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Seeing Forest Rather Than Trees Not Good Enough for CEQA, Appellate Court Rules
In a new case from Humboldt County, the First District Court of Appeals has ruled that Caltrans must see the trees as well as the forest -- at least in the environmental impact report for a controversial road widening.
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Feb 4, 2014
Will A New Regional Plan Keep Tahoe Blue?
By the simplest accounts, peace has returned to Lake Tahoe. California-Nevada cooperation has rescued the Lake Tahoe Regional Compact from years of deadlock and faltering communication over environmental governance by the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA).
Martha Bridegam
Jan 31, 2014
Cities Play Wait-And-See On Brown's Redevelopment 2.0 Proposal
Redevelopment reform has been gridlocked in the state capital for two years, but Governor Jerry Brown issued new clues on where he's heading in the state budget that was released in January.
Larry Sokoloff
Jan 26, 2014
Brand-New City Considers Municipal Suicide
A Riverside County city will take the first steps to disincorporate itself in January, with the blame being pointed at Sacramento and state government decisions about how new cities are financed. Several other cities in the Inland Empire have discussed disincorporation, but no others appear to be close to taking such an action. The city, named Jurupa Valley, could be any city in California. But most observers say the disincorporation is due to the fact that it was the
Larry Sokoloff
Jan 7, 2014
First District Upholds Categorical Exemption for S.F. Plastic-Bag Ban
In an unpublished opinion, the First District Court of Appeal has rejected an attack on San Francisco's single-use plastic-bag ban, saying that the city did not violate the California Environmental Quality Act and that local plastic-bag bans are not overridden by the state's Retail Food Code.
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Jan 7, 2014
Can Riverside County Still Sell Its Single-Family Brand?
There's no question that Riverside County is still the single-family home capital of California. Between 2010 and 2013, more single-family detached homes were built in Riverside than in any other county in the state – a lot more.
William Fulton
Jan 7, 2014
Environmental Group Can Sue Over San Jose General Plan EIR
In a new opinion, the Sixth District Court of Appeal has unraveled a confusing set of events surrounding the certification of the environmental impact report for San Jose's new general plan, concluding that an environmental group exhausted all administrative remedies and can sue over the EIR. The California Clean Energy Committee sued over the certification of the EIR, saying that it should not be penalized because of the confusing way San Jose certified the EIR. The Sixth Di
William Fulton
Dec 9, 2013
Napa Not Required To Do New EIR On Housing Element
The First District Court of Appeal has upheld the City of Napa's decision to rely on its 1998 general plan environmental impact report in adopting its 2009 housing element. Latinos Unidos De Napa sued the city, claiming a new environmental impact report should have been prepared
William Fulton
Dec 9, 2013
Smart Growth Literature Hits a Cul-du-Sac
Where is Robert Bruegemann when you need him? A few years back, Bruegmann wrote Sprawl: A Compact History, an exaltation of low-density growth. It called for cities to double-down on all the conventions and mistakes of the previous 50 years. It was a disturbingly anachronistic, but it was provocative, and it was passionate. It seems that these days there's still plenty of in urbanist literature, but, for better or worse, provocation is getting harder to come by.
Josh Stephens
Nov 11, 2013
Brown Issues Draft Environmental Goals and Policies Report
After a 30-odd-year delay, the Governor's Office of Planning & Research has released a working draft of the Environmental Goals & Policies Report – a document that OPR is supposed to produce every four years.
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Oct 30, 2013
Insight: Kill CEQA Before I Use It Again
In the pantheon of developer complaints about the California Environmental Quality Act, perhaps the most common one is that it's too easy to use it to file crazy lawsuits purely for the purposes of gumming up the works. Which is maybe why the building industry and property rights advocates have spent so much time lately filing CEQA lawsuits apparently designed to gum up the works.
William Fulton
Sep 23, 2013
Court Declines to Give Break to CEQA Plaintiff Who Filed Late
In Alliance for the Protection of the Auburn Community En
Katherine J. Hart
Jun 4, 2013
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