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Coastal Commission approves land use plan for Marin LCP update -- but with unfinished business
[5/21/14: This article has been updated and corrected following further comments from Jack Liebster of Marin County.] It wasn't on the epic scale of the Santa Monica Mountains fight, but the Coastal Commission heard passionate arguments about farmers' development rights for most of May 15 before approving a revised Marin County land use plan.
Martha Bridegam
May 20, 2014
Governor's May Revisions move some on IFD choices, not much on housing
The traditional May Revisions to Gov. Jerry Brown's budget proposal offer a big financing possibility for Infrastructure Financing Districts (IFDs), but relatively shallow support for efforts to finance and protect housing specifically.
Martha Bridegam
May 20, 2014
CP&DR News Summary, May 13, 2014: Coastal Commission, TRPA, LA stormwater
The Coastal Commission meets at the Inverness Yacht Club in Marin County starting May 14. The full agenda includes four revisions to Local Coastal Programs (LCPs).
Martha Bridegam
May 13, 2014
CP&DR News Summary, May 6, 2014: Tech bus CEQA appeal, ballot measures and more
Opponents of San Francisco's tech bus shuttle program filed May 1 for court review of the county Supervisors' decision to exempt it from CEQA review. The double-decker buses, which carry city residents to jobs on South Bay office campuses, pay the city a dollar every time a bus makes a stop. Opponents say the buses disrupt public transit but, more important, that they cause displacement by driving up housing prices along the bus routes. While the buses do reduce car trips to
Martha Bridegam
May 6, 2014
Legislative high season bill tracking report
As the California Legislature moves into spring horse-trading season, here's a review in links of some state-level legislation we're following that's relevant to land use, housing and the environment. In addition to the links provided here, the "Bill Information" section at http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/ has status updates and texts for all bills and helpful legislative analyses for most.
Martha Bridegam
May 6, 2014
Fitch announces improved outlook on ex-Redevelopment bonds
The Fitch Ratings service on May 1 announced it was ready to take a sunnier view of tax allocation bonds (TABs) administered by successor agencies in California's redevelopment dissolution. The changed view could affect both the sale prices of existing bonds and the interest rates available to successor agencies when they refinance their existing debt with refunding bonds.
Martha Bridegam
May 6, 2014
Post-Redevelopment Legislation Seeks Direction
The California Legislature's post-Redevelopment landscape is in a state of crumble and tentative growth. Like sprouts on a redwood stump, bills have crowded the space left by the 2011 abolition of local redevelopment districts and their tax-increment financing structures. The sprouts have begun variously to strengthen, clump together, or falter, but with little coherence: some of the most vigorous stems are tending in different, possibly incompatible directions. It's uncertai
Martha Bridegam
Apr 30, 2014
How Will Demography Drive California's Destiny From Now On?
How Will Demography Drive California's Destiny From Now On? Demography drives destiny, the old saying goes. And in the past few months, we've gotten a couple of pieces of important demographic news that are likely to help shape the future of California – if we can understand what they mean.
William Fulton
Apr 30, 2014
Brentwood files appeal on ruling that upheld post-redevelopment clawback
As expected, the city of Brentwood has appealed a major April 2 Sacramento County Superior Court ruling that upheld a "clawback" of former redevelopment agency funds by the state Department of Finance (DOF). It's uncertain how much tax money statewide could be affected by the decision; state officials have said $3 billion or more.
Martha Bridegam
Apr 29, 2014
CP&DR News Summary, April 22, 2014: Budget and Big-Picture Edition
What's coming down in Sacramento this month is more politics than precipitation: bills at all levels of realism, tough reexaminations of old water deals, horsetrading and litigation on big projects, and calls from Gov. Brown to revise the "Rainy Day Fund" measure on this November's ballot in case of more dry years. The LA Times ' George Skelton called it "fighting season": http://lat.ms/QAaTb2 . Here's just a little of the mid-spring wrangle, in links:
Martha Bridegam
Apr 22, 2014
Oakland Eyes New Stadiums to Keep Pro Teams
Stadium proposal is battling stadium proposal in Oakland, a mid-sized city with limited resources that wants to keep its name on big-time sports marquees. So far, professional sports team owners appear to be tilting toward a proposal to build a new football stadium, and possibly a new venue for baseball, on the current Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum site.
Morris Newman
Apr 22, 2014
Pretty Much All Unhappy News About Emissions
It has been a busy few weeks in toxics and nuisances. Southern California air quality enforcers battled lead, arsenic, chromium-6, red jalapeños and chicken manure. The Bay Area AQMD adopted a new greenhouse gas control program. A study found air pollution is worse in communities of color. Another found further evidence that pollution from traffic is bad for your heart. The Ninth Circuit heard oral arguments on rail yard emissions, the state water board proposed three new TMD
Martha Bridegam
Apr 21, 2014
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