Report Title:
Land Use; Rural or Urban Districts; Important Agricultural Lands
Description:
Provides two incentives to landowners who designate their land as important agricultural lands by allowing a landowner: (1) who has designated important agricultural lands to satisfy state- or county-imposed affordable housing assessments in the rural district; (2) to submit a petition for a declaratory order from the land use commission to combine the designation of important agricultural lands with the reclassification of agricultural land to the rural or urban district. (HB2807 HD1)
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
2807 |
TWENTY-FOURTH LEGISLATURE, 2008 |
H.D. 1 |
|
STATE OF HAWAII |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO LAND USE.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. Chapter 205, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§205- Satisfaction of state or county affordable housing requirements in the rural district. (a) In lieu of satisfying a state or county affordable housing assessment in the urban district, a project landowner subject to subsection (b) may fulfill the assessment by providing affordable housing in the rural district in accordance with section 205-2(c)(7).
(b) This section shall apply only to a project landowner who has been granted a declaratory order from the land use commission to designate all or some of the landowner's land as important agricultural land pursuant to section 205-45."
SECTION 2. Section 205-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
"(c) Rural districts shall include [activities]:
(1) Activities or uses as characterized
by low density residential lots of not more than one dwelling house per one-half
acre, except as provided by county ordinance pursuant to section 46-4(c), in
areas where "city-like" concentration of people, structures, streets,
and urban level of services are absent[, and where small];
(2) Small farms [are] intermixed
with low density residential lots, except that within a subdivision, as
defined in section 484-1, the commission, for good cause and on
petition for a special permit, may allow one lot of less than one-half acre,
but not less than 18,500 square feet, or an equivalent
residential density, within a rural subdivision and permit the construction of
one dwelling on such lot, provided that all other dwellings in the subdivision
shall have a minimum lot size of one-half acre or 21,780 square feet[. Such
petition for variance may be processed under the special permit procedure.
These districts may include contiguous];
(3) Contiguous areas [which] that
are not suited to low density residential lots or small farms by reason of
topography, soils, and other related characteristics[. Rural districts
shall also include golf];
(4) Golf courses, golf driving ranges,
and golf-related facilities[.];
(5) Agribusiness activities, including but not limited to horticulture, apiculture, aquaculture, the raising and keeping of livestock, and establishment of plant nurseries;
(6) Farm worker housing; and
(7) Affordable housing, without a special permit; provided that the housing is:
(A) Affordable to households with incomes at or below one hundred forty per cent of the median family income as determined by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development; and
(B) Situated on land reclassified to the rural district under a declaratory order issued pursuant to section 205-45 that also designates important agricultural land."
SECTION 3. Section 205-5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
"(c) Unless authorized by special permit issued pursuant to this chapter, only the following uses shall be permitted within rural districts:
(1) Low density residential uses[;], with a
minimum lot size of one-half acre and one dwelling unit per lot, except as
provided in section 205-2(c);
(2) Agricultural uses;
(3) Golf courses, golf driving ranges, and golf-related
facilities; [and]
(4) Public, quasi-public, and public utility
facilities[.];
(5) Agribusiness activities, as provided in section 205‑2(c);
(6) Farm worker housing; and
(7) Affordable housing meeting the requirements of section 205‑2(c)(7), with density established by county zoning.
[In addition, the minimum lot size for any
low density residential use shall be one-half acre and there shall be but one
dwelling house per one-half acre, except as provided for in section 205-2.]"
SECTION 4. Section 205-44, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"[[]§205-44[]]
Standards and criteria for the identification of important agricultural lands.
(a) The standards and criteria in this section shall be used to
identify important agricultural lands. Lands identified as important
agricultural lands need not meet every standard and criteria listed below.
Rather, lands meeting any of the criteria below shall be given initial
consideration; provided that the designation of important agricultural lands
shall be made by weighing the standards and criteria with each other to meet
the constitutionally mandated purposes in article XI, section 3, of the state
constitution and the objectives and policies for important agricultural lands
in sections 205-42 and 205-43. (b) In a petition for a
declaratory order submitted under section 205-45 that seeks to both designate
lands as important agricultural lands and reclassify lands in the agricultural
district to the rural or urban district, the lands shall be deemed qualified
for the important agricultural land designation if the commission reasonably
finds that the lands meet at least the criteria of subsection (c)(4), (6), and
(8).
If a petition seeks to only designate land as important agricultural lands, then the commission shall evaluate the lands in accordance with subsection (a).
(c) The standards and criteria shall be as follows:
(1) Land currently used for agricultural production;
(2) Land with soil qualities and growing conditions that support agricultural production of food, fiber, or fuel- and energy-producing crops;
(3) Land identified under agricultural productivity rating systems, such as the agricultural lands of importance to the State of Hawaii (ALISH) system adopted by the board of agriculture on January 28, 1977;
(4) Land with soil classified by the land study bureau's detailed land classification as overall (master) productivity rating:
(A) Class A or B; or
(B) Class C or D if the land is currently in agricultural production or could be put into productive agricultural use with the implementation of new technology or development of irrigation water;
[(4)] (5) Land types associated with
traditional native Hawaiian agricultural uses, such as taro cultivation, or
unique agricultural crops and uses, such as coffee, vineyards, aquaculture, and
energy production;
[(5)] (6) Land with sufficient
quantities of water to support viable agricultural production;
[(6)] (7) Land whose designation as
important agricultural lands is consistent with general, development, and
community plans of the county;
[(7)] (8) Land that contributes to
maintaining a critical land mass important to agricultural operating
productivity; [and]
[(8)] (9) Land with or near support
infrastructure conducive to agricultural productivity, such as transportation
to markets, water, or power[.]; and
(10) Land that, although unsuited for agricultural use because of topography, is part of a tax map key parcel, most of which is comprised of land meeting at least one of the standards and criteria listed above. Land under this paragraph shall be designated as important agricultural land only if the entire tax map key parcel is so designated."
SECTION 5. Section 205-45, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"[[]§205-45[]]
Petition by farmer or landowner. (a) A farmer or landowner with lands
qualifying under section 205-44 may file with the commission a petition
for declaratory [ruling with the commission] order to designate those
lands as important agricultural lands in perpetuity. The petition may be filed
at any time in the designation process.
(b) Any law to the contrary notwithstanding, within the same petition for declaratory order as described in subsection (a), the petitioner may seek a reclassification of land in the agricultural district to the rural district, urban district, or a combination of both; provided that the:
(1) Land sought to be reclassified to the rural or urban district is within the same county as the land sought to be designated as important agricultural lands;
(2) Reclassification of the land to the rural or urban district is consistent with the relevant county general, development, and community plans; and
(3) Total acreage of the land sought to be designated or reclassified in the petition complies with the following proportions:
(A) At least eighty per cent of the total acreage is sought to be designated as important agricultural land; and
(B) The remainder of the acreage is sought to be reclassified to the rural or urban district.
[(b)] (c) The petition for
declaratory [ruling] order shall be submitted in accordance with
subchapter 14 of the commission's rules and shall include:
(1) Tax map keys of the land to be designated as important agricultural lands and, if applicable, the land to be reclassified from the agricultural district to the rural or urban district, along with verification and authorization from the applicable landowners;
(2) Proof of qualification for designation as
important agricultural lands under section 205-44, respecting a regional
perspective; [and]
(3) The current or planned agricultural use of the
area sought to be designated[.] as important agricultural
lands; and
(4) If applicable, the current or planned use of the area sought to be reclassified to the rural or urban district.
[(c)] (d) The commission shall
review the petition and the accompanying submissions to evaluate the
qualifications of the land for designation as important agricultural lands in
accordance with section 205-44.
If the petition also seeks the reclassification of land to the rural or urban district, the commission shall review the petition and accompanying submissions to evaluate the suitability of the land for the reclassification in accordance with section 205-2, consistency of the reclassification with the relevant county general, development, and community plans, and compliance with the other provisions of subsection (b).
If the commission, after its review [and
evaluation], finds that the [lands qualify for] designation [as
important agricultural lands under this part,] and, if applicable,
reclassification sought in the petition should be approved, the commission
shall vote, by a two-thirds majority of the members of the commission, to issue
a declaratory order designating the petitioner's identified lands as
important agricultural lands[.] and, if applicable, reclassifying the
petitioner's identified land from the agricultural district to the rural or
urban district.
With respect to a petition that seeks to both designate important agricultural lands and reclassify agricultural lands to the rural or urban district, if the commission finds that either the designation or reclassification as proposed by the petitioner should not be approved, the commission shall deny the petition in its entirety.
[(d) Designating important agricultural
lands by the commission] (e) The designation or reclassification of
land pursuant to subsection (a) or (b) shall not be [considered as an
amendment to district boundaries under] subject to the district boundary
amendment procedures of sections 205-3.1 and 205-4 or become effective
prior to legislative enactment of protection and incentive measures for
important agricultural land and agricultural viability, as provided in section
9 of Act 183, Session Laws of Hawaii 2005.
[(e)] (f) Farmers or landowners
with lands qualifying under section 205-44 may file petitions for a declaratory
[ruling] order to designate lands as important agricultural lands
following the legislative enactment of protection and incentive measures for
important agricultural lands and agricultural viability, as provided in section
9 of Act 183, Session Laws of Hawaii 2005.
(g) After a declaratory order designates any land as important agricultural land pursuant to this section, the commission shall not remove that designation from any land so designated in the order.
(h) The commission may adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 to effectuate this section."
SECTION 6. Section 205-52, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"[[]§205-52[]]
Periodic review and amendment of important agricultural lands maps. The
maps delineating important agricultural lands shall be reviewed in conjunction
with the county general plan and community and development plan revision
process, or at least once every ten years following the adoption of the maps by
the land use commission; provided that the maps shall not be reviewed more than
once every five years. Any review and amendment of the maps of important
agricultural lands shall be conducted in accordance with this part. In these
periodic reviews [or petitions by the farmers or landowners for declaratory
rulings], the "important agricultural lands" designation [shall]
may be removed from those [important agricultural lands where the
commission has issued a declaratory order that a sufficient supply of water is
no longer available to allow profitable farming of these lands due to
governmental actions, acts of God, or other causes beyond the farmer's or
landowner's reasonable control.] lands which were so designated by
district boundary amendment and not a declaratory order under section 205-45."
SECTION 7. The legislature declares that this Act establishes incentives for the designation of important agricultural land in satisfaction of section 205-46, Hawaii Revised Statutes, and section 9 of Act 183, Session Laws of Hawaii 2005.
SECTION 8. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 9. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.