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New Clean Water "WOTUS" Rule Covers Vernal Pools
The federal government issued its long-awaited "Waters of the United States," or WOTUS, definition yesterday, extending federal authority to California's vernal pools and other naturally forming pockets of water. However, the new rule does not regulate groundwater nor many subsurface flows and states it will maintain existing provisions for stormwater systems and some ditches. However, business and Congressional opposition to the rule remains fierce. The Association of Cali
Martha Bridegam
May 28, 2015
Bill to Delay Implementation of SB 743 Gains Traction
A developers' group is promoting a new piece of legislation that would postpone implementation of SB 743 – the bill that would change traffic analysis to vehicle miles traveled in environmental review – for a year. The bill has apparently revealed a split among developers who say they focus on infill projects. Sponsored by Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (D-Norwalk), who was elected in November, Assembly Bill 779 would postpone implementation of SB 743 until 2017. A lobbying g
Josh Stephens
May 26, 2015
Beyond Almonds: Cities Face Immediate Water Cuts, Long-Range Uncertainty
As California's drought continues to worsen, the state's 500-plus local governments face a twofold challenge: complying with state-mandated reductions in urban water use while at the same time planning for long-term development. While the state's housing needs are manifest – 220,000 units per year just to keep up with latent demand – the long-term water supplies required to supply new development and redevelopment have become less certain thanks to the drought. In the w
Josh Stephens
May 26, 2015
Newport Beach's Banning Ranch Approval Upheld by Appellate Court
The Fourth District Court of Appeal has upheld the City of Newport Beach's decision to "approve" a development project on Banning Ranch, saying that the city complied with both the California Environmental Quality Act and its own general plan. A trial judge had ruled that the city complied with CEQA but violated its own general plan. The project is still pending before the Coastal Commission. It was the second time in less than three years that the Fourth District uphel
William Fulton
May 23, 2015
Enviros, Others Clash Over Desert Solar Plan
The Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan (DRECP) has taken on the difficult task of bringing high-flown talk about renewable energy goals down, literally, to earth, in the form of land use planning. It's asking members of the energy, planning and environmental fields to cooperate in adding a new dimension to the meaning of property ownership in California's southeastern deserts. But it's also running into resistance from local governments that don't want the plan t
Martha Bridegam
May 18, 2015
Cities Seize Chances to Avoid CEQA Review through Voter Initiatives
After 20 years, Los Angeles is on the verge of obtaining a new National Football League team. And as it turns out, the winning play for the NFL in Los Angeles may have been drawn up in a courtroom in Sacramento. In the cities of Carson and Inglewood, competing sponsors of stadium proposals are employing, simultaneously, a newly legitimized tactic to exempt their projects from review under the California Environmental Quality Act. Carson used the tactic to approve its stadium
Josh Stephens
Apr 28, 2015
L.A. County General Plan: First Update in 35 Years
In the continuous scrum of Los Angeles County planning, some kind of milestone was reached this spring when the Board of Supervisors formally approved the county's 2035 General Plan update. The new document is the first comprehensive rewrite of county planning rules since 1980. Among other things, it represents a new focus on the county's urbanized unincorporated areas, as well as more traditional undeveloped areas on the fringe. It is the first L.A. County general plan
Martha Bridegam
Apr 28, 2015
The Man Who Changed the Way We Think About Parking
Back in 2010, when I was Mayor of Ventura, the city installed parking meters downtown for the first time in 40 years. Not for every parking space, of course. The meters covered only 300 or so prime spaces on Main Street and a few popular side streets. Thousands of other downtown spaces � both onstreet and off � remained free. <p></p> The problem we were trying to solve was a pretty typical one: Demand was so high for the prime spaces that people were cruising up and dow
William Fulton
Apr 20, 2015
A Forest of High Rises Grows in Los Angeles
Until the mid-2000s, the South Park neighborhood of downtown Los Angeles had exactly one high-rise tower: the looming, vaguely Stalinist Transamerica Building (now the AT&T Center). It most famously supplied the rooftop where Guns 'n Roses shot the video for "Don't Cry." The area—which occupies the southern portion of downtown Los Angeles, between the Financial District and Interstate 10—otherwise consisted of dilapidated retail, low-rent residential buildings and acres o
Josh Stephens
Apr 6, 2015
A Vivid Warning for Coastal Cities
Currently on display at the Annenberg Space for Photography in Los Angeles, Sink or Swim: Designing for a Sea Change is an arresting exhibition depicting consequences of, and solutions to, rising sea levels. It includes photographs by artists and journalists of disasters, like Hurricane Katrina and the Japanese tsunami, and responses, like floating schools in Bangladesh, sculpted sea walls in the Netherlands, and the restoration of the Malibu Lagoon, just a few miles aw
Josh Stephens
Apr 6, 2015
Pasadena Ushers in Era of VMT Metrics
Perhaps fittingly, one of the state's oldest, stateliest cities will be the first to institute one of the most sophisticated advances in planning tools since the slide rule. Not long ago, the City of Pasadena implemented metrics that measure projects' impacts under the California Environmental Quality Act in terms of vehicle miles traveled rather than level of service. Pasadena is not only the first city in the state to adopt VMT metrics but may also be the first in the
Josh Stephens
Apr 6, 2015
CEQA: The Cause of All Problems in California
This week brought yet another critique from the right of the California Environmental Quality Act. Unlike most, this one isn't confined to concerns over land use, unnecessary regulation, and high housing cost. Rather, CEQA's ills have grown so vast that, apparently, it now deserves blame for California's low educational attainment, lousy job growth, extreme wealth inequality, and significant domestic out-migration. Jennifer Hernandez and David Friedman are attorneys wit
Josh Stephens
Mar 24, 2015
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