A few highlights from this week's news:

  • The First Appellate District cleared the way for a major redevelopment of the ParkMerced apartment complex in southwestern San Francisco. ParkMerced is a rare dense high-rise structure in the western half of the city. See http://www.courts.ca.gov/opinions/documents/A137753.PDF for the opinion. See http://bit.ly/1qpnusx and http://bit.ly/1w8ikcI for coverage of the project plans now unblocked.
  • The California Supreme Court denied requests for both review and depublication on the 218 Properties case on conversion of mobile home parks from rental to owner-occupied status. The online docket is at http://bit.ly/1qpu2am and CP&DR's prior coverage at https://www.cp-dr.com/articles/node-3497.
  • The Huntington Beach City Council took a measure off the ballot that would have invited voters to approve mobile home rent control after the landlord of two key mobile home parks moved toward negotiating five-year leases with his tenants. See the Huntington Beach Independent (noted via the League of CA Cities) at http://bit.ly/1uVVELl.
  • The High-Speed Rail project has had mixed fortunes this month: The State Public Works Board approved a string of 158 properties to acquire in Fresno and Kings Counties (Fresno Bee at http://bit.ly/1tgY8Sk;  Stoel Rives blog at http://bit.ly/1uVNLWl). The High-Speed Rail Auhority itself met to discuss use of its $250 million in cap-and-trade funds from the upcoming fiscal year's budget. (See http://bit.ly/1rXvMcW). On the other hand, the LA Times' Ralph Vartabedian wrote that construction on the project has been slowed for lack of authority over land. (See http://lat.ms/1n9fCdC.) And Planetizen has a roundup at http://www.planetizen.com/articles/node-70784 of reports on the appeal by opponents of the recent High-Speed Rail bonds approval decision. (See http://www.cp-dr.com/articles/node-3546.)
  • The LA Times reported a group of landlords and tenants are working together to legalize unpermitted rental units in Los Angeles: http://lat.ms/1uVQejA (Noted via @VamonosLA)
  • Per the Second Appellate District, when a city-owned tree falls on private property, it can constitute a "public improvement" for inverse condemnation purposes. See http://www.courts.ca.gov/opinions/documents/B254800.PDF and http://www.natlawreview.com/article/california-if-tree-falls-city-it-serving-public-purpose.
  • San Francisco's Planning Commission approved the Moscone Center expansion: http://sf.curbed.com/archives/2014/08/15/moscone_growth_spurt.php
  • PG&E pleaded not guilty to federal charges connected with the 2010 San Bruno gas explosion that kiled eight people. The SF Chron's Bob Egelko reported city officials were campaigning for prosecutors "to seek an independent monitor of the company's conduct, saying state regulators are too cozy with the giant utility," See http://bit.ly/YyNefA.
  • Jennifer Hernandez of Holland & Knight and David Pettit of the NRDC, both CEQA specialists, argued Tesla CEQA exemptions in an August 13 call-in show appearance with business reporter Marc Lifsher on KPCC's "Airtalk" at http://bit.ly/Xib9Q7.
  • AP reported the Ivanpah solar array has become a giant bird zapper: http://bit.ly/1pZVPkg