 1993, c. 166, §1, is
further amended to read:

 
9. Growth management program. "Local growth Growth
management program" means a document containing the components
described in section 4326, including the implementation program,
which that is consistent with the goals and guidelines
established by subchapter II and which that regulates land use
beyond that the area required by Title 38, chapter 3, subchapter
I, article 2-B.

 
Sec. 7. 30-A MRSA §4301, sub-§10, as amended by PL 1989, c. 562, §1,
is further amended to read:

 
10. Planning committee. "Local planning Planning committee"
means the committee established by the municipal officers of a
municipality or combination of municipalities which that has the
general responsibility established under sections 4324 and 4326.
Municipalities within the jurisdiction of the Maine Land Use
Regulation Commission are represented on a planning committee by
the commission and its staff.

 
Sec. 8. 30-A MRSA §4301, sub-§§11-A, 13-A and 14-A to 14-E are enacted to
read:

 
11-A. Multimunicipal region.__"Multimunicipal region" is a
region made up of 2 or more municipalities, including those
within the jurisdiction of the Maine Land Use Regulation
Commission, that work together to cooperatively establish a
growth management program or independent growth management
programs that are unified with respect to the implementation of
the state goal identified in section 4312, subsection 3,
paragraph A.__The several municipalities in a multimunicipal
region may establish the region pursuant to section 4326-A or
chapter 115.

 
13-A.__Planning district.__"Planning district" means a
municipality, multimunicipal region, land use planning region
and, where applicable, regional council.

 
14-A.__Rural area.__"Rural area" means a geographic area
identified and designated in a planning district's comprehensive
plan as an area deserving of some level of regulatory protection
from unrestricted development for purposes that may include, but
are not limited to, supporting agriculture, forestry, mining,
open space, wildlife habitat, fisheries habitat or scenic lands,
and away from which most development forecast over 10 years is
diverted.__Where residential development is allowed in a rural
area, it must be at a sufficiently low density and contain other
effective measures to promote contiguous, undeveloped blocks of
land large enough to accommodate economically viable farming and
forestry and habitat for a diversity of fish and wildlife.

 
14-B. Service center community.__"Service center community"
means a municipality or group of municipalities identified by the
office according to a methodology established by rule that
includes 4 basic criteria, including level of retail sales, jobs-
to-workers ratio, the amount of federally assisted housing and
the volume of service sector jobs.

 
14-C.__Site plan review ordinance.__"Site plan review
ordinance" or "site review ordinance" means a land use ordinance
that establishes a formal review procedure to ensure that
developments that fall within defined threshold criteria meet
specific standards, including, but not limited to, standards
governing public health, safety, environment, siting or design.

 
14-D.__Subdivision ordinance.__"Subdivision ordinance" means
either a rule adopted pursuant to section 4403, subsection 2 or a
land use ordinance that establishes a formal review procedure and
determines the standards required for subdivision approval within
the jurisdiction.

 
14-E.__Transitional area.__"Transitional area" means an area
designated in a planning district's comprehensive plan as
suitable for a share of forecasted residential, commercial or
industrial development, but that is neither intended to accept
the amount or density of development appropriate for a growth
area nor intended to provide the level of protection for rural
resources afforded in a rural or critical rural area.

 
Sec. 9. 30-A MRSA §4301, sub-§15-A, as enacted by PL 1993, c. 166, §3,
is amended to read:

 
15-A. Zoning ordinance. "Zoning ordinance" means a type of
land use ordinance that divides a municipality into districts and
that prescribes and reasonably applies different regulations in
each district or that generally regulates the distribution or
intensity of land use across a municipality, including, but not
limited to, minimum lot size ordinances.

 
Sec. 10. 30-A MRSA §4312, sub-§2, ¶E-1 is enacted to read:

 
E-1.__Encourage the development and implementation of
multimunicipal growth management programs;

 
Sec. 11. 30-A MRSA §4312, sub-§2, ¶¶F and G, as amended by PL 1991, c.
622, Pt. F, §19, are further amended to read:

 
F. Provide for continued direct state regulation of
development proposals that occur in areas of statewide
concern, that directly impact natural resources of statewide
significance or that by their scale or nature otherwise
affect vital state interests; and

 
G. Encourage the widest possible involvement by the
citizens of each municipality in all aspects of the planning
and implementation process, in order to ensure that the
plans developed by municipalities have had the benefit of
citizen input.;

 
Sec. 12. 30-A MRSA §4312, sub-§2, ¶¶I and J are enacted to read:

 
I.__Encourage development of an integrated geographical
information system that informs the State, regional councils
and municipalities of the impacts of development and enables
evaluation of State, regional and growth management and
natural resource protection policies and programs; and

 
J.__Strengthen the partnership among State Government and
regional and local governments to conserve land and water

 
resources and to invest in and make efficient use of public
infrastructure.

 
Sec. 13. 30-A MRSA §4312, sub-§3, ¶A, as enacted by PL 1989, c. 104,
Pt. A, §45 and Pt. C, §10, is amended to read:

 
A. To encourage orderly growth and development in
appropriate areas of each community and region, while
protecting the State's rural character, making efficient use
of public services and preventing development sprawl;

 
Sec. 14. 30-A MRSA §4312, sub-§4, as enacted by PL 1989, c. 104, Pt.
A, §45 and Pt. C, §10, is amended to read:

 
4. Office rule-making authority. The office is authorized to
adopt rules necessary to carry out the purposes of this
subchapter.__Rules adopted pursuant to this section are routine
technical rules as defined in Title 5, chapter 375, subchapter
II-A. This section shall may not be construed to grant any
separate regulatory authority to any state agency beyond that
necessary to implement this subchapter.

 
Sec. 15. 30-A MRSA §4314, as amended by PL 1993, c. 721, Pt. A, §1
and affected by Pt. H, §1, is further amended to read:

 
§4314. Transition; savings clause

 
1. Comprehensive plan. A municipal comprehensive plan or
land use regulation or ordinance adopted or amended by a
municipality under former Title 30, chapter 239, subchapter V or
VI remains in effect until amended or repealed in accordance with
this subchapter.

 
2. Shoreland zoning ordinances. Notwithstanding section
4352, subsection 2, any portion of a zoning ordinance that
regulates land use beyond that the area required by Title 38,
chapter 3, subchapter I, article 2-B and that is not consistent
with a comprehensive plan adopted under this subchapter is void
no longer in effect 24 months after adoption of the plan or by
July 1, 1994, whichever date is later.

 
3. Subdivision, site plan review, rate of growth, zoning and
impact fee ordinances. Any land use ordinance not consistent
with a comprehensive plan adopted according to this subchapter is
void After January 1, 2003, any portion of a planning district's
subdivision, site plan review, development permit limitation,
zoning or impact fee ordinance must be consistent with a
comprehensive plan adopted under this subchapter.__The portion of
an ordinance that is not consistent is no longer in effect
unless:

 
A. After January 1, 1998, in any municipality that received
a planning assistance grant and an implementation assistance
grant under former section 4344, subsection 4 prior to
December 23, 1991; and

 
B. After January 1, 2003, in all other municipalities.

 
C.__The ordinance or portion of the ordinance is exempted
under subsection 2;

 
D.__The planning district is under contract with the office
to prepare a comprehensive plan or implementation program,
in which case ordinances remain valid for up to 4 years
after receipt of the first installment of its first planning
assistance grant or for up to 2 years after receipt of the
first installment of its first implementation assistance
grant, whichever is earlier;

 
E.__The planning district applied for and was denied
financial assistance for its first planning assistance or
implementation assistance grant under this subchapter due to
lack of state funds on or before January 1, 2003; or

 
F.__The ordinance or portion of the ordinance conflicts with
a newly adopted comprehensive plan or plan amendment adopted
under this subchapter, in which case the ordinance or
portion of the ordinance remains in effect for a period of
up to 24 months immediately following adoption of the
comprehensive plan or plan amendment.

 
4. Encumbered balances at year-end. At the end of each
fiscal year, all encumbered balances in accounts for financial
assistance and regional planning grants may be carried twice.

 
Sec. 16. 30-A MRSA §4321, as enacted by PL 1989, c. 104, Pt. A, §45
and Pt. C, §10, is amended to read:

 
§4321. Growth management program established

 
There is established a program of local growth management to
accomplish the goals of this subchapter.

 
Sec. 17. 30-A MRSA §4322, as enacted by PL 1989, c. 104, Pt. A, §45
and Pt. C, §10, is repealed and the following enacted in its
place:

 
§4322. Exception

 
Municipalities within the jurisdiction of the Maine Land Use
Regulation Commission are not subject to the provisions of this

 
article except when the commission elects to include one or more
municipalities in its jurisdiction as part of a land use planning
region or multimunicipal region that includes municipalities
outside the commission's jurisdiction.

 
Sec. 18. 30-A MRSA §4324, as amended by PL 1993, c. 721, Pt. A, §2
and affected by Pt. H, §1, is further amended to read:

 
§4324. Responsibility for growth management

 
This section governs a municipality's planning district's
responsibility for the preparation or amendment of its local
growth management program. Where procedures for the adoption of
comprehensive plans and ordinances are governed by other
provisions of this Title or municipal charter or ordinance, the
municipality planning district may modify the procedural
requirements of this section as long as a broad range of
opportunity for public comment and review is preserved.

 
1. Growth management program. Each municipality planning
district may prepare a local growth management program in
accordance with this section or may amend its existing
comprehensive plan and existing land use ordinances to comply
with this subchapter.

 
2. Planning committee. If a municipality planning district
chooses to prepare a local growth management program, the
municipal officers of a municipality or combination of
municipalities shall designate and establish a local planning
committee.

 
A. The municipal officers may designate any existing
planning board or district established under subchapter IV,
or a former similar provision, as the local planning
committee. Planning boards established under former Title
30, section 4952, subsection 1, continue to be governed by
those provisions until they are superseded by municipal
charter or ordinance.

 
B. The local planning committee may develop and maintain a
comprehensive plan and may develop an initial proposed
zoning ordinance or an initial revision of an existing
zoning ordinance any portion of an implementation program to
which it is assigned in an adopted comprehensive plan or
otherwise directed by the municipal officers or legislative
body or bodies. In performing these duties, the local
planning committee shall:

 
(1) Hold public hearings and use other methods to solicit
and strongly encourage citizen input; and

 
(2) Prepare the comprehensive plan and proposed zoning
ordinance or any portion of the implementation program
to which it is assigned in an adopted comprehensive
plan and make recommendations to the municipal
reviewing authority and municipal legislative body
regarding the adoption and implementation of the
program or amended program that require legislative
action.

 
3. Citizen participation. In order to encourage citizen
participation in the development of a local growth management
program, municipalities planning districts may adopt local growth
management programs only after soliciting and considering a broad
range of public review and comment. The intent of this
subsection is to provide for the broad dissemination of proposals
and alternatives, opportunity for written comments, open
discussions, information dissemination and consideration of and
response to public comments.

 
4. Meetings to be public. The local planning committee shall
conduct all of its meetings in open, public session. Prior
public notice must be given for all meetings of the local
planning committee pursuant to Title 1, section 406. Prior to
April 1, 1990, if the local planning committee provided notice in
compliance with Title 1, section 406, that notice was sufficient
for all legal purposes.

 
8. Public hearing required. The local planning committee
shall hold at least one public hearing on its proposed
comprehensive plan.

 
A. Notice of any public hearing must be posted in the
municipality at least 2 times 30 days before the hearing.

 
B. A copy of the proposed comprehensive plan shall must be
made available for public inspection at the municipal office
or other convenient location with regular public hours at
least 30 days before the hearing.

 
9. Adoption. A comprehensive plan or land use ordinance is
deemed to have been considered adopted as part of a local growth
management program when it has been accepted adopted by the
municipality's legislative body. A multimunicipal comprehensive
plan or land use ordinance must be adopted by the legislative
body of each participating municipality unless another form of
legislative authority has been established for this purpose
within the planning district.

 
10. Amendments to an adopted plan. When amending an adopted
comprehensive plan, a municipality planning district shall follow
the same procedures for citizen participation, public notice and
public hearing that are required for adoption of a comprehensive
plan.

 
Sec. 19. 30-A MRSA §4325, as amended by PL 1991, c. 622, Pt. F,
§28, is repealed.

 
Sec. 20. 30-A MRSA §4326, as amended by PL 1999, c. 776, §8, is
further amended to read:

 
§4326. Growth management program elements

 
A local growth management program shall include at least a
comprehensive plan, as described in subsections 1 to 4, and an
implementation program as described in subsection 5.

 
1. Inventory and analysis. A comprehensive plan shall must
include an inventory and analysis section addressing state goals
under this subchapter and issues of regional or local
significance that the municipality planning district considers
important. The inventory must be based on information provided
by the State, regional councils and other relevant local sources.
The analysis must include 10-year projections of local and
regional growth in population and residential, commercial and
industrial activity; the projected need for public facilities;
and the vulnerability of and potential impacts on natural
resources. Within resource constraints, state agencies shall,
through the office, provide planning districts undertaking
comprehensive planning with available information regarding
resources, agency policies, plans and programs, suggested issues
to be addressed during the planning process and technical
assistance available from the State.__To the extent possible,
state agencies shall work directly with planning committees and
regional councils to address significant issues of mutual
concern, including, but not limited to, resource and
infrastructure planning during the planning process.

 
The inventory and analysis section must include, but is not
limited to:

 
A. Economic and demographic data describing the
municipality planning district and the region in which it is
located;

 
B. Significant water resources such as lakes, aquifers,
estuaries, rivers and coastal areas and, where applicable,
their vulnerability to degradation;

 
C. Significant or critical natural resources, such as
wetlands, wildlife and fisheries habitats, significant plant
habitats, coastal islands, sand dunes, scenic areas,
shorelands, heritage coastal areas as defined under Title 5,
section 3316, and unique natural areas;

 
D. Marine-related resources and facilities such as ports,
harbors, commercial moorings, commercial docking facilities
and related parking, and shell fishing and worming areas;

 
E. Commercial forestry and agricultural land;

 
F. Existing recreation, park and open space areas and
significant points of public access to shorelands within a
municipality planning district;

 
G. Existing transportation systems, including the capacity
of existing and proposed major thoroughfares, secondary
routes, pedestrian ways and parking facilities;

 
H. Residential housing stock, including affordable housing;

 
I. Historical and archeological resources including, at the
discretion of the municipality, stone walls, stone
impoundments and timber bridges of historical significance;

 
J. Land use information describing current and projected
development patterns; and

 
K. An assessment of capital facilities and public services
necessary to support growth and development and to protect
the environment and health, safety and welfare of the public
and the costs of those facilities and services.; and

 
L.__A vision statement that describes the desired
characteristics of the community at the end of the planning
period in sufficient detail to enable an evaluation of the
success of the planning district in achieving its vision at
that time.

 
2. Policy development. A comprehensive plan must include a
policy development section that relates the findings contained in
the inventory and analysis section to the state goals. The
policies must:

 
A. Promote the state goals under this subchapter;

 
B. Address any conflicts between state goals under this
subchapter;

 
C. Address any conflicts between regional and local issues;
and

 
D. Address the State's coastal policies, if any part of the
planning district is a coastal area.

 
3. Implementation strategy. A comprehensive plan must
include an implementation strategy section that contains a
timetable for the implementation program, including land use
ordinances, ensuring that the goals established under this
subchapter are met. These implementation strategies must be
consistent with state law and must actively promote policies
developed during the planning process. The timetable must
identify significant ordinances to be included in the
implementation program. The strategies and timetable must guide
the subsequent adoption of policies, programs and land use
ordinances. In developing its strategies and subsequent
policies, programs and land use ordinances, each municipality
shall employ the following guidelines consistent with the goals
of this subchapter:

 
A. Identify and designate at least 2 basic types of
geographic areas:

 
(1) Growth areas, which are those areas suitable for
orderly residential, commercial and industrial
development or any combination of those types of
development, forecast over the next 10 years. Each
municipality shall:

 
(a) Establish standards for these developments;

 
(b) Establish timely permitting procedures;

 
(c) Ensure that needed public services are
available within the growth area; and

 
(d) Prevent inappropriate development in natural
hazard areas, including flood plains and areas of
high erosion; and

 
(2) Rural areas, which are those areas where
protection should be provided for agricultural, forest,
open space and scenic lands within the municipality.
Each municipality shall adopt land use policies and
ordinances to discourage incompatible development.

 
These policies and ordinances may include, without limitation:
density limits; cluster or special zoning;

 
acquisition of land or development rights; or performance
standards.

 
A municipality is not required to identify growth areas for
residential growth if it demonstrates that it is not
possible to accommodate future residential growth in these
areas because of severe physical limitations, including,
without limitation, the lack of adequate water supply and
sewage disposal services, very shallow soils or limitations
imposed by protected natural resources; or it demonstrates
that the municipality has experienced minimal or no
residential development over the past decade and this
condition is expected to continue over the 10-year planning
period. A municipality exercising the discretion afforded
by this paragraph shall review the basis for its
demonstration during the periodic revisions undertaken
pursuant to section 4327;

 
B. Develop a capital investment plan for financing the
replacement and expansion of public facilities and services
required to meet projected growth and development;

 
C. Protect, maintain and, when warranted, improve the water
quality of each water body pursuant to Title 38, chapter 3,
subchapter I, article 4-A and ensure that the water quality
will be protected from long-term and cumulative increases in
phosphorus from development in great pond watersheds;

 
D. Ensure that its land use policies and ordinances are
consistent with applicable state law regarding critical
natural resources. A municipality may adopt ordinances more
stringent than applicable state law;

 
E. Ensure the preservation of access to coastal waters
necessary for commercial fishing, commercial mooring,
docking and related parking facilities. Each coastal
municipality shall discourage new development that is
incompatible with uses related to the marine resources
industry;

 
F. Ensure the protection of agricultural and forest
resources. Each municipality shall discourage new
development that is incompatible with uses related to the
agricultural and forest industry;

 
G. Ensure that its land use policies and ordinances encourage
the siting and construction of affordable housing within the
community and comply with the requirements of section 4358
pertaining to individual mobile home and mobile home park siting
and design requirements. The municipality

 
shall seek to achieve a level of 10% of new residential
development, based on a 5-year historical average of
residential development in the municipality, meeting the
definition of affordable housing. Municipalities are
encouraged to seek creative approaches to assist in the
development of affordable housing, including, but not
limited to, cluster zoning, reducing minimum lot and
frontage sizes, increasing densities and use of municipally
owned land;

 
H. Ensure that the value of historical and archeological
resources is recognized and that protection is afforded to
those resources that merit it;

 
I. Encourage the availability of and access to traditional
outdoor recreation opportunities, including, without
limitation, hunting, boating, fishing and hiking; and
encourage the creation of greenbelts, public parks, trails
and conservation easements. Each municipality shall
identify and encourage the protection of undeveloped
shoreland and other areas identified in the local planning
process as meriting that protection; and

 
J. Develop management goals for great ponds pertaining to
the type of shoreline character, intensity of surface water
use, protection of resources of state significance and type
of public access appropriate for the intensity of use of
great ponds within a municipality's jurisdiction.

 
3-A.__Guidelines for policy development and implementation
strategies.__In developing its strategies and subsequent
policies, programs and land use ordinances, each planning
district shall employ the following guidelines consistent with
the goals of this subchapter:

 
A.__Identify and designate geographic areas in the planning
district using at least 2 basic types of growth area or
rural area, as defined in this chapter.

 
(1)__Within growth areas, each planning district shall:

 
(a)__Establish development standards;

 
(b)__Establish timely permitting procedures;

 
(c)__Ensure that needed public services are
available; and

 
(d)__Prevent inappropriate development in natural
hazard areas, including flood plains and areas of
high erosion.

 
(2)__Within rural areas, each planning district shall
adopt land use policies and ordinances to discourage
incompatible development.__These policies and
ordinances may include, without limitation, density
limits, cluster or special zoning, acquisition of land
or development rights or performance standards.__The
planning district should also identify which rural
areas qualify as critical rural areas, as defined in
this chapter.__These areas would receive priority
consideration for proactive strategies designed to
enhance rural industries, manage wildlife and fisheries
habitat and preserve sensitive natural areas.

 
(3)__Planning districts may also designate one or more
portions of land area as transitional areas, which do
not meet either the definition of a growth or rural
area.__These areas may be appropriate for medium-
density development that does not require expansion of
municipal facilities and does not include significant
rural resources.

 
(4)__A planning district is not required to identify
growth areas for residential growth if it demonstrates
that it is not possible to accommodate future
residential growth in these areas because of severe
physical limitations, including, without limitation,
the lack of adequate water supply and sewage disposal
services, very shallow soils or limitations imposed by
protected natural resources.

 
(5)__A planning district is not required to identify
growth areas for residential, commercial or industrial
growth if it demonstrates that the planning district
has experienced minimal or no residential, commercial
or industrial development over the past decade and this
condition is expected to continue over the 10-year
planning period.

 
(6)__A planning district exercising the discretion
afforded by subsections 3-A or 4 shall review the basis
for its demonstration during the periodic revisions
undertaken pursuant to section 4347-A;

 
B.__Develop a capital investment plan for financing the
replacement and expansion of public facilities and services
required to meet projected growth and development;

 
C.__Protect, maintain and, when warranted, improve the water
quality of each water body pursuant to Title 38, chapter 3,
subchapter I, article 4-A and ensure that the water quality
will be protected from long-term and cumulative increases in
phosphorus from development in great pond watersheds;

 
D.__Ensure that its land use policies and ordinances are
consistent with applicable state law regarding critical
natural resources.__A municipality, or multimunicipal
planning district, if authorized to enact ordinances, may
adopt ordinances more stringent than applicable state law;

 
E.__Ensure the preservation of access to coastal waters
necessary for commercial fishing and commercial mooring,
docking and related parking facilities.__Each coastal
planning district may identify and designate one or more
critical waterfront areas and implement policies to ensure
protection of those areas or shall otherwise discourage new
development that is incompatible with uses related to the
marine resources industry;

 
F.__Ensure the protection of agricultural and forest
resources.__Each planning district shall discourage new
development that is incompatible with uses related to the
agricultural and forest industry;

 
G.__Ensure that the planning district's land use policies
and ordinances encourage the siting and construction of
affordable housing within the community and comply with the
requirements of section 4358 pertaining to individual mobile
home and mobile home park siting and design requirements.__
The planning district shall seek to achieve a level of at
least 10% of new residential development, based on a 5-year
historical average of residential development in the
planning district and meeting the definition of affordable
housing.__A planning district is encouraged to seek creative
approaches to assist in the development of affordable
housing, including, but not limited to, cluster housing,
reduced minimum lot and frontage sizes, increasing
residential densities and use of municipally owned land;

 
H.__Ensure that the value of historical and archeological
resources is recognized and that protection is afforded to
those resources that merit it;

 
I.__Encourage the availability of and access to traditional
outdoor recreation opportunities, including, without limitation,
hunting, boating, fishing and hiking and encourage the creation
of greenbelts, public parks, trails

 
and conservation easements.__Each planning district shall
identify and encourage the protection of undeveloped
shoreland and other areas identified in the local planning
process as meriting that protection;

 
J.__Develop management goals for great ponds pertaining to
the type of shoreline character, intensity of surface water
use, protection of resources of state significance and type
of public access appropriate for the intensity of use of
great ponds within a planning district's jurisdiction; and

 
K.__Ensure the efficient use and functional integrity of
state and state aid highway infrastructure.__To achieve this
goal, each planning district shall manage highway access to
ensure that existing posted speeds in excess of 45 miles per
hour on rural arterial and major collector roads between
service centers are maintained.

 
4. Regional coordination program. A regional coordination
program must be developed with other municipalities to manage
shared resources and facilities, such as rivers, aquifers,
transportation facilities and others. This program must provide
for consistency with the comprehensive plans of other
municipalities for these resources and facilities.

 
5. Implementation program. An implementation program must be
adopted that is consistent with the strategies in subsection 3 3-
A.

 
Sec. 21. 30-A MRSA §4326-A is enacted to read:

 
§4326-A. Cooperative local growth management activities

 
This section governs cooperative local growth management
efforts conducted by 2 or more municipalities.

 
1.__Within municipality.__A municipality may exercise its land
use planning and management authority over the total land area
within its jurisdiction.

 
2.__Multimunicipal region.__Any combination of contiguous
municipalities may conduct joint planning and regulatory programs
to meet the requirements of this subchapter upon adoption of a
written comprehensive planning and enforcement agreement by the
municipal legislative bodies involved.__The agreement must be in
writing, approved by the municipal legislative bodies and
forwarded to the office.__The municipalities must agree:

 
A.__On procedures for joint action in the preparation and
adoption of comprehensive plans, land use regulations and

 
other implementation measures to be conducted on a
multimunicipal basis;

 
B.__On the manner of representation on any such joint land
use body; and

 
C.__On the amount and source of contribution from each
municipality for any costs incurred in the development,
implementation and enforcement of the comprehensive plan and
its implementation program and on the method of distributing
the benefits or impacts of regional land use, economic
development, housing, transportation, infrastructure or
other shared plans and programs.

 
Sec. 22. 30-A MRSA §4327, as amended by PL 1993, c. 721, Pt. A, §4
and affected by Pt. H, §1, is repealed.

 
Sec. 23. 30-A MRSA §4331, as enacted by PL 1993, c. 721, Pt. A, §5
and affected by Pt. H, §1, is repealed.

 
Sec. 24. 30-A MRSA §4345, as amended by PL 1995, c. 395, Pt. d,
§13, is further amended to read:

 
§4345. Purpose; office to administer program

 
Under the provisions of this article, a municipality planning
district may request financial or technical assistance from the
State Planning Office, referred to in this article as the office,
for the purpose of planning and implementing a local growth
management program. A municipality planning district that
requests and receives a financial assistance grant shall develop
and implement its growth management program in cooperation with
the office and in a manner consistent with the provisions of this
article.

 
To accomplish the purposes of this article, the office shall
develop and administer a technical and financial assistance
program for municipalities planning districts. The program must
include direct financial assistance for planning and
implementation of local growth management programs, standards
governing the review of local growth management programs by the
office, technical assistance to municipalities planning districts
and a voluntary certification program for local growth management
programs.

 
Sec. 25. 30-A MRSA §4346, as amended by PL 1993, c. 721, Pt. A, §§7
to 10 and affected by Pt. H, §1, is further amended to read:

 
§4346. Technical and financial assistance program

 
The technical and financial assistance program for
municipalities and regional councils planning districts is
established to encourage and facilitate the adoption and
implementation of local, regional and statewide growth management
programs throughout the State.

 
The office may enter into financial assistance grants only to
the extent that funds are available. In making grants, the
office shall consider the need for planning in a municipality
planning district, the proximity of the municipality planning
district to other towns areas that are conducting or have
completed the planning process and the economic and geographic
role of the municipality planning district within a regional
context. The office may consider other criteria in making
grants, as long as the criteria support the goal of encouraging
and facilitating the adoption and implementation of a local and
multimunicipal growth management program programs consistent with
the provisions of this article. In order to maximize the
availability of the technical and financial assistance program to
all municipalities, multimunicipal regions and regional councils,
financial assistance programs administered competitively under
this article are exempted from 18-554 C.M.R. Chapter 110, the
Rules for the Purchase of
Services and Awards.__The office shall publish a program
statement describing its grant program and advertising its
availability to eligible applicants.

 
2-A. Financial assistance grants. A contract for a financial
assistance grant must:

 
A. Provide for the payment of a specific amount for the
purposes of planning and preparing a comprehensive plan;

 
B. Provide for the payment of a specific amount for the
purposes of implementing that comprehensive plan; and

 
C. Include specific timetables governing the preparation
and submission of products by the municipality planning
district.

 
The office may not require a municipality planning district to
provide matching funds in excess of 25% of the value of that
municipality's financial assistance contract for its first
planning assistance and implementation assistance grants. The
office may require a higher match for other grants, including,
but not limited to, grants for the purpose of updating
comprehensive plans.__This match limitation does not apply to
distribution of federal funds that the office may administer.

 
2-B. Use of funds. A municipality planning district may
expend financial assistance grants for:

 
A. The conduct of surveys, inventories and other data-
gathering activities;

 
B. The hiring of planning and other technical staff;

 
C. The retention of planning consultants;

 
D. Contracts with regional councils for planning and
related services;

 
E. Assistance in the development of ordinances;

 
F. Retention of technical and legal expertise for
permitting activities;

 
G. The updating of growth management programs or components
of a program; and

 
G-1.__Evaluation of growth management programs; and

 
H. Any other purpose agreed to by the office and the
municipality planning district that is directly related to
the preparation of a comprehensive plan or the preparation
of policies, programs and land use ordinances to implement
that implementation of a comprehensive plan adopted under
this subchapter.

 
2-C.__Program evaluation.__Any recipient of a financial
assistance grant shall cooperate with the office in performing
program evaluations required under section 4350.

 
3. Technical assistance. Using its own staff, the staff of
other state agencies, contractors and the resources of the
regional councils, the office shall provide technical assistance
to municipalities and multimunicipal regions in the development,
administration and enforcement of local growth management
programs. The technical assistance component of the program must
include a set of model land use ordinances or other
implementation strategies developed by the office that are
consistent with this subchapter.

 
4. Regional council assistance. As part of the technical and
financial assistance program, the office may develop and
administer a program to develop regional education and training
programs, regional policies to address state goals and regional
assessments. Regional assessments may include, but are not
limited to, public infrastructure, inventories of agricultural

 
and commercial forest lands, housing needs, recreation and open
space needs, and projections of regional growth and economic
development. The program may include guidelines to ensure
methodological consistency among the State's regional councils.
To implement this program, the office may contract with regional
councils to assist the office in reviewing local growth
management programs, to develop necessary planning information at
a regional level or to provide support for local planning
efforts.

 
5. Coordination. State agencies with regulatory or other
authority affecting the goals established in this subchapter
shall conduct their respective activities in a manner consistent
with the goals established under this subchapter, including, but
not limited to, coordinating with municipalities, regional
councils and other state agencies in meeting the state goals,
providing available information to regions and municipalities as
described in section 4326, subsection 1, cooperating with efforts
to integrate and provide access to geographic information system
data, making state investments and awarding grant money as
described in section 4349-A and conducting reviews of growth
management programs as provided in section 4347, subsection 1.
Without limiting the application of this section to other state
agencies, the following agencies shall comply with this section
subchapter.__The Land and Water Resources Council shall
periodically, but in no event less than biannually, review the
effectiveness of agency coordination efforts,
including, but not limited to, those in section 4349-A:

 
A. Department of Conservation;

 
B. Department of Economic and Community Development;

 
C. Department of Environmental Protection;

 
D. Department of Agriculture, Food and Rural Resources;

 
E. Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife;

 
F. Department of Marine Resources;

 
G. Department of Transportation;

 
G-1.__Department of Human Services;

 
G-2.__State Planning Office;

 
H. Finance Authority of Maine; and

 
I. Maine State Housing Authority.

 
Sec. 26. 30-A MRSA §4347, as amended by PL 1993, c. 166, §§9 and
10, is repealed.

 
Sec. 27. 30-A MRSA §4347-A is enacted to read:

 
§4347-A. Review of programs by office

 
1.__Comprehensive plans.__A planning district that chooses to
prepare a growth management program and receives a planning grant
under this article shall submit its comprehensive plan to the
office for review.__The office shall review plans for consistency
with the goals and guidelines established in this subchapter.__
Any contract for a planning assistance grant must include
specific timetables governing the review of the comprehensive
plan by the office.__Any comprehensive plan submitted for review
more than 12 months following a contract end date may be required
to update data, projections and other time-sensitive portions of
the plan or program to the office's most current review
standards.

 
2.__Growth management programs.__A planning district may at
any time request a certificate of consistency for its growth
management program.__Upon a request for review under this
section, the office shall review the program and determine
whether the program is consistent with the procedures, goals and
guidelines established
in this subchapter.

 
3.__Review of comprehensive plan or growth management program.__
In reviewing a comprehensive plan or growth management program,
the office shall:

 
A.__Solicit written comments on any proposed comprehensive
plan or growth management program from regional councils,
state agencies, all municipalities contiguous to the
planning district submitting a comprehensive plan or growth
management program and any interested residents of the
planning district or of contiguous municipalities.__The
comment period extends for 45 days after the office receives
the comprehensive plan or growth management program.

 
(1)__Each state agency reviewing the proposal shall
designate a person or persons responsible for
coordinating the agency's review of the comprehensive
plan or growth management program.

 
(2)__Any regional council commenting on a program shall
determine whether the program is compatible with those
of other municipalities that may be affected by the
program and with regional policies or needs identified
by the regional council;

 
B.__Prepare all written comments from all sources in a form
to be forwarded to the planning district.

 
C.__Within 60 days after receiving the comprehensive plan or
90 days after receiving the growth management program, send
all written comments on the comprehensive plan or growth
management program to the planning district and any
applicable regional council.__If warranted, the office shall
issue findings specifically describing how the submitted
plan or growth management program is not consistent with
this subchapter and the recommended measures for remedying
the deficiencies.__In its findings, the office shall clearly
indicate its position on any point on which there are
significant conflicts among the written comments submitted
to the office.__If the office finds that the comprehensive
plan or growth management program was adopted under this
subchapter, the office shall issue a finding of consistency
for the comprehensive plan or a certificate of consistency
for the growth management program.__If the same growth
management program or a component of the program has been
previously reviewed by the office under this article, any
finding of inconsistency on the same program or component
must be based on the written findings prepared by the office
at the time
of the previous review.

 
(1)__A finding of consistency for a comprehensive plan
expires in 5 years if a plan is not adopted by that
date.__If the plan is adopted, the finding of
consistency expires 10 years from the date of the
office's original review finding of the plan or from
the date of plan adoption, whichever is earlier.

 
(2)__Except as provided in subsection 1, certification
by the office of a planning district's growth
management program under this article is valid for 10
years.__To maintain certification, a planning district
shall periodically review its growth management program
and submit to the office in a timely manner any
revisions necessary to account for changes, including
changes caused by growth and development.__
Certification does not lapse in any year in which the
Legislature does not appropriate funds to the office
for the purposes of reviewing programs for
recertification;

 
D.__Provide ample opportunity for the planning district
submitting a comprehensive plan or growth management program to
respond to and correct any identified deficiencies in the
program.__A finding of inconsistency for a comprehensive

 
plan or growth management program may be addressed within 24
months of the date of the finding without jeopardizing
partial findings of consistency attained during that review.__
After 24 months, the plan or program must be resubmitted in
its entirety for state review under the office's current
review standards; and

 
E.__Provide an expedited review and certification procedure
for those submissions that represent minor amendments to
certified growth management programs.

 
The office's decision on consistency of a comprehensive plan or
growth management program constitutes final agency action.

 
4.__Updates and amendments.__A planning district may submit
proposed amendments to a comprehensive plan or growth management
program to the office for review in the same manner as provided
for the review of new plans and programs.__Subsequent to
voluntary certification under this subsection, the planning
district shall file a copy of an amendment to a growth management
program with the office within 30 days after adopting the
amendment and at least 60 days prior to applying for any state
grant program that offers a preference for consistency or
certification.

 
5.__Regional councils.__Subject to the availability of funding
and pursuant to the conditions of a contract, each regional
council shall review and submit written comments on the
comprehensive plan or growth management program of any planning
district within its planning region.__The comments must be
submitted to the office and contain an analysis of:

 
A.__Whether the comprehensive plan or growth management
program is compatible with identified regional policies and
needs; and

 
B.__Whether the comprehensive plan or growth management
program is compatible with those of other municipalities
that may be affected by the proposal.

 
Sec. 28. 30-A MRSA §4348, as amended by PL 1993, c. 166, §11, is
repealed.

 
Sec. 29. 30-A MRSA §4349-A, sub-§1, ¶A, as enacted by PL 1999, c. 776,
§10, is amended to read:

 
A. A locally designated growth area, as identified in a
comprehensive plan adopted pursuant to and consistent with the
goals and guidelines of this subchapter or as identified

 
in a growth management program certified under section 4347-
A;

 
Sec. 30. 30-A MRSA §4349-A, sub-§2, as enacted by PL 1999, c. 776,
§10, is amended to read:

 
2. State facilities. The Department of Administrative and
Financial Services, Bureau of General Services shall develop site
selection criteria for state office buildings, state courts and
other state civic buildings that serve public clients and
customers, whether owned or leased by the State, that give
preference to the priority locations identified in this
subsection while ensuring safe, healthy, appropriate work space
for employees and clients and accounting for agency requirements.
Preference must be given to priority locations in the following
order: service center downtowns, service center growth areas and
downtowns and growth areas in other than service center
communities. If no suitable priority location exists or if the
priority location would impose an undue financial hardship on the
occupant or is not within a reasonable distance of the clients
and customers served, the facility must be located in accordance
with subsection 1. The following state facilities are exempt
from this subsection: a state liquor store; a lease of less than
500 square feet; and a lease with a tenure of less than one year,
including renewals.

 
For the purposes of this subsection, "service center" means a
community that serves the surrounding region, drawing workers,
shoppers and others into the community for jobs and services.

 
Sec. 31. 30-A MRSA §4349-A, sub-§2-A is enacted to read:

 
2-A.__State's role in implementation of growth management
programs.__All state agencies, as partners in local and regional
growth management efforts, shall consciously contribute to the
successful implementation of comprehensive plans and growth
management programs adopted under this subchapter by making
investments, delivering programs and awarding grants in a manner
that reinforces the policies and strategies within the plans or
programs.__Assistance must be provided within the confines of
agency policies, available resources and considerations related
to overriding state interest.

 
Sec. 32. 30-A MRSA §4349-A, sub-§3, as enacted by PL 1999, c. 776,
§10, is amended to read:

 
3. Preferences for other state grants and investments. When
awarding grants or assistance for capital investments making a
discretionary investment under any of the following programs or
undertaking its own capital investment programs other than for

 
projects identified in section 4301, subsection 5-B, a state
agency shall respect the primary purpose of its grant or
investment program and, to the extent feasible, give preference
first to a municipality that receives a certificate of
consistency under section 4348 or 4347-A and 2nd to a
municipality that has adopted a comprehensive plan and
implementation strategies consistent with the goals and
guidelines of this subchapter over a municipality that does not
obtain the certificate or finding of consistency within 4 years
after receipt of the first installment of a financial assistance
grant or rejection of an offer of financial assistance. This
subsection applies to:

 
A.__Programs that assist in the acquisition of land for
conservation, natural resource protection, open space or
recreational facilities under Title 5, chapter 353; and

 
B.__Programs intended to:

 
(1)__Accommodate or encourage additional growth and
development;

 
(2)__Improve, expand or construct public facilities; or

 
(3)__Acquire land for conservation or management of specific
economic and natural resource concerns.

 
This subsection does not apply to state grants or other
assistance for sewage treatment facilities, public health
programs or education.

 
The office shall work with state agencies to prepare mechanisms
for establishing preferences in specific investment and grant
programs as described in paragraphs A and B.

 
Sec. 33. 30-A MRSA §4350 is enacted to read:

 
§4350. Evaluation process

 
The office shall conduct an ongoing evaluation process to
determine the effectiveness of state, regional and local efforts
under this chapter to achieve the purposes and goals of this
chapter.__Working through the Land and Water Resources Council,
the office shall seek the assistance of other state agencies.__If
requested, all state agencies shall render assistance to the
office in this effort.

 
1. Criteria.__In conducting the evaluation, the office shall
develop criteria based on the goals of this chapter.__The

 
criteria must be objective, verifiable and, to the extent
practicable, quantifiable.

 
2. Baseline conditions.__The office shall establish a baseline
of land use conditions at a level of detail sufficient to permit
general comparison of state and regional trends in future land
use development patterns.

 
3. Public input.__The office shall incorporate opportunities
for public input and comment into the evaluation process.

 
4. Level of analysis.__The office shall evaluate the program
generally at a regional and statewide level.__To illustrate the
impact of the program, the office shall compare land use
development trends and patterns in a sample of towns that have
participated in the program with a matched sample of towns that
have not participated.__The evaluation performed by the office
shall include an analysis of the State's financial commitment to
growth management.

 
5. Periodic reports.__Beginning on January 1, 1995, the office
shall report in writing on the results of its evaluation process
every 4 years and more frequently if necessary.__The office shall
submit its report to the joint standing committees of the
Legislature having jurisdiction over natural resources matters
and appropriations and financial affairs, which committees shall
submit the report to the Legislature with any comments or
recommendations those committees may wish to include.

 
Sec. 34. Revisor's review; cross-references. The Revisor of Statutes shall
review the Maine Revised Statutes and include in the errors and
inconsistencies bill submitted to the Second Regular session of
the 120th Legislature pursuant to Title 1, section 94, any
sections necessary to correct and update any cross-references in
the statutes to provisions of law repealed in this Act.

 
SUMMARY

 
This bill amends the comprehensive planning and land use
regulation laws to add and improve definitions, particularly
those related to growth, rural and transitional areas. The bill
proposes to protect municipalities from unintended consequences
of deadlines in the law by adding a severability clause, limiting
the scope of affected ordinances and creating an exemption for
municipalities that have been denied financial assistance. The
bill reinforces the State's role and regional and municipal roles
in growth management, more clearly enables multimunicipal
planning efforts and allows for those within the Maine Land Use

 
Regulation Commission's jurisdiction to participate if desired.
The bill extends the exemption for designating residential growth
areas to commercial and industrial areas in small, slow-growing
municipalities. Procedural adjustments are made in the state
review and financial assistance program guidelines to reflect the
aging of the program and introduction of a competitive grant
application process. The bill reinstates preferences in state
grant programs and investments for municipalities with certified
growth management programs and comprehensive plans that were
inadvertently eliminated in the amendments adopted in the last
legislative session and clarifies that the State Planning Office
has rule-making authority to administer the Maine Revised
Statutes, Title 30-A, chapter 187.


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