Cole v. Dist. of Columbia Zoning Comm'n

210 A.3d 753
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 27, 2019
Docket17-AA-0360
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 210 A.3d 753 (Cole v. Dist. of Columbia Zoning Comm'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Dist. of Columbia Zoning Comm'n, 210 A.3d 753 (D.C. 2019).

Opinion

Thompson, Associate Judge:

On December 17, 2015, 777 17th Street, LLC, (the "applicant" or the "Intervenor") submitted to the Zoning Commission (the "Commission") an application for review and approval of a consolidated planned-unit development ("PUD") and a PUD-related zoning map amendment. 1 The application proposed construction of a mixed-use residential/ground-floor-retail development at 1701 H Street, N.E., located at the intersection of Benning Road, 17th Street, and H Street, N.E. The building (ten floors at its greatest height on the west end, and six floors at its eastern end) would be constructed on lots that currently are an unimproved, vacant lot and a used-car lot. The planned residential component would consist of approximately 180 rental units, with eight percent of the residential floor space set aside for affordable-housing units (referred to by the Commission as "IZ," i.e., "inclusionary zoning," units) for the life of the development. 2

Petitioner Sharon Cole, who resides in a building adjacent to the proposed construction site, seeks review of the Commission's decision approving the application, which was published on March 10, 2017. 3 For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the Commission's decision.

I.

The District of Columbia Office of Planning ("OP") submitted a report on April 1, 2016, recommending that a public hearing on the PUD application be held, and filed its final report on September 19, 2016, recommending approval of the application. The Commission held a public hearing on the application on September 29, 2016, during which petitioner Cole testified in opposition. 4 At a subsequent public meeting, *758 the Commission approved the application, finding that the PUD will provide public benefits of "exceptional quality" and of "substantial value to the community" and that the concerns noted by those who testified in opposition to the application were adequately addressed.

In its 23-page ruling, the Commission credited the assessment by OP that the PUD complies with the District of Columbia Comprehensive Plan, 5 which is intended to "[g]uide executive and legislative decisions on matters affecting the District and its citizens[.]" D.C. Code § 1-306.01 (b)(2) (2016 Repl.). The Commission also found that the PUD will promote the policies of the Comprehensive Plan's Land Use, Transportation, Environmental, Housing, and Urban Design Citywide Elements and its Upper Northeast Area Element 6 by, among other things, bringing mixed-income housing and retail uses within walking distance of the H Street streetcar (thus "capitaliz[ing] on the Property's transit-oriented location") and implementing policies that encourage "growth and revitalization to an underutilized lot along a high transit corridor," that expand the city's supply of affordable, family-size units and "provide deeper affordability limits," and that enhance the aesthetic appeal of a major thoroughfare within the District. 7

*759 The Commission also found that the PUD is compatible with and furthers the goals and policies of the Benning Road Redevelopment Framework Plan (the "Benning Road Plan"), which "specifically calls the Property out as appropriate for redevelopment as a mixed-use residential and retail project." 8

During the September 29, 2016, public hearing, petitioner Cole's comments were limited. She testified that she believed the applicant would "demolish [her] building," and she asked where current senior, disabled, and low-income residents would go if that happened. She recommended that the Property "remain as it is." She complained that traffic in the neighborhood was already "very heavy" and that there is "very limited parking" in the area. She also expressed concern about the 90-foot height of the proposed building, saying that the height is "a lot."

In her brief to this court, petitioner no longer asserts that her building will be demolished (apparently satisfied by the assurance from the applicant's counsel, acknowledged by the Commission, that the PUD "will not displace any residential uses"). However, petitioner has expanded her objections to the PUD and now argues that the Commission's action was faulty in several respects. She asserts that the Commission "never proactively sought to identify," and "failed to actively identify," "a myriad of basic project impacts," and made "no effort to mitigate them to protect the surrounding community." Listing those potential impacts, petitioner complains that no "mitigation is in place to protect the existing neighbors ... from land value destabilization and gentrification pressures that will be brought on by the ... project," that the Commission "fail[ed] to contend with the issue of displacement and rising gentrification pressures brought on by this project," and that the Commission's decision contains "no acknowledgment of how the ... proposal to build a project with 90% of the units selling as luxury apartments/condos ... will impact ... existing affordability levels." Petitioner asserts that there is "little affordability included in the ... project."

Petitioner further complains that the Commission record contains no written reports from relevant agencies (other than the District of Columbia Department of Transportation ("DDOT")). 9 She contends *760 that OP was required to have "written reporting from relevant agencies before taking [a] position[ ]" on the PUD application and that "[w]ithout relevant agency reports on the record, the Commission's decision to approve the [a]pplicant's PUD project is arbitrary and unlawful." Petitioner asserts that she seeks a thorough and thoughtful review by the Commission in order to be protected from "overwhelming construction nuisances" such as noise, dust, and pollution; from the "overburdening ... of ... existing public services," including gas, water, electric, and bus service; and from "rising housing costs." 10 She asserts that by failing to undertake that review, the Commission "eliminate[d] fundamental due process granted by statutory zoning protections afforded to [petitioner and her] community."

II.

"The overall goal of the [PUD] process is to permit flexibility in the zoning regulations, so long as the PUD 'offers a commendable number or quality of public benefits' and 'protects and advances the public health, safety, welfare, and convenience.' " Barry Farm Tenants & Allies Ass'n v. District of Columbia Zoning Comm'n

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 A.3d 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-dist-of-columbia-zoning-commn-dc-2019.