Colleagues,
Since our October 2 agenda includes referral of amendments to Chapter 14 (variance and special exception procedures) to the Planning & Zoning Commission, I want to provide some context. This is not intended to direct P&Z’s work, but simply to clarify the issues so both Council and Commission members understand what’s at stake.
1. State Law Framework
The real issue is not form (variance vs. special exception), but substance (the adequacy of our criteria). Council must set those standards so that BOA can do its job with confidence, without appearing to legislate case by case.
Since our October 2 agenda includes referral of amendments to Chapter 14 (variance and special exception procedures) to the Planning & Zoning Commission, I want to provide some context. This is not intended to direct P&Z’s work, but simply to clarify the issues so both Council and Commission members understand what’s at stake.
1. State Law Framework
- Texas Local Government Code §211.009 authorizes BOAs to:
- hear appeals of administrative decisions,
- decide special exceptions when the zoning ordinance provides them,
- authorize variances where hardship is shown, and
- hear other matters the ordinance assigns.
- A variance always requires hardship. A special exception does not, but only if the ordinance supplies specific criteria that BOA must apply.
- Section 11.20 (variances) is aligned with state law and hardship findings.
- Section 11.60 (special exceptions) includes limited criteria, but in the case of height, those criteria are minimal. In practice, this shifts the burden onto neighbors to show harm rather than requiring the applicant to meet substantive standards.
- Some, like former P&Z Chair Tom Monahan, emphasize the form: special exceptions and variances are distinct tools, and hardship should not be imported into Section 11.60. State law and TML guidance support that distinction.
- Our City Attorney, Brad Bullock, emphasizes the substance: Lago’s ordinance currently gives BOA too little guidance. Without stronger standards, BOA risks functioning as a “super-council,” effectively making zoning policy case-by-case. That makes its decisions more vulnerable to legal challenge.
- Both perspectives can be true: special exceptions are valid, but they must be backed by robust, ordinance-defined criteria.
- The referral to P&Z is not about eliminating special exceptions. It’s about ensuring that when BOA considers them, they are applying clear, legally defensible standards set by Council.
- Whether P&Z recommends adding hardship or strengthening other criteria, the ultimate goal is the same: protect the integrity of BOA decisions and ensure they withstand legal scrutiny.
The real issue is not form (variance vs. special exception), but substance (the adequacy of our criteria). Council must set those standards so that BOA can do its job with confidence, without appearing to legislate case by case.