v.
MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, etc., Respondent.
Liberty Counsel, and Mathew D. Staver and Erik W. Stanley, Longwood, for petitioner.
[*1115] Robert A. Ginsburg, Miami-Dade County Attorney, and Jay W. Williams, Assistant Miami-Dade County Attorney, for respondent.
Before GERSTEN, and RAMIREZ, JJ., and NESBITT, Senior Judge.
RAMIREZ, J.
This petition for certiorari review is brought by the unsuccessful applicant for zoning special exceptions and variances. The circuit court, appellate division summarily denied certiorari review and thus confirmed the denial of the application by the Community Zoning Appeals Board of Miami-Dade County. We conclude that the applicant did not present sufficient, competent evidence to satisfy its burden of showing that its request met the applicable standards and criteria for the granting of special exceptions and non-use variances set forth in the Comprehensive Development Master Plan and the Metropolitan Miami-Dade County Zoning Code. Because of this failure of proof by the applicant, we hold that the circuit court, appellate division properly applied the correct law when it refused to quash the Zoning Board's decision. Thus, we deny the petition.
Petitioner First Baptist Church of Perrine runs a church-related school for kindergarten through sixth grade on its church property in Perrine, Florida. It sought two special exceptions and a sign variance from the county zoning authorities in order to expand the school to include the seventh and eighth grades and increase the number of students attending the school from 500 to 650. The County's zoning and planning department recommended the approval of the proposal and the Church then brought the matter for hearing before the Zoning Board.
The Church presented testimony and studies that concluded that only a minimal potential traffic congestion increase could be expected in the neighborhood surrounding the Church if the proposed expansions were permitted. The Church had already changed the school day beginning time at the suggestion of traffic specialists in an effort to minimize early morning congestion. The Church also presented testimony showing that it considered having a religious-based school a central part of its religious ministry, and that it was important to extend that schooling into the adolescent years by having grades seven and eight.
The neighboring residents opposed the planned expansion based on the potential for increased traffic and crime in the neighborhood should middle school grades be allowed at the school. In fact-based testimony before the Zoning Board, representatives of the neighborhood pointed out, and we agree, that the Church's traffic study was invalid and thus not probative of the zoning code's traffic impact and neighborhood quality protection standards because its projections of future neighborhood traffic congestion were flawed. Those projections were based on figures which took into account less than 100% of the number of additional students permitted at the school under the application. The residents also presented fact-based testimony calling into question the validity of the traffic study and the County's zoning and planning department's recommendation based on that study because it showed that the most frequently used ingress and egress from the school was by way of a non-arterial, neighborhood street, SW 170 Street, rather than the County arterial street, SW 168 Street, which bounded the Church/school property. Thus, the applicant failed to meet the criteria which require consideration of the neighborhood traffic impact arising from a requested special exception. See § 33-311(A)(3), (F)(1),(5), Miami-Dade County Code; CDMP, Traffic Circulation Element, objective 5.[1]
[*1116] In our recent decision in Jesus Fellowship, Inc. v. Miami-Dade County, 752 So.2d 708 (Fla. 3d DCA 2000), which admittedly involved similar issues and facts, we stated as follows:
An applicant seeking special exceptions and unusual uses need only demonstrate to the decision-making body that its proposal is consistent with the county's land use plan; that the uses are specifically authorized as special exceptions and unusual uses in the applicable zoning district; and that the requests meet with the applicable zoning code standards of review. If this is accomplished, then the application must be granted unless the opposition carries its burden, which is to demonstrate that the applicant's requests do not meet the standards and are in fact adverse to the public interest.
Id. at 709. Here, unlike in Jesus Fellowship, although the Church arguably demonstrated that its application was consistent with the land use plan and that the uses were specifically authorized, its flawed traffic impact study failed to meet the zoning standards of review. The recommendation for approval of the application by the County's zoning and planning department was likewise flawed because it was based upon the erroneous finding that the Church's evidence, including the suspect traffic study, satisfied the criteria for special exceptions. The invalid conclusions contained in this evidence did not constitute competent evidence in support of the Church's application, and, therefore, the burden never shifted to the objectors, as it did in Jesus Fellowship, to show that the request did not meet the standards and were adverse to the public interest.[2] Because of the inadequacy of the evidence presented by the applicant to satisfy the criteria for special exceptions, as a matter of law, the Zoning Board properly denied the application.
The Church also challenges the Zoning Board's rejection of its application by way of a claim that the decision violates Florida's Religious Freedom Restoration Act, §§ 761.02-.05, Fla. Stat. (1999).[3] The[*1117] Church contends that the Zoning Board's ruling restricts the free exercise of its well-founded religious beliefs which allegedly require it to educate its children in a religious setting. The Church argues that the Act requires the County to show a compelling government interest to justify the denial of the Church's requests for special exceptions and variances; or that, if such interest is shown, the County must find a less restrictive method to protect the governmental interest than complete denial of the Church's requests.
We do not agree that the County has the burden of showing it has a compelling interest requiring denial of the Church's zoning request. The United States Supreme Court, in Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, 508 U.S. 520, 531, 113 S.Ct. 2217, 124 L.Ed.2d 472 (1993), explained that "a law that is neutral and of general applicability need not be justified by a compelling governmental interest even if the law has the incidental effect of burdening a particular religious practice." In Grosz v. City of Miami Beach, Fla., 721 F.2d 729 (11th Cir.1983), the court enunciated a three-part test to determine whether there has been a violation of the constitutional First Amendment Free Exercise Clause (which Florida's Act is obviously designed to protect): (1) the ordinance must regulate religious conduct, not belief; (2) the law must have a secular purpose and secular effect; and (3) once these threshold tests are met, the court must balance the competing governmental and religious interests.
In this case, the Church has not even attempted to show, nor could it show, that the zoning ordinances here, which preclude its requested expansion, regulate belief instead of conduct. The County's zoning code is entirely secular in purpose and effect. The record does not demonstrate that the County's zoning ordinances are aimed at impeding religion, that they are based on a disagreement with religious beliefs or practices, or that they negatively influence the pursuit of religious activity or expression of religious belief. See Grosz, 721 F.2d at 733-34. Further, the burden on the County of altering the enforcement of its zoning ordinances to accommodate the Church's requests would be much greater than any burden placed on the Church's religious activity by requiring that it comply with the Zoning Board's decision in this matter. In First Assembly of God v. Collier Co., 775 F.Supp. 383, 386 (M.D.Fla.1991), the court recognized as a significant interest the preservation of a government's ability to regulate zoning. To impose on the County's zoning ordinances an exception based on religion could result in the breakdown of a community's zoning scheme and increase nonconforming uses each time religion is asserted as a basis for zoning requests. Even though the Church argues that religious education is central to its religion, the burden on the Church of conducting this activity elsewhere is less than the burden which would be placed on the County if it is forced to routinely grant exceptions to its zoning schemes for primarily residential neighborhoods when requested to do so for allegedly religious purposes.
Application of the County's zoning ordinances to preclude expansion of First Baptist Church of Perrine's school does not prevent or seriously inhibit the Church's ability to provide a religious education. There are other less-traffic-sensitive locations within Miami-Dade County for the Church to expand in order to teach seventh and eighth grades, if its religion so requires. It is not absolutely precluded from providing seventh and eighth grade classes by the Zoning Board's decision.[*1118] But, even assuming that the Church has demonstrated a substantial burden on its free exercise of religion, the County clearly has a compelling interest in enacting and enforcing fair and reasonable zoning regulations. See Daytona Rescue Mission, Inc. v. City of Daytona Beach, 885 F.Supp. 1554, 1560 (M.D.Fla.1995). For these reasons, the circuit court, appellate division also properly rejected the Church's contention that the Zoning Board's denial of its zoning request violated the Act.[4]
In conclusion, the circuit court, appellate division properly applied the correct law in this case when it denied the Church's attempts to overturn the Zoning Board's denial of its application. As a matter of law, the Church's evidence did not satisfy the zoning code criteria for the granting of special exceptions, nor did the Zoning Board's decision in any manner violate the Florida Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
Petition for writ of certiorari denied.