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Articles
Developer Liable for Obstruction of Illegal Billboard
In the ongoing billboard wars that have taken place up and down the state in recent years, the advertisers have won the latest legal battle. In Hill v. San Jose Family Housing Partners, the Court of Appeal for the Sixth Appellate District held: (1) that a written easement for a billboard was enforceable, even if the billboard was constructed in an illegal manner; and (2) that the servient owners of a development that unreasonably interfered with the visibility of the bi
Glen C. Hansen
Oct 18, 2011
Caltrans Permitted to Hire Private Engineering Firms
As with most things in life, one person's gain is another person's loss, and public-private partnerships are not exempt from these types of tradeoffs. To the state engineers and their representative union, the contracting out to private engineering firms of engineering services traditionally performed by Caltrans engineering staff represents one of those zero-sum games. This becomes the backdrop to a challenge to the Phase II improvement work on Doyle Drive, the highway appro
William W. Abbott
Oct 18, 2011
Annexed Parcel Subject to Voter-Approved Down-Zoning
When the City of Morgan Hill annexed an 80-acre plot of land over public outcry, city residents fought back by approving ballot measures limiting the development that could take place on that parcel. With a recent appeals court ruling – 31 years after the initial annexation -- a developer's project is high and dry, with the court ruling that the city's actions did not amount to inverse condemnation or illegal spot zoning.
Katherine J. Hart
Oct 17, 2011
Insight: 100 Years After Introduction of Voter Initiatives, ‘Ballot-Box Zoning' Prevails
This month – October 10, to be exact – marks the 100th anniversary of initiative and referendum in California. It's hard to imagine that Gov. Hiram Johnson, the godfather of the constitutional amendment, could have imagined all the different ways that the initiative process would be used – especially by the moneyed interests that were his target in 1911. But it's equally hard to imagine that Johnson could have foreseen the way the initiative and referendum process would trans
William Fulton
Oct 5, 2011
City Need Not Abide by AG's List of GHG Mitigation Measures
By now, most CEQA practitioners have faced the problem of what to do when a project opponent submits the attorney general's 18-page list of potential greenhouse gas mitigation measures, when many of the measures in the list may not be appropriate for a particular project. On June 30, 2011, the Court of Appeal for the Second Appellate District held that the lead agency is not required to explain why each of the proposed measures is inappropriate for the project at issue.
Leslie Z. Walker
Oct 4, 2011
Parking Reform Measure Strains Relationship Between Infill Developers, Housing Advocates
There was a time when the biggest opponents to infill development were the interstate highway, the barbeque grill, and the American dream. Following the failure of Assembly Bill 710, you might be able to add advocates of affordable housing to the list.
Josh Stephens
Oct 4, 2011
Federal Government Sends Reinforcements to Fresno
According to some Fresno locals, it was 30 years ago -- perhaps because of Proposition 13, perhaps because of the falling price of grapes -- that the city at the heart of the San Joaquin Valley went into decline. Since then, accusations of corruption, dismal economics, and nearly unmitigated low-density development have made the city both the butt of jokes and one of the nation's most forlorn urban areas. It has not suffered the spectacular fall of, say, Detroit -- but only b
Josh Stephens
Sep 30, 2011
S.F. Peninsula Cities Cast Wary Eye on High-Speed Rail
With friends like the cities of Palo Alto, Redwood City, and San Mateo, who needs enemies? Certainly not the California High-Speed Rail Authority.
Josh Stephens
Sep 23, 2011
Tide Turns at Coastal Commission With Douglas' Retirement
The retirement of Peter Douglas, the 26-year executive director of the California Coastal Commission, has unleashed a tsunami of superlatives from admirers: "legend," "tremendous," "staunch advocate." For decades, Douglas has been a lighting rod of both praise and criticism for the Coastal Commission. Some say that, under his direction, the commission has protected coastal resources that otherwise would have been lost. Others say that during his tenure the commission has been
Josh Stephens
Sep 21, 2011
AB 32 Offers Legal Benchmark for Greenhouse Gas Analysis
Jurisdictions across California have slowly come to accept that their environmental reviews under the California Environmental Quality Act now must address greenhouse gas emissions. Yet, relatively few rulings exist to help jurisdictions establish thresholds by which to analyze a project's GHG impact. A recent case suggests that Assembly Bill 32, California's 2006 climate change law, may provide a reasonable guide.
Leslie Z. Walker
Sep 9, 2011
Sacramento Should Reconsider Approach to Housing Elements
Well, local governments around California finally got their wish: The staff at the state Department of Housing & Community Development that reviews housing elements has been cut to the bone. So what does this mean about state review of housing elements – and, by extension, state law about housing elements as well?
William Fulton
Sep 7, 2011
Judge Rejects Initiative to Banish Ventura Parking Meters
A ballot initiative to remove parking meters from downtown Ventura has been knocked off the November ballot by a Ventura County Superior Court judge.
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Aug 27, 2011
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