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New York Zoning and Municipal Law Blog

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Property Owner Found To Be Within Zone Of Interest For Standing To Challenge Development

An appellate court reversed a lower court decision dismissing, for lack of standing, a challenge brought by a nearby property owner to a development over 1,000 feet from his property. In Matter of Ontario Heights Homeowners Association v. Town of Oswego Planning Board, the Appellate Division Fourth Department held that…

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Court Holds Documents Exchanged Between Federal and State Agencies May Be Exempt From FOIL, But Settlement Documents Exchanged WIth Corporation Are Not

A court held that documents exchanged between the EPA and the New York DEC may be exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) as inter-agency communications, but additional documents exchanged as part of the settlement negotiations with General Electric are subject to disclosure. In Town of Waterford…

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Court Rules on Use of Municipal Funds and Labor for Religious Display

The Appellate Division concluded that the context in which a menorah was displayed was not an unconstitutional endorsement of religion but that the nightly lighting of the menorah by municipal employees, even if the cost is reimbursed, violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. In…

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Court Upholds SEQRA Determination and Subdivision for 850,000 Square Foot Shopping Center

The Appellate Division upheld two lower court decisions which dismissed challenges to the SEQRA findings, site plan and subdivision approval for a shopping center in the Town of Newburgh. In Matter of Save Open Space v. Planning Bd. Of the Town of Newburgh the court noted judicial review is limited…

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New York Legislature Amends Opening Meetings Law Requirements

The New York Legislature has adopted several amendments to portions of New York’s Open Meetings Law (sections 103 and 107 of the Public Officers Law) in order to provide for more transparency in the conduct of governmental activities, as set forth in three recently adopted chapters. Chapter 40 took effect…

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N.Y. Court of Appeals Reverses Appellate Division and Says Columbia University Condemnation May Proceed

In a rebuke to the Appellate Division First Department, the New York Court of Appeals today held that the condemnation of land on the upper west side of Manhattan to benefit Columbia University may go forward. In Matter of Kaur v New York State Urban Dev. Corp., the Court of…