LAPID-LAUREL, L.L.C.; John and Jane Doe, Appellants, v. ZONING BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE TOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS; the township of Scotch Plains; Alta A. Rose; Barbara Horev.
No. 00-3625.
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
Argued Sept. 7, 2001. Filed March 15, 2002.
284 F.3d 442
Because Casabella had arguable probable cause and thus was entitled to summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity, we need not reach his claim that he had actual probable cause to issue the appearance ticket.
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is reversed.
Stephen Eisdorfer (Argued), Hill, Wallack, Princeton, NJ, Co-Counsel for Appellees, Township of Scotch Plains.
Frank N. Yurasko, Somerville, NJ, Co-Counsel for Appellees, Township of Scotch Plains.
Douglas W. Hansen, Scotch Plains, NJ, Co-Counsel for Appellees, Township of Scotch Plains.
Anthony D. Rinaldo, Jr., Garrubbo, Romakow & Rinaldo, Westfield, NJ, Co-Counsel for Appellees, Zoning Board of Scotch Plains.
Before BECKER, Chief Judge, ALITO and BARRY, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
BECKER, Chief Judge.
Plaintiff Lapid-Laurel, L.L.C. (“Lapid“), a real estate development firm that unsuccessfully sought approval from the Zoning Board of Adjustment of the Township of Scotch Plains, New Jersey (“the Board“) to build a 95-bed care facility for the elderly, appeals the District Court‘s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Board and the Township, defendants in Lapid‘s civil case, challenging their actions under the Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988 (“FHAA“),
Lapid‘s primary contentions on appeal are that: (1) because the Board failed to engage in the “interactive process” that we have held is required of employers by the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
We resolve the first claim adversely to Lapid by declining to extend the “interactive process” requirement that exists in the employer-employee context of the Rehabilitation Act to the housing and land use context of the FHAA. We conclude that the process was never intended to apply in this context, and would be especially inappropriate to apply to local land use boards, which already face detailed procedural requirements under state law. We will also affirm the District Court‘s grant of summary judgment on both the reasonable accommodations and disparate impact claims. Before doing so, we must determine which party bears the burden of establishing the various elements of an FHAA reasonable accommodations challenge to a local land use board‘s decision. We resolve this question by adopting a burden-shifting analysis, in which the plaintiff bears the initial burden of showing that its requested accommodations are “necessary to afford [handicapped] person[s] [an] equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling,”
In the present case, we conclude that the plaintiff has failed to produce sufficient evidence that the accommodations that it requested were “necessary” to afford the handicapped an “equal opportunity” to housing, and that the Board has shown that the requested accommodations were unreasonable, largely because of the problems with traffic safety and emergency vehicle access that the proposed Facility was likely to cause. We therefore affirm the District Court‘s grant of summary judgment to the defendants on the reasonable accommodations claim. We also affirm the District Court‘s judgment on the discriminatory impact claim, because we agree that Lapid has failed to establish a prima facie case that Scotch Plains‘s ordinances have a discriminatory impact on the elderly handicapped.
I. Facts & Procedural History
On June 9, 1998, Lapid applied to the Zoning Board of Adjustment of the Township of Scotch Plains, New Jersey for the variances and site plan approval necessary to build a long-term care facility for the elderly (“the Facility“). The proposed Facility included 35 beds in a skilled nursing section, the license for which Lapid wished to transfer from its nursing home in nearby Plainfield, New Jersey, and 60 “assisted living” beds, for which Lapid had originally received a license in Westfield, New Jersey. Lapid proposed to build the Facility on two contiguous lots, 1290 and 1310 Martine Avenue. At the time it applied to the Board, Lapid owned one of the lots in
The Martine Avenue lots are located in an area that is zoned R-1 under Scotch Plains‘s 1976 Master Plan. The R-1 zone is designated to permit only single-family houses on large lots (40,000 square feet or more—about an acre), with wide street frontage (a minimum width of 160 feet). However, several institutional uses exist in the R-1 zone around the lots where Lapid proposed to develop the Facility. These include a synagogue, a high school, a YMCA, and a country club.
In order to get approval to build the Facility, Lapid needed the Board to grant several variances, which it applied for on June 9, 1998. Lapid‘s application requested three approvals from the Board. First, because the land use that Lapid proposed (i.e., a residential care facility for the elderly), did not fit within the uses permitted in an R-1 zone, Lapid asked for a use variance pursuant to
The Board held four public hearings on Lapid‘s application—on February 4, March 4, March 15, and March 24, 1999. Lapid presented testimony from various experts at these meetings, including Julius Szalay, an engineer; Stephen Crystal, a gerontologist; Peter Steck, a planner; David Horner, a traffic consultant; and Joseph Martin, a real estate appraiser. The Board received written reports from the Township‘s experts, Susan Kimball, a planner; Paul Ferriero, an engineer; Harold Maltz, a traffic consultant; Fire Chief Jonathan Ellis; Police Chief Thomas O‘Brien; and Sergeant James Rau, the head of the police department‘s traffic safety bureau. Several of these officials also testified at the Board‘s public hearings.
Lapid‘s engineer made multiple amendments to the site plan in order to address the concerns that the Board and its experts raised. In particular, these concerns focused on the layout of the parking lot and its effect on traffic safety both within the Facility‘s lot and at the point of ingress and egress on Martine Avenue, as well as on the access that emergency vehicles would have to the rear of the building. In order to address the issues of emergency vehicle access, Lapid‘s planner sought to meet with the Township‘s fire chief beginning on March 10, 1999, but was unable to do so until March 22, two days before the Board‘s final meeting at which it considered Lapid‘s variance and site plan applications.1 Lapid did not address the fire chief‘s latest concerns in a revised site plan
The Board then issued a written denial of Lapid‘s applications. The Board cited the following concerns as its reasons for denying the variances and site plan: (1) a negative impact on the municipal zoning plan (i.e., siting a commercial use in the R-1 zone); (2) traffic safety concerns, including increased traffic on Martine Avenue and hazards resulting from ingress and egress from the Facility‘s lot; (3) a substantial portion of the site contained wetlands; and (4) insufficient access for emergency and fire vehicles.
Lapid then filed a complaint in the District Court against the Board, the Township of Scotch Plains (together, “the municipal defendants“), Alta Rose, the person from whom Lapid had contracted to purchase the property at 1310 Martine Avenue, and her daughter Barbara Horev,2 who held a durable power of attorney for Rose‘s benefit. The complaint alleged that: (1) the Board‘s denial of Lapid‘s application for variances and site plan approval violated the FHAA‘s requirement that municipalities “make reasonable accommodations in rules, policies, practices, or services, when such accommodations may be necessary to afford [handicapped] person[s] [an] equal opportunity to use and enjoy” housing,
Following discovery, the municipal defendants moved for summary judgment, which the District Court granted as to all counts. Lapid raises three questions on
II. Failure to Make Reasonable Accommodations Under 42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)(3)(B) —Extent of the Record on Review, and Burdens of Proof
Lapid relies on
[I]t shall be unlawful—
(f)
(1) To discriminate in the sale or rental, or to otherwise make unavailable or deny, a dwelling to any buyer or renter because of a handicap of—
(A) that buyer or renter,
(B) а person residing in or intending to reside in that dwelling after it is so sold, rented, or made available; or
(C) any person associated with that buyer or renter.
...
(3) For purposes of this subsection, discrimination includes—
...
(B) a refusal to make reasonable accommodations in rules, policies, practices, or services, when such accommodations may be necessary to afford such person equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling
Lapid contends that by denying its variance and site plan applications, the Board refused to make reasonable accommodations to facilitate the construction of housing for the elderly handicapped, thereby violating the FHAA. Before addressing the question whether summary judgment was proper on the reasonable accommodations claim, we must first address the proper scope of the record on review when hear-
A. Was it Error for the District Court to Limit its Review to the Materials That Were Before the Board?
Lapid submits that the District Court erred by limiting its review to the materials that were in the administrative record before the Board. Lapid asked the District Court for permission to supplement the administrative record for the purpose of litigating its reasonable accommodations claim, but the Court refused, holding that it “must review the Zoning Board‘s decision based solely on the record below.” Lapid‘s argument that it was error for the District Court to limit its review to the materials that were before the Board is groundеd on its contentions that the Board and its experts failed to engage in an “informal interactive process” with Lapid and its engineer, and that it committed procedural error by refusing to allow Lapid to bifurcate its variance and site plan applications. Lapid contends that when a local land use board fails to engage in such a process, a court reviewing an FHAA challenge to the local board‘s decision should allow the plaintiff to supplement the administrative record.
Lapid points to two sources for the “interactive process” requirement that it suggests exists. First, Lapid argues that because the reasonable accommodations provision in the FHAA is modeled on the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
1. Should a Court Reviewing an FHAA Reasonable Accommodations Challenge to an Adverse Decision from a Locаl Land Use Board Limit Its Review to the Administrative Record?
Although we have not previously addressed the issue of the proper scope of review for a federal court reviewing an FHAA reasonable accommodations challenge to a decision of a local land use board, we are convinced that federal courts should limit their review to the materials that were presented to the local land use board, except in circumstances where the board prevents applicants from presenting sufficient information.
To support its conclusion that a reviewing court should not look outside the record when reviewing an FHAA reasonable accommodations challenge to a local land use decision, the District Court cited Keys Youth Services, Inc. v. City of Olathe, 75 F.Supp.2d 1235 (D.Kan.1999), which was later affirmed in relevant part by the Tenth Circuit, 248 F.3d 1267 (10th Cir.2001). In Keys Youth Services, a nonprofit organization (Keys) sought a variance that it needed to establish a group home in a single-family home in Olathe, Kansas for ten youths who had been abused, neglected, or abandoned. After the local land use
The Tenth Circuit affirmed the district court‘s judgment on the reasonable accommodations claim based “on the principle that Olathe cannot be liable for refusing to grant a reasonable and necessary accommodation if the City never knew the accommodation was in fact necessary.” Keys Youth Services, 248 F.3d at 1275. The court held that plaintiffs should be required to present all of the evidence they have that would justify why an accommodation is necessary under the FHAA to the local land use board, and that a reviewing court should not look outside the administrative record.
The Fourth Circuit adopted the same position in Bryant Woods Inn, Inc. v. Howard County, 124 F.3d 597 (4th Cir.1997), an FHAA reasonable accommodations challenge brought by a non-profit group home for adults suffering from Alzheimer‘s Disease that was seeking to expand its number of residents from 8 to 15. In Bryant Woods, the court refused to look beyond the administrative record and affirmed the district court‘s grant of summary judgment in favor of Howard County because the non-profit group had failed to present evidence to the local land use board that the expansion was “necessary” within the meaning of the FHAA. Id. at 605-06.
We join the Tenth and Fourth Circuits in holding that courts hearing reasonable accommodations challenges should ordinarily limit their review to the administrative record. This rule permits local land use boards to have the initial opportunity to provide reasonable accommodations to facilitate housing for the handicapped; it also comports with the tradition in American law thаt land use decisions are quintessentially local in nature. See, e.g., FERC v. Mississippi, 456 U.S. 742, 768 n. 30, 102 S.Ct. 2126, 72 L.Ed.2d 532 (1982) (“[R]egulation of land use is perhaps the quintessential state activity.“); Village of Belle Terre v. Boraas, 416 U.S. 1, 13, 94 S.Ct. 1536, 39 L.Ed.2d 797 (1974) (Marshall, J., dissenting) (noting that zoning “may indeed be the most essential function performed by local government“). We too have recognized in similar contexts the value of local authorities resolving such matters on their own without interference from the federal courts. See Acierno v. Mitchell, 6 F.3d 970 (3d Cir.1993) (stating that courts should not insert themselves in “delicate area[s],” subject to local regulation until local authorities have “had the opportunity to apply authoritatively” their specific regulations).
Notwithstanding the foregoing, we point out that it may be necessary for a court reviewing an FHAA reasonable accommodations claim to look outside of the administrative record when a land use board either intentionally or inadvertently prevents an applicant from presenting the evidence necessary to support an FHAA reasonable accommodations claim.5 Lapid
Although we are not bound by the district court cases cited above, including the case that we summarily affirmed, (summary affirmances are non-precedential, see 3d Cir. I.O.P. 6.2.1), and we are not presented with and do not reach questions of ripeness or exhaustion in this case, we note that the position adopted by the Seventh and Eighth Circuits on when plaintiffs bringing FHAA reasonable accommodations challenges against localities must first apply for variances with local land use boards rationalizes these cases (which allowed plaintiffs to bring reasonable accommodations claims without first seeking a variance) with the necessary implication of our holding today (that most reasonable accommodations claims must first be presented to local land use boards). In United States v. Village of Palatine, 37 F.3d 1230 (7th Cir.1994), the Seventh Circuit reviewed an FHAA reasonable accommodations challenge to a local ordinance for which the plaintiff had not sought a variance. The court held that the claim was not ripe, and that in general a city must be afforded the opportunity to make the requested accommodation. Id. at 1233. However, the court identified two exceptions where the claim would be ripe even if the plaintiff had not first sought a variance from the local land use board: (1) if the claim were a challenge to the variance application procedure itsеlf; and (2) if the variance application process was demonstrably futile. Id. at 1234. The Village of Palatine court also limited the ripeness rule that it formed to reasonable accommodations claims and noted that “if the plaintiff‘s claim were of discriminatory intent, rather than failure to make a reasonable accommodation, th[e] claim might well be presently ripe even though [the plaintiff] has not sought a special use approval.” Id. at 1233 n. 3. The Eighth Circuit has followed the Seventh Circuit‘s ripeness rule for FHAA reasonable accommodations claims. See Oxford House-A v. City of Univ. City, 87 F.3d 1022, 1024-25 (8th Cir.1996).
New Jersey‘s Municipal Land Use Law provides that local zoning boards must act on аn application for a variance or site plan approval within 120 days of when a complete application is submitted. If a zoning board fails to act within the statutory period, the application is deemed granted by force of law. See
Lapid contends that by requesting to bifurcate its application, it was offering to extend the time limit for the site plan application, and resting its case only on the variance application. Because of New Jersey‘s statutory scheme governing the evaluation of variance applications, however, we agree that the Board could not have meaningfully considered the variance application without reference to the specific problems that it had identified in the site plan application and Lapid‘s proposed solutions to these problems, and that the offer to extend time for consideration of the site plan application was therefore essentially meaningless.
The section of the MLUL that governs applications for use variances,
Most importantly, we agree with the District Court that “based on a reading of the Zoning Board‘s hearing on the matter, it appears that Lapid-Laurel was given a full and fair opportunity to present its case before the Zoning Board. Over the course of four hearings, Lapid ... presented five witnesses and various exhibits.” Indeed, as the District Court noted, “[p]laintiff‘s counsel even conceded at oral argument that the Board in no way prevented plaintiff from presenting any and all evidence it wished to advance.” Therefore, we do not think that the Board‘s denial of Lapid‘s request to bifurcate its applications shows that the Board prevented Lapid from presenting the necessary evidence to support its FHAA claim, nor does it provide a sufficient reason for this court to look outside the administrative record when reviewing Lapid‘s reasonable accommоdations claim.
2. Does the FHAA or New Jersey Law Require a Local Land Use Board to Engage in an “Informal Interactive Process” with a Developer?
Lapid argues that the FHAA itself, or alternatively New Jersey‘s MLUL, imposes an affirmative obligation on local land use boards to engage in an “informal interactive process” with variance applicants. Lapid argues that the Board in this case failed to engage in that process (citing in particular the inability of Lapid‘s representatives to meet with Fire Chief Ellis when they wanted to do so), and that therefore it is appropriate for a reviewing federal court to look at materials from outside the administrative record. For the following reasons, we do not think that any such “informal interactive process” requirement exists.
Lapid argues that because the language of the FHAA‘s reasonable accommodations requirement was borrowed from the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,
Mengine involved a Rehabilitation Act challenge brought by a Postal Service employee, alleging that the Service had failed to provide reasonable accommodations by failing to move him to a position other than letter carrier after he became disabled and incapable of fulfilling the duties of that position. Relying on Beck v. University of Wisconsin, 75 F.3d 1130 (7th Cir.1996), an analogous case from the Seventh Circuit that involved a claim brought under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), Mengine held that “both parties [i.e., the employer and the employee] have a duty to assist in the search for [an] appropriate reasonable accommodation.” 114 F.3d at 420.
Beck involved a similar claim brought by a disabled employee under the ADA against her employer for failing to provide reasonable accommodations for her disability. In Beck, the court specifically relied on
The FHAA borrows language from the Rehabilitation Act. See Hovsons, Inc. v. Township of Brick, 89 F.3d 1096, 1101 (3d Cir.1996). However, the FHAA and the Rehabilitation Act do not bear the significant similarities that justified importing the requirements of
Lapid also argues that New Jersey law requires local zoning boards to engage in an informal interactive process with developers who apply for site plan approvals. To support this proposition, Lapid cites the following language from Pizzo Mantin Group v. Township of Randolph, 137 N.J. 216, 645 A.2d 89 (1994):
Although a planning board is not required affirmatively to propose suggested revisions and modifications of a subdivision plan or site plan, the MLUL [Municipal Land Use Law] contemplates active involvement by planning boards in their review of subdivisions. The generalized design standards for subdivision ordinances prеscribed by the MLUL necessarily invoke the planning board‘s expertise and familiarity with local conditions and implicate the exercise of discretion by planning boards.... That discretion is best exercised by a process in which planning boards affirmatively interact with developers when reviewing proposed subdivisions.
Id. at 98 (emphasis added) (citation omitted). We do not agree that Pizzo Mantin imposes a requirement that local land use boards engage in an informal interactive process with developers. First, the language in the case says that how a board interacts with a developer is a matter of discretion that is “best exercised” when “planning boards affirmatively interact with developers.” Id. This language is far from mandatory. Second, it is unclear how, if the Scotch Plains zoning board violated New Jersey‘s MLUL in this case, that should bear on the scope of review of a federal FHAA claim (unless in violating the MLUL, the Board prevented Lapid from presenting necessary evidence). To the extent that Lapid is attempting to argue its pendent state law claims, it is barred from doing so because it failed to raise these state law claims in this appeal.
It is generally beneficial for land use boards to be cooperative with developers, and we do not think that the Board engaged in model behavior toward Lapid in this case. Nevertheless, we cannot impose an interactive process requirement on the Board as a matter of law.
B. Burdens of Proof for Reasonable Accommodations Claims
As noted above, Lapid relies on
Hovsons, Inc. v. Township of Brick, 89 F.3d 1096 (3d Cir.1996), is the only case in which we have addressed the legal framework of an FHAA reasonable accommoda-
Our precedents interpreting § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act have held that the burden of proving that a proposed accommodation is not reasonable rests with the defendant. See Juvelis v. Snider, 68 F.3d 648, 653 & n. 5 (3d Cir.1995); Nathanson v. Medical College of Pennsylvania, 926 F.2d 1368, 1385 (3d Cir.1991). As we have already held that courts must look to the body of law developed under § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act as an interpretive guide to the “reasonable accommodations” provisions of the FHAA, we further hold that the burden should have been placed on the [defendant] [t]ownship ... to prove that it was either unable to accommodate [the plaintiff] or that the accommodation ... proposed was unreasonable.
Hovsons, 89 F.3d at 1103. At least three Courts of Appeals disagree with our position on which party has the burden on the issue of reasonableness. See Groner v. Golden Gate Gardens Apartments, 250 F.3d 1039, 1045 (6th Cir.2001) (“[W]e conclude that the plaintiff in a Fair Housing Act case has the burden of proof to establish the reasonableness of a proposed accommodation.“); Bryant Woods Inn, Inc. v. Howard County, 124 F.3d 597, 603-04 (4th Cir.1997) (holding that it is the plaintiff‘s burden to show that the requested accommodation is reasonable); Elderhaven, Inc. v. City of Lubbock, 98 F.3d 175, 178 (5th Cir.1996) (“[W]e reject the suggestion of certain courts that a Fair Housing Act defendant bears the burden of proof on the question of reasonableness.“) (citing Hovsons).
Although Hovsons discussed only the “reasonableness” part of the statute, the Township contends that the plaintiffs were also required to show that the requested accommodations were “necessary to afford ... [an] equal opportunity” to the handicapped.
We believe that this approach makes more sense and more closely comports with the likely intent of Congress than the approach of placing the burden on the defendant to show both (1) that the requested accommodation is not necessary to create an equal opportunity for housing; and (2) that it is unreasonable. We initial-
Because the cases on which Hovsons relied to place the burden on the reasonableness issue on the defendant do not provide any guidance as to where the burden should be placed on the other issues (that would be analogous to the “necessary” and “equal opportunity” elements of
While a plaintiff is in the best position to show what is necessary to afford its clients (i.e., the handicapped population that it wishes to serve) an equal opportunity to use and enjoy housing, a defendant municipality is in the best position to provide evidence concerning what is reasonable or unreasonable within the context of its zoning scheme. This burden-shifting approach is also consistent with the approach that courts have applied to intentional discrimination and disparate impact claims brought under
III. Was Summary Judgment Proper on the Reasonable Accommodations Claim?
In order to evaluate the District Court‘s grant of summary judgment to the municipal defendants on the reasonable accommodations claim, we must determine whether there is a genuine issue of material fact regarding: (1) whether the accommodations that Lapid requested were necessary to afford handicapped persons an equal opportunity to use and enjoy housing; and, if so (2) whether the аccommodations requested were unreasonable.
As an initial matter, there are two points on which the parties agree or that are settled beyond dispute with respect to the reasonable accommodations claim: (1) that the future residents of the Facility that Lapid proposed to build would be handicapped within the meaning of
A. Did Lapid Demonstrate That the Accommodations it Requested Were Necessary to Afford Elderly Handicapped Persons an Equal Opportunity to Use and Enjoy Housing?
As noted above, we have not previously addressed the “necessity” and “equal opportunity” factors of a
In Smith & Lee Associates, Inc. v. City of Taylor, 102 F.3d 781 (6th Cir.1996), an FHAA challenge by a residential facility for Alzheimer‘s patients to the city‘s denial of its application to expand its facility from 6 to 12 patients, the Sixth Circuit discussed the meaning of “necessity” and “equal opportunity” in
Next turning to the meaning of “necessary,” the Smith & Lee court concluded that in order to show that a requested accommodation is “necessary” plaintiffs “must show that, but for the accommodation, they likely will be denied an equal opportunity to enjoy the housing of their choice.” 102 F.3d at 795. The Fourth Circuit also defined the word “necessary” to require a link between the proposed accommodation and the “equal opportunity” in question:
The “necessary” element ... requires the demonstration of a direct linkage between the proposed accommodation and the “equal opportunity” to be provided to the handicapped person. This requirement has attributes of a causation requirement. And if the proposed accommodation provides no direct amelioration of a disability‘s effect, it cannot be said to be “necessary.”
Bryant Woods Inn, 124 F.3d at 604.
Other courts have also recognized that the equal opportunity to live in a residential zone is valid under
With respect to the use variance, it is clear that Lapid demonstrated that a use variance was necessary to achieve an equal opportunity for the elderly handicapped to live in a residential area of Scotch Plains. This is true almost by definition. The elderly handicapped who need skilled nursing care usually are not able to live in their own houses. They must live in some sort of institutional setting in order to receive the assistance or health care that they need. No institutional health care facilities are permitted without a use variance in the neighborhoods zoned R-1 residential in Scotch Plains. Therefore, a use variance is necessary for the elderly handicapped to have an equal opportunity to live in a residential area of Scotch Plains. Lapid‘s experts were explicit that one of the objectives of the proposed Facility was to allow the elderly to live in a predominately single-family residential zone. Dr. Stephen Crystal, Lapid‘s gerontologist, expert gave the following answer to a question that Lapid‘s lawyer asked him at one of the Board‘s public hearings:
Atty. Butler: “... Dr. Crystal, generally in your professional opinion, is it appropriate to site an assisted living nursing home in a residential zone?”
Dr. Crystal: “There has been a lot of emphasis on long term care, in trying to normalize long-term care, [and] bring[ing] people as much as possible into settings where they feel they are part of the mainstream and they feel they are not segregated. And I believe that‘s a benefit.”
While we think it clear that the use variance that Lapid requested was necessary to provide the elderly handicapped an equal opportunity to live in a residential neighborhood, it is a much closer question whether Lapid established that the particular features of the site plan that it requested were necessary to provide the elderly handicapped an equal opportunity to live in a residential area of Scotch Plains. All of the Board‘s site-plan-specific objections really seem to boil down to the objec-
Courts that have taken this approach have required a plaintiff to show that the size of the proposed facility either would be necessary for the facility‘s financial viability (and therefore necessary to give the handicapped an equal opportunity to live in a residential neighborhood) or would serve a therapeutic purpose, (and would therefore be necessary to ameliorate an effect of the handicap). See Bryant Woods Inn, 124 F.3d at 605 (concluding thаt the plaintiff had failed to demonstrate why expanding its group home was necessary other than than it would increase its profits, even though it was already making a sustaining profit); Smith & Lee Assocs., 102 F.3d at 788 (holding that the test to determine whether expansion of a group home was financially necessary was not whether “a particular profit-making company needs such an accommodation, but, rather do businesses as a whole need this accommodation“) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); see also Brandt v. Village of Chebanse, 82 F.3d 172, 174 (7th Cir.1996) (noting that “some minimum size may be essential to the success” of group care facilities). We agree that the FHAA requires Lapid to show that the size of its proposed Facility is required to make it financially viable or medically effective.
Lapid presented some evidence on the therapeutic value served by the scale of its group home. Dr. Crystal, the gerontologist, testified that assisted living facilities above a certain size were less desirable from a therapeutic standpoint, and opined that he had observed that care facilities that contained between 80 and 100 beds “seem to work very well.” Dr. Crystal did not testify, however, that care facilities for the elderly that are smaller than the proposed facility are unable to provide the range of care required or that it would be economically infeasible to operate a smaller facility. We therefore do not think that on the basis of Dr. Crystal‘s testimony regarding the therapeutic effectiveness of facilities of the size that Lapid was proposing, a reasonable jury could find that Lapid had shown that the speсific features of its proposed facility (its size in particular) were “necessary to afford [handicapped] person[s] [an] equal opportunity” to live in a residential neighborhood in Scotch Plains.
B. Did the Board Demonstrate That the Requested Accommodations Were Unreasonable?
In Hovsons, we established the legal framework for determining whether a requested accommodation is “reasonable” under
sion that Union County is in need of additional assisted living and skilled nursing facilities, that alone does not establish a nexus between the requested accommodations and their necessity to create an equal opportunity for the handicapped.
sonable boundaries in accomplishing this purpose.‘” Id. (quoting Americans Disabled For Accessible Pub. Transp. (ADAPT) v. Skinner, 881 F.2d 1184, 1191 (3d Cir.1989) (en banc)). Thus, the question we face is whether, taking the evidence in the light most favorable to Lapid, there remains a genuine dispute as to whether there was sufficient evidence before the Board that Lapid‘s requested accommodations (i.e., the variance and site plan applications for the proposed Facility) were unreasonable.
The municipal defendants in this case argue that certain features of Lapid‘s proposed Facility that resulted from its excessive size and the fact that approximately two acres at the back of the lot (the whole lot was 4.17 acres) were unusable because they were covered with protected wetlands shows that the plan would have imposed an “undue hardship” on the Township, and that it would have “required a fundamental alteration” in the nature of the Township‘s zoning program. Hovsons, 89 F.3d at 1104. The municipal defendants point to two categories of objections to the site plan that they identified during the hearing process as evidence that the accommodations that Lapid requested (in the form of the site plan and non-use variances) were unreasonable (i.e., that they would have imposed an “undue hardship upon the Township,” or that they would have required the Township to “fundamentally alter” its zoning program, seе Hovsons, 89 F.3d at 1104).
The two main categories that the Board identified are (1) traffic safety issues (including traffic movement within the parking lot, increased traffic on Mar-
1. Traffic Safety Concerns
The municipal defendants flag several different concerns regarding traffic safety issues that they say show that the site plan that Lapid proposed was unreasonable. Several of the criticisms that the Board‘s experts presented on the traffic safety issues center on potential hazards at the point of ingress and egress from the Facility‘s proposed parking lot, particularly the fact that the entrance to the parking lot would require a 180 degree turn for cars turning right and a sharp turn across oncoming cars for cars turning left. Both Harold Maltz, the Board‘s traffic consultant, and Paul Ferriero, the Board‘s engineer, opined that the turns into the parking lot were too sharp and would force cars to make multiple-point “K turns” that would disrupt the flow of traffic into and out of the Facility‘s parking lot and would increase the likelihood of an accident.
Maltz stаted that “a vehicle coming south on Martine [Avenue] making a right, [would] essentially [be required to make] a hundred and eighty degree turn to turn into the site, ... [and the vehicle would have] to be able to make another hundred and eighty degree turn to drop off a passenger at the main entrance.” Ferriero commented that in order to make the two sharp turns that a car must make in order to reach the passenger drop off area, a driver would have to be “very familiar with the site or have planned in advance.” Similarly, Maltz predicted in his written report that a car attempting to make a right turn after entering the parking lot would tend to stray into the lane of oncoming traffic (due to the tight 180 degree turn that is required), thereby increasing the likelihood of an accident.
The Board‘s experts also predicted that the defects in the point of ingress/egress would increase the risk of an accident happening on Martine Avenue. Sergeant James Rau, the police department‘s director of traffic safety, predicted that the difficult turn-in site and its closeness to the intersection of Martine Avenue and West Broad Street would cause cars turning into the Facility to pause for longer than normal. He concluded that this would increase the likelihood of accidents. Rau also stated in his report that drivers seeking to go south on Martine Avenue through a green light at the intersection of Martine and West Broad could be forced into the right lane (to go around cars waiting to turn left) and would be forced immediately to switch back into the right lane (to avoid cars turning in to the Facility‘s parking lot). This, he concluded, would also increase the likelihood of accidents.
Lapid‘s engineer agreed at the March 4 meeting that redesigning the area of ingress/egress was a “good suggestion,” but failed to submit a redesigned plan dealing with the traffic safety criticisms regarding ingress/egress. Lapid also did not point to any information in the record that contradicts the Board‘s experts’ opinions that the design of the entrance to the Facility‘s parking lot posed traffic safety hazards.
The Board‘s experts also raised concerns about internal traffic safety, i.e., within the Facility‘s parking lot, especially with respect to delivery trucks that would be forced to go around to the loading dock at the south side of the building and would then be unlikely to be able to turn around without backing up a long distance. Both Ferriero and Maltz testified that the parking lot‘s layout would require delivery trucks to back a long way out of the driveway into the parking area in order to turn around and that this would create a situation that was hazardous to public safety. Ferriero commented that “to leave the [loading area] would require a fairly long backing maneuver across the pedestrian
Lapid has not pointed to any place in the record where it countered these criticisms. And, although Szalay, Lapid‘s civil engineer, agreed at the March 4 hearing that it would be a “good suggеstion” to create a turn-around area for trucks, Lapid did not alter its site plan to account for the problems that the Board‘s experts flagged.
2. Emergency Vehicle Access
The Board also identifies its concerns about inadequate access for safety vehicles as an alternative reason why the proposed plan would cause an “undue hardship” for the Township by requiring it to compromise the safety of its residents. As noted above, there is some dispute about whether Fire Chief Ellis ever gave Lapid adequate information on the turning radius that was necessary for a “tower ladder” fire truck to access an emergency vehicle lane that was to swing around the back of the building; (the inability to drive a tower ladder truck behind the Facility was one of the problems that the Fire Chief identified with Lapid‘s plan). See supra note 1. Even if we discount the comments of Fire Chief Ellis, however, several other experts testified before the Board about their concerns that emergency vehicles would either be unable to access the rear of the building or would be unable to back out once they got there. Lapid presented almost no counter-testimony, and although Lapid‘s engineer, Szalay, agreed that the narrowness of the access road could be a problem, Lapid did not amend its site plan to provide a wider access way.
In addition to Ellis, Ferriero and Maltz both flagged the issue of emergency vehicle access as a problem with the site plan in both written reports and public testimony. Ferriero‘s report of March 3, 1999 stated that:
The plan shows a fire lane extending to the rear of the building. The centerline radius of this drive is 43.5 feet, which is a minimal radius for access. The difficulty with the fire lane as shown is that exiting the fire lane will require backing a vehicle around this same tight radius with the edge of the drive within two feet of the building. If the vehicle is slightly off track to the inside by starting the turn too early, it will strike the building. If the vehicle is too far to the outside by turning too late or too wide, it will run off the access down a 33% slope.
Ferriero‘s report also pointed out that the emergency vehicle access lane would actually be narrowed to around seven feet when the sidewalk ramp at the rear of the building was fitted with handrails and curbs, as is required by the ADA. He concluded that this would be too narrow to accommodate any emergency vehicle.
Maltz, the traffic engineer, provided similar criticisms of the site plan‘s emergency access way. Maltz echoed Ferriero‘s comments about the narrowness of the lane, and the effect of the extension of the handrails into the fire access lane. He also wrote that he had done tests with models using the turning radius of a standard bus going around an access way with the same turning radius and dimensions as the one proposed by Lapid. He concluded from his tests that it “appears probable” that a fire truck‘s “wheels will leave the grass pavers area and proceed down the
Szalay, Lapid‘s civil engineer, agreed during the Board‘s March 4 meeting, that in particular, the presence of the handrails would present a problem. He also agreed that the problem of backing out emergency vehicles from behind the building was “a legitimate issue.” However, Lapid did not revise its site plan to account for these criticisms regarding emergency vehicle access before the final hearing with the Board on March 24, 1999. It seems likely that the wetlands (and the required wetland buffer zone), which were located close behind the proposed location for the emergency access lane, were the reason that Lapid did not change its site plan to provide a wider vehicle access lane. In his March 4 testimony, Szalay admitted that the wetlands posed a substantial constraint to widening the access way. Nor did Lapid present any evidence that would undermine or call into question the Board‘s experts’ opinions on the emergency vehicle access route. We agree that with respect to its limited safety vehicle access, the site plan would impose the “undue hardship” on the Township of compromising the safety of its residents.
Therefore, we conclude that it was proper to grant summary judgment to the Township on the issue of whether it had shown that Lapid‘s requested accommoda-
tions with respect to the site plan were unreasonable because they would cause an “undue hardship” on the Township. The Board presented sufficient evidence to grant summary judgment in its favor with respect to the site plan approval and non-use variances, which were sufficient bases for it to deny the entire application.
IV. Was Summary Judgment Proper on the Disparate Impact Claim?
The plaintiffs also appeal the grant of summary judgment on their claim that the Township‘s ordinances have a disparate impact on the handicapped in violation of
When reviewing disparate impact claims brought under the FHAA, we have borrowed from the framework of Title VII disparate impact claims. See Resident Advisory Bd. v. Rizzo, 564 F.2d 126, 148 (3d Cir.1977); see also Huntington Branch, NAACP v. Huntington, 844 F.2d 926, 934 (2d Cir.1988), aff‘d 488 U.S. 15 (1988) (per curiam). In order to make a prima facie case of disparate impact under the FHAA, the plaintiff must show that the Township‘s
The District Court found that in this case, the plaintiffs failed to make a prima facie case of disparate impact. The District Court relied on the formulation of the elements of a prima facie case for disparate impact under the FHAA that the Ninth Circuit set forth in Gamble v. City of Escondido, 104 F.3d 300 (9th Cir.1997). There, the court “identified the following elements of an FHA[A] prima facie case under a disparate impact theory: (1) the occurrence of certain outwardly neutral practices, and (2) a significantly adverse or disproportionate impact on persons of a particular type produced by the defendant‘s facially neutral acts or practices.” Id. at 306 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
The only evidence that Lapid cites to support its prima facie case of disparate impact is that Scotch Plains‘s zoning plan designates only one location in the Township for “senior housing.”10 This
location is part of the Township‘s Broadway Redevelopment Plan, which the plaintiff argues is located in an undesirable location, a light industrial area rather than a residential area. Lapid also points out that the town permits no development of senior residences as of right (that is, the development is not permitted without the grant of a use variance), in any other part of the Township besides the Broadway Redevelopment Area.
Accepting as true Lapid‘s arguments on these points, we do not believe that they are sufficient to make out a prima facie case. They ignore the fact that under New Jersey law, developers of group homes for the handicapped (including the elderly) may apply for use variances as an “inherently beneficial use” in any zone. See Smart SMR, 704 A.2d at 1281 (noting that the New Jersey Supreme Court has recognized nursing homes as “inherently beneficial uses“). Applicants for an “inherently beneficial use” under New Jersey law face a reduced standard for demonstrating that the use qualifies for a use variance (as opposed to applicants for commercial use variances). See supra at 16. Therefore, even though Scotch Plains‘s land use regime affirmatively provides for senior housing in only one location, that
We also agree with the District Court that even if we were to determine that Lapid had demonstrated a prima facie case of disparate impact, it would be appropriate to grant summary judgment on the issue that Scotch Plains has demonstrated that it had non-discriminatory reasons for denying Lapid‘s site plan application. The test for whether the government has articulated a legitimate bona fide governmental interest that would support denying the application and that no alternative would serve the interest with less discriminatory effect, see Rizzo at 148-49, is similar to the test of whether the defendant has demonstrated that the requested accommodation is “unreasonable” for the purposes of rebutting a claim under
For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the order of the District Court.
