Take Back Your Neighborhood (RCO) v. 6600 Bustleton Associates City of Philadelphia Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 13, 2017
Docket141 C.D. 2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of Take Back Your Neighborhood (RCO) v. 6600 Bustleton Associates City of Philadelphia Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment (Take Back Your Neighborhood (RCO) v. 6600 Bustleton Associates City of Philadelphia Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Take Back Your Neighborhood (RCO) v. 6600 Bustleton Associates City of Philadelphia Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment, (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Take Back Your : Neighborhood (RCO), : : Appellant : : v. : No. 141 C.D. 2017 : Submitted: October 17, 2017 6600 Bustleton Associates; City of : Philadelphia; Philadelphia Zoning : Board of Adjustment :

BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE WOJCIK FILED: November 13, 2017

Take Back Your Neighborhood (RCO) (Objector) appeals the order of the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas (trial court) denying its appeal and affirming the decision of the City of Philadelphia’s (City) Zoning Board of Adjustment (Zoning Board) that granted, with provisos, the application of 6600 Bustleton Associates (Landowner) for a special exception1 to operate a personal care home at 6600 Bustleton Avenue. We affirm.

1 “A special exception is not an exception to the zoning ordinance, but rather a use to which the applicant is entitled unless the zoning board determines, according to the standards set forth in the ordinance, that the proposed use would adversely affect the community.” Blancett-Maddock v. City of Pittsburgh Zoning Board of Adjustment, 640 A.2d 498, 500-01 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994), appeal denied, 655 A.2d 992 (Pa. 1995) (citation omitted). Landowner’s property is located at the corner of Bustleton Avenue and Magee Street in the City’s RSA-5 Residential Single-Family Attached zoning district.2 There is a 25,000-foot, two-story detached structure on the property that was formerly used as a charter school. The site is vacant and includes off-street parking for 18 cars. On December 4, 2015, Landowner submitted an application for a zoning/use registration permit with the City’s Department of Licenses and Inspection (L&I) to operate a personal care home on the property. 3 On December 14, 2015, L&I issued a Notice of Referral, referring the matter to the Board because the proposed personal care use requires special exception approval in the RSA-5

2 Section 14-401(1)(c) of the City’s Zoning Code states:

The RSA, Residential Single-Family Attached districts are primarily intended to accommodate attached and semi-detached houses on individual lots, but may be applied in areas characterized by a mix of housing types, including detached houses. The districts are also intended to provide a density transition between [the Residential Single-Family Detached] districts and [the Residential Multi-Family] districts. The Zoning Code includes five RSA districts that are differentiated primarily on the basis of minimum lot area requirements.

3 Section 14-602(1) of the Zoning Code provides that the “personal care home” use is a use permitted by special exception in the RSA-5 zoning district. Section 14-601(2)(b)(.1) defines “personal care home” as follows:

Any premises in which food, shelter, and personal assistance or supervision are provided for a period exceeding 24 hours for four or more adults who are not relative of the operator, who do not require the services in or of a licensed long-term care facility, but who do require assistance or supervision in such matters as dressing, bathing, diet, financial management, evacuation from the residence in the event of an emergency, or medication prescribed for self- administration.

2 zoning district. Reproduced Record (R.R) at 84a.4 The Notice noted for the Zoning Board that the Zoning Board had previously granted a special exception for an education facility on the property on August 7, 2013, and that “[p]er §14-603(11) [of the Zoning Code], where the Pennsylvania Department of [Human Services] requires, personal care homes must comply with all applicable regulations of 55 Pa. Code Chapter 2600.” Id. Landowner thereafter filed an application for a special exception with the Zoning Board.5 At the Board hearing, Landowner’s counsel, Vern Anastasio,

4 Section 14-303(7)(b) states that “[o]nce a use application has been filed with L&I, and L&I confirms that the use is subject to the special exception approval procedures of this §14- 303(7) (Special Exception Approval) and L&I provides a referral to the applicant, the applicant has 30 days to file an appeal to the Zoning Board for special exception approval.”

5 Section 14-303(7)(e) of the City’s Zoning Code states:

(e) Criteria for Review and Action by the Zoning Board.

The Zoning Board must approve, or approve with conditions, the application for a special exception if it determines that the criteria in §14-303(7)(e)(.1) and §14-303(7)(e)(.2) below have been met, unless the Zoning Board finds that the objectors, if any, satisfied the criteria in §14-303(7)(e)(.3). The Zoning Board shall, in writing, set forth each required finding for each special exception that is granted, set forth each finding that is not satisfied for each special exception that is denied, and to the extent that a specific finding is not relevant to the decision, shall so state.

(.1) Specific Conditions of Use.

The applicant shall have the initial duty of presenting evidence, and the burden of proof, that the proposed use meets the definition for a use permitted by special exception, that all dimensional standards are satisfied, and that the application complies with all the criteria and meets all the conditions applicable to the proposed use, including all

3 applicable use-specific standards in §14-603 (Use-Specific Standards).

(.2) Specific Detrimental Impacts on the Neighborhood.

The applicant shall have the initial duty of presenting objective evidence, and the burden of proof, that the grant of a special exception will not cause the following specific detrimental impacts to the neighborhood beyond that which normally might be expected from the proposed use:

(.a) Congestion in the public streets or transportation systems;

(.b) Overcrowding the land;

(.c) Impairing an adequate supply of light and air to adjacent property;

(.d) Burdening water, sewer, school, park, or other public facilities;

(.e) Impairing or permanently injuring the use of adjacent conforming properties;

(.f) Endangering the public health or safety by fire or other means; or

(.g) Inconsistency with the Comprehensive Plan of the City.

(.3) General Detrimental Impacts on the Neighborhood.

Once the applicant meets such initial duty and burden of proof, the objectors, if any, shall have the duty of presenting objective evidence, and the burden of proof, that the proposed use is substantially likely to cause a detrimental impact on the health, safety, and welfare of the neighborhood exceeding that which normally might be expected from the proposed use. The objectors also may present evidence, and have the burden of proof, that the

4 stated that the block on which the property is located includes a number of institutional and non-residential uses, including four churches and a gas station. R.R. at 59a. He explained that the facility would house “single individual women, who had . . . dependency issues, went through the detox program, are completely clean, and are coming into a personal care facility for counseling, for life skills training, to assist with job employment.” Id. at 32a. He indicated that the facility would not accept “any applicant with a criminal background, with a violent background, even a PFA,” and that a resident would only remain at the facility for an average of 90 days. Id. at 33a, 37a. He stated that there would initially be 25 residents “phasing up to, within 12 months, 35,” but that “[t]he Commonwealth would set it to somewhere in the upper 40s.” Id. at 32a.

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Bluebook (online)
Take Back Your Neighborhood (RCO) v. 6600 Bustleton Associates City of Philadelphia Philadelphia Zoning Board of Adjustment, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/take-back-your-neighborhood-rco-v-6600-bustleton-associates-city-of-pacommwct-2017.