Arizona 2024 2024 Regular Session

Arizona Senate Bill SB1162 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 05/10/2024

                    Originally Assigned to TTMC 	AS PASSED BY HOUSE 
Now FICO-related  
 
 
 
ARIZONA STATE SENATE 
Fifty-Sixth Legislature, Second Regular Session 
 
AMENDED 
FACT SHEET FOR S.B. 1162 
 
telecommunications fund; report; posting 
(NOW: residential zoning; housing; assessment; hearings)  
As passed the Senate, S.B. 1162 required the Director of the Arizona Department of 
Administration to post the Telecommunications Program Office report on its website. 
The House of Representatives adopted a strike-everything amendment that does the 
following: 
Purpose 
Establishes municipal housing needs assessments and time frames for zoning applications. 
Background 
Statute authorizes municipalities to adopt zoning ordinances and codes to conserve and 
promote the public health, safety, convenience and general welfare. A municipality may:  
1) regulate the use of buildings, structures and land between agriculture, residence, industry and 
business; 2) regulate the location, height, bulk, number of stories and size of buildings and 
structures, the size and use of lots, yards, courts and other open spaces, the percentage of a lot that 
may be occupied by a building or structure, access to incident solar energy and the intensity of 
land use; 3) establish requirements for off-street parking and loading; 4) establish and maintain 
building setback lines; and 5) establish floodplain and age-specific community zoning districts and 
districts of historical significance. (A.R.S. § 9-462.01). 
Municipalities must post time frames during which the municipality will either grant or 
deny each license required by an ordinance or code, with specified exceptions. The overall 
timeframe must separately state the administrative completeness review timeframe and the 
substantive review timeframe. During the substantive review timeframe, a municipality may make: 
1) one comprehensive request for corrections; and 2) supplemental requests for corrections limited 
to previously identified issues, if the applicant fails to resolve an issue identified in the 
comprehensive request for corrections. The substantive review timeframe and overall timeframe 
are suspended from the date a request for corrections is issued until the date the municipality 
receives the corrections. A municipality may consider an application withdrawn if, by 30 days or 
more after the date of notice, the applicant does not supply the documentation or information 
requested or an explanation of why the information cannot be provided within the established time 
period. If a municipality does not issue the applicant a written or electronic notice granting or 
denying a license within the overall time frame or within mutually agreed on time frame extension, 
the municipality must refund to the applicant all fees charged for reviewing and acting on the 
application for the license and excuse payment of any fees that have not yet been paid. The 
statutory requirements do not apply to a license that is: 1) necessary for residential lot construction 
or development, including swimming pools, hardscape and property walls, a subdivision or a  FACT SHEET – Amended  
S.B. 1162 
Page 2 
 
 
master planned community; 2) issued within seven working days after initial application receipt; 
and 3) a permit that expires within 21 working days after issuance (A.R.S. § 9-835). 
There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this 
legislation.  
Provisions 
Zoning Application Time Frames 
1. Requires, by January 1, 2025, a municipality to adopt an amendment to the municipality's 
zoning ordinance that requires the municipality to determine whether a zoning application is 
administratively complete within 30 days after receiving the application.  
2. Requires the municipality, if it determines that the application is not administratively complete, 
to follow statutory procedures until the application is administratively complete.  
3. Requires the municipality to determine whether a resubmitted application is administratively 
complete within 15 days after receiving the resubmitted application.  
4. Requires the municipality to approve or deny the application within 180 days after determining 
that the application is administratively complete.  
5. Allows the municipality to extend the time frame to approve or deny the request beyond 180 
days:  
a) for extenuating circumstances; or 
b) if an applicant requests an extension.  
6. Allows the municipality to grant:  
a) a onetime extension of 30 days for each granted extenuating circumstance; and 
b) extensions of 30 days for each granted request from an applicant.  
7. Stipulates that the zoning application time frames do not apply to:  
a) land that is designated as a district of historical significance by municipality in accordance 
with statute; 
b) an area designated as historic of the National Register of Historic Places; or 
c) planned area developments.  
Municipal Housing Assessments  
8. Requires, beginning January 1, 2025 and every five years thereafter, a municipality to publish 
a housing needs assessment that includes:  
a) the total population growth projected for the subsequent five-year period;  
b) the total job growth projected for the subsequent five-year period;  
c) the total amount of residentially zoned land with detail on land zoned as single-family and 
multifamily; and 
d) the total need for additional residential housing units for rent and for sale in the 
municipality to meet any deficiencies in housing the existing population and workforce, 
population and job growth projections and housing needs across all various income levels.   FACT SHEET – Amended  
S.B. 1162 
Page 3 
 
 
9. Requires, beginning January 1, 2025, each municipality to submit an annual report to the 
Arizona Department of Housing (ADOH) accounting for the total number of:  
a) proposed residential housing units submitted to the municipality;  
b) net new residential housing units submitted to the municipality; and 
c) new residential housing units that are entitled, have been platted, have been issued a 
building permit and have received a certificate of occupancy by the municipality.  
10. Requires the annual report to also include:  
a) the number of housing development applications received in the prior year;  
b) the number of lots and multifamily units included in all development applications in the 
prior year;  
c) the number of lots and multifamily units approved and disapproved or otherwise not 
approved in the prior year;  
d) a threshold percentage requirement of multifamily zoned land versus single-family zoned 
land needed to meet population demand in each municipality;  
e) the status and progress in meeting the municipality's housing needs; and 
f) a plan that specifies how the municipality intends to satisfy the identified need for 
additional housing units within the municipality.  
11. Requires a municipality that has conducted a housing needs assessment report as of January 1, 
2021 to amend all existing reports to include all the statutorily required information.  
12. Requires the ADOH to compile the annual reports received from the municipalities and submit 
the reports to:  
a) the Governor;  
b) the President of the Senate; and  
c) the Speaker of the House of Representatives.  
13. Stipulates that the housing needs assessment requirement does not require a municipality to 
fulfill the projections in the assessment.  
14. Exempts, from the housing needs assessment and annual report requirements:  
a) a municipality located on tribal land; or 
b) a municipality with a population of less than 30,000 persons.  
Miscellaneous  
15. Excludes government owned property from the property in a zoning area in which the property 
owners may file a protest against a proposed zoning amendment. 
16. Becomes effective on the general effective date.  
Amendments Adopted by the House of Representatives 
• Adopted the strike-everything amendment relating to zoning and housing. 
 
  FACT SHEET – Amended  
S.B. 1162 
Page 4 
 
 
Senate Action  	House Action  
TTMC 2/12/24 DP 4-2-1  COM  3/19/24  DPA/SE 8-1-0-1 
3
rd
 Read 3/5/24  24-4-2  3
rd
 Read  4/2/24   53-0-6-0-1 
Prepared by Senate Research 
April 2, 2024 
JT/cs