What's Hot

    City Engineers Stress Collaboration, Adaptability at BEX Public Projects Event

    May 16, 2025

    Tempe DRC Recommends 105-Unit, 271 Bed Student Housing Project

    May 16, 2025

    Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

    May 16, 2025
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    AZBEX
    NEWS TICKER
    • [May 16, 2025] - City Engineers Stress Collaboration, Adaptability at BEX Public Projects Event
    • [May 16, 2025] - Tempe DRC Recommends 105-Unit, 271 Bed Student Housing Project
    • [May 16, 2025] - Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate
    • [May 16, 2025] - Backlogs, Confidence Increase in April
    • [May 16, 2025] - Arizona Projects 05-16-25
    • [May 14, 2025] - Labor Department Issues New Guidance on Independent Contractor Classification
    • [May 14, 2025] - City Will Spend $522M Preparing Peoria Innovation
    • [May 14, 2025] - ADOT to Hold Hearing on Tentative 5-Year Construction Plan
    Facebook Twitter YouTube LinkedIn
    • Home
    • News
      1. View Latest
      2. Planning & Development
      3. Local News
      4. Classifieds
      5. Editorial Analysis
      6. Budgets & Funding
      7. Commercial Real Estate
      8. People on the Move
      9. Arizona Projects
      10. Legislation & Regulations
      11. Trends

      Tempe DRC Recommends 105-Unit, 271 Bed Student Housing Project

      May 16, 2025

      City Will Spend $522M Preparing Peoria Innovation

      May 14, 2025

      Industrial Rezoning Sought for 369 Acres in Douglas

      May 13, 2025

      Pinal BOS Okays Rezone for Spec Industrial Park

      May 13, 2025

      City Engineers Stress Collaboration, Adaptability at BEX Public Projects Event

      May 16, 2025

      Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

      May 16, 2025

      ADOT to Hold Hearing on Tentative 5-Year Construction Plan

      May 14, 2025

      ASPE Panel Discusses Tariffs, Uncertainty and Optimism

      May 2, 2025

      Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

      May 16, 2025

      Legislation Would Effectively Strip NIMBYs of Referendum Tool

      February 11, 2025

      2025 Forecast Tries to Clarify an Uncertain Market

      February 7, 2025

      KOREPlex Buckeye Site Quietly Listed For Sale

      January 31, 2025

      Scottsdale Water Needs $50M for ‘Toilet to Taps’

      May 9, 2025

      Phoenix Releases $11.5B, 5-Year CIP with Nearly 1,000 Projects

      April 1, 2025

      Buckeye Starts Planning Bond Funding Outlays

      February 26, 2025

      $400M of Federal Funding in Limbo for Phoenix Plans

      February 14, 2025

      Commercial Real Estate 05-13-25

      May 13, 2025

      Commercial Real Estate 05-06-25

      May 6, 2025

      Commercial Real Estate 04-29-25

      April 29, 2025

      Commercial Real Estate 04-22-25

      April 22, 2025

      Industry Professionals 05-13-25

      May 13, 2025

      Industry Professionals 05-06-25

      May 6, 2025

      Industry Professionals 04-29-25

      April 29, 2025

      Industry Professionals 04-22-25

      April 22, 2025

      Arizona Projects 05-16-25

      May 16, 2025

      Arizona Projects 05-09-25

      May 9, 2025

      Arizona Projects 05-02-25

      May 2, 2025

      Arizona Projects 04-25-25

      April 26, 2025

      Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

      May 16, 2025

      Executive Order Will Streamline Federal Acquisition Regulations System

      April 26, 2025

      Legislation to Save Axon Plan Continues to Advance

      April 16, 2025

      Court Issues Summary Judgment in X Phoenix Case

      April 16, 2025

      Backlogs, Confidence Increase in April

      May 16, 2025

      Multifamily Developer Confidence Down in Q1

      May 13, 2025

      U.S. Construction Added 11,000 Jobs in April

      May 6, 2025

      Jobsite Safety Can Improve 7x with Best Practices

      May 6, 2025

      City Engineers Stress Collaboration, Adaptability at BEX Public Projects Event

      May 16, 2025

      Tempe DRC Recommends 105-Unit, 271 Bed Student Housing Project

      May 16, 2025

      Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

      May 16, 2025

      Backlogs, Confidence Increase in April

      May 16, 2025
    • AZBEX
      • Subscribe
      • Classifieds
      • Advertising
    • DATABEX
      • Webinars
      • Monthly Snapshot
    • Events
      • Housing Projects on the Horizon
    • About Us
      • Meet the Company
      • Meet the Sales Team
      • Meet the Editorial Team
      • Meet the BEXperts
    AZBEX
    Home » Legislation & Regulations » Arizona Legislature Outlaws NIMBYism
    Legislation & Regulations

    Arizona Legislature Outlaws NIMBYism

    BEX StaffBy BEX StaffApril 1, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
    Credit: Getty Images
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    By Roland Murphy for AZBEX

    In a rider amendment slipped quietly into a continuing budget resolution last week, both chambers of the Arizona State Legislature voted to effectively outlaw special interest opposition to proposed development projects around the state. The Governor then signed the bill into law in a guests-only, 3 a.m. ceremony March 28.

    Following the signing, the Governor’s Office released the following statement: “This bill has some useful stuff and some bad stuff. Most importantly, it keeps Arizona’s $16.2B budget from flaming out. I’m going to catch (grief) from everybody anyway, so here it is. You guys figure it out.”

    Bill Meant to Streamline Process and Input

    The amendment to Senate Bill 3858, comprising three pages added in the final minutes of debate to the 1,146-page State budget continuing resolution (also known as a CR), has two primary points.

    First, it amends State law and makes all zoning changes and development agreements administrative, rather than legislative, decisions. As such, those decisions would no longer be able to be overturned by special interest-influenced voter referenda, as happened with the Tempe Entertainment District and may still happen with VAI Resort in Glendale and the Axon Corporate Campus in Scottsdale.

    Similar measures were blocked as freestanding bills earlier this year by leadership in both chambers following lobbying by cities using taxpayer funds for lobbyists to represent their concerns to legislators. SB 3858’s sponsor, Sen. Bob N. Frapples (R-Miracle Valley), called the failure of those efforts, “A back-room whinge-fest that undermined legislative supersession.” He added, “We’ve now shown the cities and towns there’s a new sheriff in town and we’re no longer putting up with their petty gamesmanship.”

    Any development proposal on any land with any zoning other than single-family residential would be allowable by right unless the local jurisdiction requests and receives approval from a two-thirds majority in both houses of the Legislature. Municipalities would also be required to ensure not more than 15% of their total developable land, including land currently developed and occupied, is zoned exclusively for single-family residential use. This may lead to some parcels being rezoned from Single-Family to General Commercial retroactively.

    Input Requirements Overview

    The bill also limits public comments before boards, commissions and councils to only allow in-person input from designated experts. Project representatives—such as owner/developers, architects and engineers, consultants and land-use attorneys—qualify automatically as, “experts by right,” under the terms of the bill.

    Outside parties, either in support or opposition, will be required to register and request certification as qualified experts with the yet-to-be-created State Office of Informed Public Input before being allowed to address any public hearing or meeting.

    According to Frapples, certification will require full disclosure of all individual financial records, including the sources of funding for so-called “in-kind” donations and itemized receipts or invoices for all expenditures made by the person or group and paid to any source in the preceding five years.

    There will also be a requirement for registrants to pass a 500-question test on Arizona history, micro- and macroeconomics, state and national housing policy dynamics since 1912, private development business administration, traffic engineering and municipal water system resource allocation and management.

    There will be a $1,000 fee to administer the test, which will be given once a year and must be taken in person. The testing center will be located at the foot of the mule trail in Supai. To pass, an applicant will be required to answer 490 questions correctly.

    Frapples refers to the certification process as, “The Know What The Heck You’re Talking About Before You Shoot Your Mouth Off,” provision.

    Once successfully registered and approved, residents and groups in support of or opposition to a proposed development will be given a total of three minutes to present their concerns to the board, commission or council. Only one non-expert-by-right speaker from each side will be permitted per hearing.

    “This is a means of ensuring collaboration and effective use of both time and resources,” Frapple said. “If all the people and groups who have some kind of opinion have to work together to get all their reasons into a three-minute presentation, that presentation has a better chance of being at least remotely relevant.”

    He added, “One of the biggest drains on municipal resources, and a major hindrance to public engagement in the political process, is meeting length. Sure, some meetings are stupidly long because some board member wants to spend two hours crying about how he likes one tree on the approved plant list better than another. We can’t do much about that. What we can limit is having a parade of 50 chuckleheads spending three minutes each to say, ‘Apartments bad,’ or, ‘Progress good.’ We get it. Move on. Next!”

    Is There a 1st Amendment Issue?

    Phoenix-area sign maker and multi-issue activist Dalin Dahlas IV, who hosts the podcast Dalin 4 Dahlas to promote and raise funds for various causes, called SB 3858 “one of the most bad, like, things, like ever, bro.” He said, “The Constitution guarantees people have a right to talk about anything they want, anytime they want, for as long as they want, man. This is, like, some really fascist stuff, bro.”

    Frapples said he has heard similar complaints, “again, from people who don’t know what the heck they’re talking about. The First Amendment enshrines the right to petition government for redress of grievances. While we’ve changed the methods and requirements for speaking live and in person, we haven’t done jack to prevent them from providing their special snowflake worldview. Anyone and everyone are free to write a letter or an email as to why another 100 apartments in a high-activity area will mean the end of civilization and the American way of life.”

    He continued, “Most of the time, the complaints aren’t about the project. They’re about nostalgia and the loss of a local character that had already fallen by the wayside by the time Ronald Reagan left office. These letters and complaints would probably be better shared with a therapist who specializes in aging issues instead of a city council, but people can send things wherever they want.”

    When reminded the complaints would, under the new law, fall on deaf ears since developments are now approved by-right and municipal bodies are effectively operationally powerless to stop them, Frapples said, “Look, residents aren’t the only ones harkening back to the sentimental days of yesteryear or whatever. I once heard a sitting city council member argue against a project that would have turned a failing 30-year-old strip mall into a 200-unit Class A apartment community that would have revitalized the entire surrounding square mile.

    “You know why she said no? It wasn’t because the retail was needed. It wasn’t. It wasn’t because she was brokering a backroom deal to profit off a different development on the same site. She wasn’t. It was because the strip mall was built on the site of an old orange grove where she had her first kiss in 1968 and building new apartments would put yet another layer between the present and her happy memory.”

    He concluded, “You can’t move that kind of thinking with reason, data or rational argument. You pretty much have to legislate around it. That’s what we’ve done with this CR. You can’t ban insanity outright, but you can empower common sense, especially when indulging the doddering has a potential price tag of $10B in lost development and economic impact.

    Opponents Stage Protest

    Development opponents are not taking the new law in stride. Feels, Not Facts, an umbrella group representing various opposition campaigns around the state, held a sit-in last week at the Capitol Grille food truck parking area on Adams Street and 18th Avenue.

    Dahlas, one of the event organizers, was on site with protest signs and merchandise for sale.

    The sit-in was planned as a semi-silent event. While no speakers addressed the crowd of 11 attendees, three members of the 24-piece Lithuanian hip-hop bagpipe ensemble Ne Ver’te Etomu played dirges in the background to mark the solemnity of the occasion.

    April Fools Arizona State Legislature Axon Corporate Campus Bob N. Frapples budget bill continuing resolution CR Dalin 4 Dahlas Dalin Dahlas IV Gov. Katie Hobbs Ne Ver'te Etomu NIMBY parody protected use SB 3858 Senate Bill 3858 State Office of Informed Public Input Tempe Entertainment District The Know What The Heck You’re Talking About Before You Shoot Your Mouth Off provision VAI Resort
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

    May 16, 2025

    Executive Order Will Streamline Federal Acquisition Regulations System

    April 26, 2025

    Now the Real Axon Fight Begins

    April 22, 2025

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Our Picks

    City Engineers Stress Collaboration, Adaptability at BEX Public Projects Event

    May 16, 2025

    Tempe DRC Recommends 105-Unit, 271 Bed Student Housing Project

    May 16, 2025

    Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

    May 16, 2025

    Backlogs, Confidence Increase in April

    May 16, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn
    • YouTube
    Don't Miss
    Local News

    City Engineers Stress Collaboration, Adaptability at BEX Public Projects Event

    May 16, 20250

    By Roland Murphy for AZBEX Faced with cost escalations, uncertain economic conditions, budget constraints, leadership…

    Tempe DRC Recommends 105-Unit, 271 Bed Student Housing Project

    May 16, 2025

    Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

    May 16, 2025

    Backlogs, Confidence Increase in April

    May 16, 2025

    BEX serves architecture, engineering and construction firms as well as all the ancillary product and service categories that market to them. These include manufacturing representatives, public agencies and private real estate organizations, specialty subcontractors and services providers related to our industry.

    Our Picks

    City Engineers Stress Collaboration, Adaptability at BEX Public Projects Event

    May 16, 2025

    Tempe DRC Recommends 105-Unit, 271 Bed Student Housing Project

    May 16, 2025

    Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

    May 16, 2025
    Contact Us

    Phone: 480-709-4190
    Address: P.O. Box 12196 Tempe, AZ 85284
    Email: sales@azbex.com

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.