Thursday, Apr. 24, 2003
In 1974, in its decision in Belle
Terre v. Boraas, the United States Supreme Court lyrically described
the kind of neighborhood that, for many, represents the American Dream:
A quiet place where yards are wide, people few, and motorcycles restricted
are legitimate guidelines in a land-use project addressed to family needs....The
police power is not confined to elimination of filth, stench, and unhealthy
places. It is ample to lay out zones where family values, youth values, and
the blessings of quiet seclusion and clean air make the area a sanctuary for
people.
Tragically - and apparently unwittingly - Congress attacked this bucolic American
Dream when it enacted the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act
(RLUIPA). The Act raises high hurdles that those residential homeowners who
seek to achieve these values must now overcome.
The Act is unconstitutional, but regardless of what the courts do, Congress
should consider drastic amendment and even repeal.
Why Congress Acted Against the Interest of Millions of Homeowners
How could Congress have passed legislation that so dramatically harmed the
interests of so many of its constituents? There are two main explanations.
First, Congress did not bother to familiarize itself with the constitutional
rules surrounding land use. There is no evidence in the legislative history
that any member (or staffer) grasped that land use law that has been the domain
of the states and local governments since the Framing. They simply did not understand
that this attempt to federalize local land use law was a revolution in the making.
Nor is there any evidence of even a modicum of knowledge of the purposes and
principles underlying zoning and planning, or how such legal rules aid and protect
private property owners.
Second, the record on RLUIPA was unbalanced, and thus distorted. The only groups
permitted to testify regarding the bill were religious groups, and less than
a handful of constitutional scholars, including myself. The very group most
affected by the bill - residential homeowners - was conspicuously absent.
Also excluded were the affected cities, townships, states or their organizations,
such as the National League of Cities - despite their frequent entreaties to
have an opportunity to testify. They were not even allowed to explain the basics
of land use law, or to counter some of the religious organizations' most outlandish
claims.
The religious groups testified that zoning laws burdened them. How? The groups
made isolated references to alleged religious discrimination in the land use
process - discrimination that, even if proven, would not have established a
pattern of such conduct (that is, the pattern required to justify congressional
intervention in local and state law). Otherwise, they simply complained about
their obligation to abide by the same generally applicable, neutral zoning laws
that every landowner must obey.
The proper answer to these complaints should have been: Too bad; the law applies
to you just the same as it does to others. But that was not Congress's response.
On the contrary, the members of Congress, like so many politicians, did not
question what the religious groups told them.
In the end, in July 2000, the Act passed both houses by "unanimous consent"
-a voice vote with no requirement that any member be in attendance. (As a result,
we will never know what any particular member thought of the Act.)
Clearly, Congress reasoned, quite naively, as follows: What harm could possibly
arise from giving religious landowners such a privilege? As subsequent events
have shown, the answer is: Plenty.
The Impact of RLUIPA in Residential Neighborhoods
Currently, homeowners trying to retain the residential character of their neighborhoods
are finding RLUIPA an enemy to their dreams. Across the country, cases where
religious landowners are seeking to get around residential zoning requirements
abound. RLUIPA is the classic siren song, capable of persuading any religious
landowner that they need not be good neighbors and that they have "rights" to
choose location, size, and use at whim. That siren song has gone platinum as
groups like the Becket Fund have funded federal litigation, making the religious
landowners' decision to ignore the pleas of their neighbors in favor of federal
court easier than ever. (Of course, Congress is largely to blame for such shenanigans
because of its ill-advised decision to provide attorneys' fees for lawyers taking
on RLUIPA claims.)
In one case, a church seeks to add a fourth story in a residential neighborhood
zoned for two stories. In another, a private homeowner asserts the right to
hold lengthy prayer meetings that exceed occupancy requirements every weekend.
In a third, the church seeks a "small" addition of 30,000 square feet.
In a fourth, a synagogue seeks to convert a piece of property previously used
to house a quiet convent, and then a monastery, into a lively complex offering
services, education, and a catering hall for hundreds of families. In a fifth
case, a quickly constructed 8000 square foot shul is overshadowing its 3000
square foot residential neighbors.
Every one of these projects changes the residential quality of the neighborhood
in which it is planned. That is because every one is inconsistent with the character
of the neighborhood, and involves a dramatic increase in the intensity of the
use of the property, far above normal residential usage. Traffic (both pedestrian
and automobile), lighting, setbacks, height, bulk, noise, and parking are all
elements that contribute to the degradation of residential character; each project
would alter at least one, and often several, of these elements.
Why Neighbors and State and Local Officials Are Correct to Be Aggrieved
The religious organizations' neighbors are fighting mad, and they should be.
They were never asked whether they should have fewer property rights than their
religious neighbors. Their interests apparently were never considered by Congress.
And the people they normally hold accountable for zoning issues--mayors, city
councils, and zoning boards--were kept out of the loop as well.
When they bought their dream home, in all likelihood they did not understand
that a religious landowner could enter the neighborhood and alter its character
with impunity. They probably reasonably assumed that zoning laws applied equally
to ever landowner - as indeed they should.
Aggravating the situation is the fact that, too often, the clergy member who
leads the building project is heard to say that his congregation's religious
mission is more important than the petty interests of its residential neighbors
in securing a residential neighborhood. This is what happens when the federal
government gets into the business of parceling out special privileges for religious
entities.
Meanwhile, zoning and city officials should be fighting mad as well. Their
proper role as land use lawmakers has been usurped by Washington. RLUIPA directly
regulates - by nullifying - state and local land use law.
Its defenders say it is a commerce measure because it regulates land use. The
truth is, however, that it attacks land use law, which is the proper
province of cities and towns and states - not of the federal government. There
is not a more direct attack on state sovereignty on the books.
Even If and When the Supreme Court Invalidates RLUIPA, Homeowners Need to
Be Vigilant
RLUIPA is the second most aggressive attempt by Congress to take over traditional
state functions. The first was the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA),
a law that regulated every state and local law to the benefit of religious
entities. Ultimately, its constitutionality went to the Supreme Court, where
I represented the City of Boerne. In its decision in Boerne
v. Flores, the Court held that RFRA violated the principles of federalism
and the separation of powers.
RLUIPA will also make its way to the Supreme Court, where it should be struck
down on federalism and separation of church and state grounds, among others.
In passing it, Congress far exceeded its power to regulate interstate commerce,
and intruded far into the domain of localities.
If RLUIPA were upheld, which is doubtful, it would open a Pandora's box of
further inroads into state and local autonomy. Secular real estate developers,
too, will start to seek special preferences from the federal government, seeing
a new opportunity for more efficient lobbying that can result in centralized
regulation. Developers who lost on the local level will get an extra bite at
the apple on the federal level - to the detriment of the localities whose residents
best know their own neighborhoods, and can best plan how they should be used.
Unfortunately, RLUIPA should not be homeowners' only concern on this score.
The religious groups that obtained RLUIPA in Congress are lobbying the states
for similar favors. Two tacks are apparent. The first is to push a state Religious
Freedom Restoration Act, which would affect land use laws as well. A dozen states
have done so, and the pressure has not abated in other states. The second appeared
in a recently proposed bill in Texas that would have permitted enforcement by
zoning authorities of "only the least restrictive site development regulations
applying to the least restrictive zoning district" against religious landowners.
How can homeowners fight back? Sadly, their own zoning, city, and state officials
may not be of much help. For fear that they will anger the religious groups
from whom they seek to curry future votes (just like Congress), they often cave
to RLUIPA claims.
This political reality makes it abundantly clear that--contrary to the claims
of RLUIPA's supporters--religious landowners are not likely to be discriminated
against in the land use process, and the paucity of religious discrimination
land use cases reinforces this political fact. With RLUIPA, the special treatment
they normally receive is enhanced tenfold.
Thus, residential homeowners get slapped in the face twice: first by Congress
and second by their local officials.
That means residential homeowners must act on their own behalf. Indeed, some
are already doing so, bringing their own lawsuits against cities and religious
landowners. Others are mobilizing politically. Others just want the phone numbers
of their members in Congress and state officials.
Whatever approach homeowners take, they are likely to be aggressive in pursuing
it. After all, their homes are their castles, and the unfairness of allowing
religious groups to ignore zoning laws is plain. The federal government has
floated the argument that RLUIPA is constitutional because it enforces constitutional
guarantees, but the First Amendment has never guaranteed that religious landowners
are to be treated better than their neighboring landowners. To the contrary,
land use laws--even when they are applied to religious entities--have been subjected
to rationality review under the Constitution, not the strict scrutiny mandated
by RLUIPA.
Congress thus may well have awakened a sleeping giant. If it is lucky, the
Supreme Court will relieve it of the burden of having to explain why it was
so willing to devalue the American Dream. If not, it will have the hard duty
of explaining to millions of residential homeowners why it saw fit to make them
second-class citizens in their own neighborhoods.