For many years—the memory of man runneth not to the contrary—earth removal operators in South Kingstown, Rhode Island (the Town) were able freely to mine their properties. That privilege was tempered in 1996, when the Town Council amended its zoning ordinance. The amendments here at issue, codified as Article 4, § 411 and Article 14, § 1404 of the Town’s zoning ordinance (collectively, the Amended Ordinance), prohibit businesses engaged in extractive industries from “expanding] horizontally in surface area by more than 25% of [their] existing excavated area” unless they first obtain a special use permit. 1
The Amended Ordinance did not sit well with the Town’s preeminent earth removal operator, South County Sand & Gravel Company (SCS). SCS sued the Town in a Rhode Island state court, claiming that the new enactment violated its rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. The Town removed the action to the federal district court. In due course, the parties cross-moved for summary judgment. The district court, adopting a magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, granted the Town’s motion as to SCS’s federal claims, denied SCS’s cross-motion, and remanded the remaining claims to the state court. This appeal ensued.
SCS originally advanced both procedural and substantive due process challenges to the constitutional legitimacy of the Amended Ordinance. In this venue, however, SCS pursues only the latter. In itself, this raises a threshold question. When a specific provision of the Constitution protects individuals against a particular kind of physical intrusion by government actors, individuals seeking redress for such an intrusion must assert their claims under that particular constitutional rubric instead of invoking the more generalized notion of substantive due process.
See Albright v. Oliver,
We proceed to the merits. The dis-positive question is whether the challenged legislation bears a rational connection to a legitimate public purpose.
See Schad v. Borough of Mt. Ephraim,
The Town claims that it needs to control the expansion of new and existing earth removal operations, among other things, in order to prevent a loss of its “natural resources including wildlife habitat, groundwater quality and scenic value.” There is no dispute that these are legitimate municipal goals.
See, e.g., Berman v. Parker,
SCS’s frontal assault on this means/ends nexus is impuissant. The best that SCS does is to assert that, if strictly applied, the 25% rule would operate unevenly: under it, a business having more acreage under excavation could expand permit-free into a comparatively greater area than a business with less acreage under excavation. As SCS sees it, this possibility demonstrates the scheme’s irrationality because the amount of controlled acreage will vary from one plot of land to another even though the environmental concerns affecting both sites are the same.
SCS’s argument grossly oversimplifies the issue. Even assuming
arguendo
that the expansion of a business with greater acreage under excavation would prove more environmentally harmful, a reviewing court cannot overlook that, at some level, the Town’s legislation functions to balance environmental with economic concerns in a manner that protects the legitimate interests of firms that have made considerable investments in their businesses. Indeed, the effort to strike such a balance is amply evidenced by the discussion at the public hearing held before the Town Council antecedent to the adoption of the Amended Ordinance. By thus respecting investment-backed expectations, the Town is doing precisely what takings jurisprudence requires it to do. See,
e.g., Kaiser Aetna v. United States,
Nor does the permit application process render the Amended Ordinance vulnerable to a facial challenge. The Amended Ordinance only requires that excavators apply for permits; it does not guarantee their automatic denial. Furthermore, the process, at least in theory, allows the Town closely to monitor developments on real estate containing non-conforming uses. In turn, this confirms the Amended Ordinance’s utility as a means of securing the Town’s legitimate ends 4
SCS’s cryptic suggestion that the special permit procedures are problematic because they are standardless is equally unavailing. In the first place, the argument is wholly undeveloped—and arguments made in a perfunctory manner do not warrant consideration.
See United States v. Bongiorno,
To the extent that SCS's imnortun-ings about standardless discretion represent a back-door attempt to resurrect its procedural due process claim, that attempt is not only proeedurally defaulted, but also unavailing. Rhode Island provides ample process in this regard, and what Rhode Island offers far exceeds the minima required by the Constitution.
See City of Eastlake v. Forest City Enterps., Inc.,
We are similarly unpersuaded by SCS’s asseveration&emdash;based on the Amended Ordinance’s provision that the 25% cushion is to be measured against excavated area existing at the time the law took effect, see swpra note 1&emdash;that the law is unenforceable (and, thus, irrational) because the Town has taken no steps to ascertain each earth remover’s acreage under excavation as of that date. To suggest that the Amended Ordinance itself violates the Constitution because the Town’s administrative arm has yet to conduct surveys to determine acreage under excavation is a non sequitur. The Town’s failure in that regard may make it much harder to sanction property owners who seek to excavate too much too soon, but that failure has no impact on the validity of the legislation itself.
SCS also complains that a provision of the Amended Ordinance which requires new earth removal operations to submit detailed soil erosion and sediment control plans with their special permit applications, but exempts existing operators from this requirement, renders the law unconstitutional. We are at a loss to understand how this provision affects SCS. In all events, the differential treatment constitutes a run-of-the-mine grandfathering, analogous to that contained in many laws, and substantially advances the Town’s legitimate goals (for reasons similar to those previously recited).
SCS’s remaining arguments are not so much directed toward the means/ends nexus, but toward the manner in which the Town adopted the Amended Ordinance. SCS submits a detailed history of the political maneuvering leading to the adoption of the legislation as proof of its arbitrariness. According to SCS, the Town began mulling ways to prevent soil erosion and sedimentation problems early in the current decade. Town officials drafted a number of proposed ordinances and submitted them to industry representatives for comment. Consistent with the model ordinances contained in the Soil Erosion and Sediment Control Act (SE/SC Act), passed by the Rhode Island General Assembly in 1982 and subsequently codified at R.I. Gen. Laws § 45-46-1 et seq., none of these proposals contained a provision for special use permits.
In the spring of 1996, the Town changed course and decided not to adopt a SE/SC ordinance at all. Instead, the Town elected to amend its zoning ordinance. According to SCS, the “key feature” of this neoteric effort was the permit requirement, which, in turn, embodies the 25% rule. SCS takes umbrage that the figure selected&emdash;25%&emdash;appears not to have been based on a study or other discernible rationale. Without sparing the vitriol, SCS asserts that the figure was made up out of whole cloth by the Town’s lawyer (who, SCS insists, has no particular expertise in environmental planning). To make a bad situation worse, SCS adds, no Town official whom it deposed was able to explain either the basis for, or the derivation of, the 25% figure. Given this history, SCS posits, the Amended Ordinance is irrational.
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S.CS’s jeremiad misapprehends the nature of rationality review. Refined to bare essence, SCS is arguing that the 25% rule will not secure the Town’s environmental goals. Such an argument asks us to debate the effectiveness of municipal policy—and that is well outside our compass. Whether viewed from the vantage point of substantive due process or Takings Clause jurisprudence, the means/ends nexus frames the central inquiry for an abstract challenge to a zoning law. Courts ordinarily do not look behind such legislation to determine who knew what, or to what extent (if at all) the legislative body (here, the Town Council) was informed when it made a particular judgment.
5
In the 'ordinary course, the background knowledge upon which enacted legislation is based is irrelevant.
See FCC v. Beach Communications, Inc.,
Another major theme in SCS’s broadside is its claim that the Amended Ordinance is nothing more than an endeavor to avoid the mandates of state law. This claim has its genesis in SCS’s assertion that the Town elected not to pass free-standing legislation, on soil erosion and sediment control because it could not devise a satisfactory way to conform its desired legislation to the SE/SC Act. This claim takes SCS down a blind alley. If the Town purposed to evade state law—a matter on which we express no opinion—the remedy for that alleged transgression is properly within the purview of the state courts. A municipality’s violation of state law, without more, is insufficient to pass as a violation of the federal Constitution.
See River Park, Inc. v. City of Highland Park,
We need go no further. Because SCS has failed to show that the Town’s zoning amendments violate the Constitution, we uphold the district court’s grant of brevis disposition. Affirmed. .
Notes
. Under the terms of the Amended Ordinance, a firm's "existing excavated area” is to be measured "at the time of the adoption of [the Amended Ordinance].”
. To be sure, in an earlier case we allowed a complainant to assert an abstract challenge to an allegedly irrational zoning provision on substantive due process grounds.
See Smithfield Concerned Citizens for Fair Zoning v. Town of Smithfield,
. We are mindful of Justice Scalia's statement in
Nollan v. California Coastal Comm'n,
. SCS does not allege that the Town whimsically denies such permits as a matter of practice. Moreover, since SCS itself has
not
applied unsuccessfully for such a permit, any such claim would be unripe.
See Williamson County Reg'l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank,
. Of course, there are limits to this rule. If, say, there were evidence that the Town had singled out SCS and passed an ordinance specifically designed to debilitate its business in retaliation for the political views of its principals, a remedy might be at hand.
See, e.g., Sameric Corp. of Del., Inc. v. City of Philadelphia,
