---
name: urban-planning-summary
title: Urban Planning Law Summary
description: Summarizes legal issues in urban development projects covering zoning, land use disputes, and environmental compliance. Generates structured briefings for municipalities, developers, and legal counsel. Use when reviewing zoning ordinances, land use applications, environmental impact statements, or comprehensive plans before development or planning decisions.
author: CaseMark
author_url: https://github.com/CaseMark/skills/tree/main/skills/legal/urban-planning-summary
license: Apache-2.0
version: 0.1.0
execution_mode: open
jurisdiction: us
practice: real-estate
language: en
---

# Urban Planning Law Summary

Produces a structured legal briefing on zoning, land use, and environmental compliance issues for an urban development project or municipal planning initiative.

## Required Inputs

1. **Project documents** — zoning ordinances, comprehensive plans, land use applications, site plans
2. **Environmental materials** — EIS/EA reports, wetland delineations, traffic/noise studies, agency correspondence
3. **Regulatory filings** — variance applications, conditional use permits, subdivision plats, overlay district maps
4. **Dispute history** (if any) — hearing transcripts, opposition letters, litigation materials

## Briefing Structure

### 1. Executive Overview

3–4 sentences: critical legal issues, highest risks, immediate action items.

### 2. Zoning Analysis

For each element, document:

| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Current zoning | Classification, overlay districts, special zones |
| Use compatibility | By right / conditional / nonconforming status |
| Dimensional compliance | Setbacks, height, FAR, lot coverage, parking |
| Relief needed | Variance, rezoning, special exception — type and standard |
| Nonconforming use | Grandfathered status, expansion/abandonment rules |

For each conflict: state (a) applicable regulation, (b) project deviation, (c) available remedy.

### 3. Land Use Disputes

Assess each applicable issue:

- [ ] Community opposition — standing, grounds, organized vs. individual
- [ ] Comprehensive plan consistency — required vs. advisory in jurisdiction
- [ ] Vested rights / development agreements
- [ ] Takings or inverse condemnation exposure
- [ ] Federal/state preemption conflicts
- [ ] Procedural compliance — notice, hearing, appeal deadlines
- [ ] Approval sequencing dependencies

Flag procedural defects specifically — most common grounds for challenge.

### 4. Environmental Compliance

| Category | Key Items |
|---|---|
| NEPA/SEPA status | EIS, EA, or categorical exclusion; adequacy |
| Protected resources | Wetlands, endangered species, historic properties, floodplains |
| Required permits | EPA, Army Corps (§404), state/local conservation |
| Impact studies | Stormwater, air quality, noise, traffic — status and findings |
| Mitigation | Conditions of approval, monitoring obligations |

### 5. Timeline & Procedural Map

- Critical deadlines (appeals, comment periods, permit expiration)
- Sequential vs. concurrent approval paths
- Bottleneck approvals and timeline risks

### 6. Risk Assessment

Assign each issue a risk level:

| Level | Meaning |
|---|---|
| **High** | Could block or significantly delay project; immediate attention required |
| **Medium** | Manageable with strategic handling and proper planning |
| **Low** | Routine compliance; monitor but unlikely to impede |

Conclude with: immediate-attention items, prioritized approval sequence, expert consultation needs, and negotiated-resolution opportunities.

## Pitfalls & Checks

- **Neutral tone** — do not advocate for development or preservation interests
- **Citation rigor** — cite specific ordinance sections, statutes, and case law; mark uncertain citations with `[VERIFY]`
- **Ambiguity flagging** — when documents conflict or are unclear, flag explicitly rather than assuming
- **Audience clarity** — accessible to non-lawyers (officials, developers) while preserving legal precision
- **Jurisdiction awareness** — note Dillon's Rule vs. home rule status, state environmental review requirements, and zoning enabling authority variations
- **Length target** — 2–5 pages depending on project complexity
