OPINION
Bannum, Inc. obtained a permit from the City of Saginaw to build a halfway house in Saginaw. After Bannum received its permit, the Saginaw Housing Commission and the School District of the City of Saginaw both filed complaints in Saginaw circuit court seeking injunctions against Bannum’s construction of the halfway house. Bannum removed both actions to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. The district court then remanded the School District action back to state court because, as the City of Saginaw was also a defendant, complete diversity was not satisfied. The district court also dismissed the Housing Commission’s action based on Burford abstention. For the reasons set forth below, we dismiss Bannum’s appeal with regard to the School District action (Nos. 08-2069, 08-2082) and reverse and remand the action involving the Housing Commission (Nos. 08-2068, 08-2079).
I.
Bannum, Inc. is a private corporation that regularly contracts with the Federal Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) to operate Residential Re-entry Centers (“RRCs”). Bannum is incorporated in Kentucky and has its principal place of business in Florida. Bannum runs RRCs in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Nevada, North Carolina, and Texas.
RRCs are halfway houses to which the BOP transfers prisoners approaching their release dates and probationers under supervised release. The BOP provides extensive regulations for RRCs. The RRC allows those staying there to transition into the community, finding places to live and work, while remaining subject to supervision by the RRC. Bannum employees monitor and supervise those staying at the RRC, but Bannum employees do not have weapons or uniforms. They also do not have the authority to stop those staying at the RRC from leaving the facility. Unauthorized excursions are instead reported to federal authorities.
The BOP published notice that it would seek bids for a new RRC in Saginaw, Michigan. Intending to submit a bid, Ban
Bannum purchased 2.2 acres of property at 2209 Norman Street in Saginaw in order to construct the RRC. Bannum submitted a site plan review form to the Saginaw Planning Commission on October 11, 2007. On October 23, 2007, the Planning Commission held a public meeting and unanimously approved Bannum’s site plan. 1 Bannum received its building permit on April 24, 2008. It then began construction on its RRC in Saginaw. Id.
On May 8, 2008, the Saginaw Housing Commission (the “Commission”) and three hundred unnamed plaintiffs filed a complaint against Bannum in the Saginaw Circuit Court and sought a temporary restraining order and an injunction. SHC is a Michigan non-profit municipal commission that “exists to develop and rehabilitate affordable housing in Saginaw.” The complaint alleged that Bannum’s RRC violated Saginaw zoning ordinances and that SHC would suffer irreparable harm if the RRC operated at that location. The Saginaw Circuit Court granted the TRO on May 7, 2008. On May 12, the circuit court held a hearing on the TRO. After the hearing, the circuit court lifted the TRO.
On May 15, 2008, the School District of the City of Saginaw (the “School District”) filed a complaint in Saginaw Circuit Court. The complaint named Bannum and the City of Saginaw (“City”) as defendants. It alleged that the RRC was a penal institution and, as such, required a special use permit. The complaint alleged that Bannum had not received a special use permit and that any construction or operation without a special use permit was a nuisance per se. Based on these facts, the School District alleged that the RRC would be a nuisance per se and a nuisance in fact. The nearest school is about 750 feet away from Bannum’s property. 2
The School District also moved to consolidate its complaint against Bannum with the Commission’s complaint against Bannum. Before the circuit court could act on the motion to consolidate, Bannum filed a notice of removal in both the action brought by the Commission and the action brought by the School District.
Bannum’s notices of removal relied on diversity to establish the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction. There was no issue regarding Bannum’s diversity from both the Commission and the School District. However, in the School District complaint, the School District had also named the City as a defendant. Bannum’s notice of removal contended that the School District had fraudulently joined the City, and therefore the City’s presence did not defeat diversity jurisdiction.
Once the matter was before the district court, both the Commission and the School District filed motions to return the matter
After a consolidated hearing, the district court found that the City was properly joined in the School District’s complaint, defeating diversity jurisdiction, and that abstention was appropriate with regard to the Commission’s action. Accordingly, the district court remanded both cases to state court. In addition, it denied without prejudice both the Commission’s motion to amend and Bannum’s motion to dismiss.
Bannum filed a motion for reconsideration, which the district court denied. Bannum then filed a notice of appeal.
II.
A district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction in a diversity action where the parties are not completely diverse.
Jerome-Duncan, Inc. v. Auto-By-Tel, L.L.C.,
There are, however, several limited exceptions to the unreviewability of remands to state court.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1447(d). The only exception at issue in this appeal is whether the district court made “a substantive decision on the merits of a collateral issue.”
See, e.g., Regis Assoc. v. Rank Hotels (Mgmt.) Ltd.,
Both the School District and the City are citizens of Michigan for purposes of diversity. Bannum thus based its assertion of diversity on an allegation that the School District had fraudulently joined the City as a defendant. The district court found that there was no fraudulent joinder and remanded the School District’s claim to Saginaw Circuit Court. As the'remand order was based on the district court’s assessment of its own jurisdiction, it is generally unreviewable regardless of whether it reached the correct result.
Bannum argues that one of the exceptions to the bar on reviewing remand orders applies because the district court
III.
Abstention is “an extraordinary and narrow exception to the duty of a District Court to adjudicate a controversy properly before it.”
Answers in Genesis of Ky., Inc. v. Creation Ministries Int’l., Ltd.,
Burford
abstention arose out of a conflict involving state oversight of oil fields in Texas. The Supreme Court observed that, in certain cases, abstention “further[s] the harmonious relation between state and federal authority” and that, when faced with an equitable claim, federal courts “should exercise their discretionary power with proper regard for the rightful independence of state governments in carrying out their domestic policy.”
“[I]n
Burford ...
dismissal was appropriate because the availability of an alternative, federal forum threatened to frustrate the purpose of the complex administrative system that Texas had established.”
Quackenbush v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Where timely and adequate state-court review is available, a federal court sitting in equity must decline to interfere with the proceedings or orders of state administrative agencies: (1) when there are “difficult questions of state law bearing on policy problems of substantial public import whose importance transcends the result in the case then at bar”; or (2) where the “exercise of federal review of the question in a case and in similar cases would be disruptive of state efforts to establish a coherent policy with respect to a matter of substantial public concern.”
New Orleans Pub. Serv., Inc. v. Council of City of New Orleans (“NOPSI”),
Burford
abstention often protects “complex state administrative processes from undue federal interference.”
Id.
That said, “it does not require abstention wherever there exists such a process.”
Id.
“Because
Burford
abstention is concerned with potential disruption of a state administrative scheme, rather than the mere existence of such a scheme, looking behind the action to determine whether it implicates the concerns of
Burford
is necessary.”
AmSouth Bank v. Dale,
A.
The question in this appeal is one of first impression in this circuit: whether a federal court should abstain from a decision involving the interpretation of a local land use ordinance. We find that it should not. Every case in which we have found
Burford
abstention appropriate has involved evidence that federal involvement would disrupt a coherent state policy.
See Adrian Energy
Assocs.
v. Mich. Pub. Serv. Comm’n,
This emphasis on state policy is in keeping with the Supreme Court’s emphasis on the disruption of state regulatory processes.
Burford
repeatedly articulates the purpose of abstention as facilitating the relationship between the federal government and the states. It notes the importance of preserving “the rightful independence of state governments in carrying out their domestic policy.”
Burford,
While the presence of a state agency is not conclusive proof that
Burford
abstention is appropriate, the Supreme Court has found that the presence of such a process does indicate that a court should consider
Burford
abstention.
NOPSI,
This emphasis on state administrative involvement is clear in our decisions on
Burford
abstention. In most cases in which we have applied
Burford,
the creation of an agency to promulgate and administer the state policy has served as evidence of the state’s level of concern and of its desire for uniform application of the policy.
See Adrian Energy Assocs.,
Where there is not an agency devoted to implementing the policy in question, we have looked elsewhere for proof of state involvement. In
Caudill,
we found that the extensiveness of the state statutory scheme governing corporations justified abstention in cases seeking corporate dissolution.
B.
Like MacDonald, there is both a state and local policy at interest here. And, like MacDonald, we find it appropriate to focus on the state rather than the local policy. The evidence of a coherent state policy here is minimal. The City of Saginaw drafted and implemented the ordinances under the authority of the Township Zoning Act. 4 See Mich. Comp. Laws § § 125.271-125.310. The Township Zoning Act did not provide substantive guidance for municipalities; instead, it provided localities the authority to create zoning ordinances, subject to certain procedural protections not at issue here. See Mich. Comp. Laws § 125.271. The Township Zoning Act also did not create any state administrative agency to implement the Township Zoning Act; instead, it left administration of local zoning ordinances to the localities themselves. 5 Id.
C.
Our decision in this case is consistent with the approach taken by the Third Circuit in
Heritage Farms, Inc. v. Solebury Twp.,
We recognize that we previously have cited favorably the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
Pomponio v. Fauquier County Bd. of Supervisors,
To summarize, we hold that Burford abstention applies only to statewide policies and that the appropriate focus for Burford abstention is state policy, rather than local policy. Additionally, we hold that the zoning dispute in this case does not implicate the kind of coherent state policy that would warrant Burford abstention.
Again, the Commission has not identified any evidence of a coherent state policy or of how federal involvement would disrupt such a policy. Instead, the Commission’s nuisance per se action only challenges the permit B annum received from the City. The dispute thus turns solely on the City’s interpretation of its own zoning ordinance-it does not implicate any policies embodied in the Township Zoning Act or the Zoning Enabling Act.
See Heritage Farms, Inc.,
IV.
As the district court’s remand of the School District’s claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is unreviewable by this court, we dismiss Bannum’s appeal in case numbers 08-2069 and 08-2082. As Bur-ford abstention was inappropriate for the Commission’s claim, we REVERSE and REMAND for further proceedings in case numbers 08-2068 and 08-2079.
Notes
. The approval order requested minor modifications to the order that are not relevant to this appeal.
. Bannum’s counsel asserts, on information and belief, that there are no residents near the Bannum property and that several buildings and an elevated roadway separate the Bannum property from the school.
. Though some previous opinions in this circuit apply an abuse of discretion standard,
see, e.g., Caudill v. Eubanks Farms, Inc.,
. Michigan has since replaced the Township Zoning Act with the Zoning Enabling Act. See Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 125.3101-125.3702. Like the Township Zoning Act, the Zoning Enabling Act provides municipalities with the authority to create and implement zoning ordinances but does not provide any substantive guidance in developing the ordinances. Mich. Comp. Laws § 125.3401.
. This feature also forecloses abstention under the first prong of
Burford
abstention as articulated in
NOPSI. See NOPSI,
