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Articles
Transit Woes Threaten to Undercut Regional Sustainability Plans
To supporters, the wisdom of Senate Bill 375, the 2008 law that promotes emissions reductions through coordination of transportation and land use, lies in its holistic approach to planning and its kitting together of disparate elements of the urban fabric. But, in light of budget crises at all level of government, one piece that is essential to SB 375's success is rapidly coming off the rails: money to run buses and trains
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Jun 8, 2010
Low-Income Development Comes With An Embarrassment of Riches
By Morris Newman Dammit, it's not fair! Residents of affordable housing get all the lucky breaks. Just look at all the money they're getting from all directions: local government, the local power company, the feds, the green-building lobby. Case in point: the Casa Dominguez development in East Dominguez Hills, an unincorporated area of south Los Angeles County, even has a child care center and a medical clinic, on site.
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Jun 4, 2010
Is Santa Clara Ready for Some Football?
The San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League are trying to punt themselves out of creaky Candlestick Park and into a shiny new home in Santa Clara. Whether political winds will carry them roughly 35 miles to the south to the City of Santa Clara or whether they'll be blown back to the line of scrimmage now depends on the voters of Santa Clara.
Josh Stephens
Jun 3, 2010
Pleasanton Voters Decide, What's in a Ridgeline?
Many long, hard-fought battles have been waged for the control of high ground, and the one surrounding Pleasanton's Measure D is no exception. Measure D asks whether a 51-home development known as Oak Grove may be built on a parcel of 562 acres in the southeastern hills above the city, a Bay Area bedroom community which sits in a valley in inland Alameda County. Measure D was placed on the ballot by the City Council following a long saga of denials, approvals, lawsuits,
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Jun 3, 2010
Liquidation of State Property Puts Costa Mesa Voters in Control of Fairgrounds
Whether or not the state's "fleet reduction" plan to sell 11 properties for an estimated $2 billion makes the slightest bit of fiscal sense remains to be seen (see CP&DR Blog April 29, 2010). As the state wallows in a $20 billion deficit, the most palpable impacts of the sale may fall someplace other than Sacramento, including Costa Mesa. Wary of intensive development of the 150-acre site of the Orange County Fairgrounds, residents of the City of Costa Mesa will vote on w
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Jun 3, 2010
Another OC City Considers Vesting Zoning Power in Voters
As residents of one of the nation's oldest master-planned cities, Mission Viejo voters will be asked, essentially, to decide whether the city's planners got it right the first time. Measure D, billed by its backers as the "Right to Vote Amendment," would update the city's general plan to require all projects seeking a "major amendment of planning policy documents" to not only go through the city's existing approvals process but also receive final approval via a popular vote.
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Jun 3, 2010
Court Upholds Broad Use of Housing Funds
Use of redevelopment funds by a city-formed nonprofit organization to develop school administrative buildings and a housing project with units reserved for low- and very low-income residents was valid and did not require voter approval, the Second District Court of Appeal has ruled. In reaching its decision, the court had to interpret the various restrictions in redevelopment law as well as Article 34 of the state constitution. Article 34 as part of the Californi
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May 30, 2010
UCLA Ext: One Day Seminar, June 9th - "CEQA: 2010 Updates, Issues and Trends
UCLA Extension will offer its annual CEQA updates course on Wednesday June 9. This one day seminar, CEQA: 2010 Updates, Issues, and Trends will be held at the Figueroa Courtyard in downtown Los Angeles. Keep in mind, this seminar is only offered once a year.
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May 28, 2010
CP&DR Seeks Marketing Manager
The lives of 39 million people are affected by the news that CP&DR reports, and we're trying to get as many of them to subscribe to and advertise in the newsletter as possible.
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May 27, 2010
Brentwood's Measure F Tests Definition of 'Control'
Even as commuters have grown weary of the long drive from the western edge of the Central Valley to the employment centers of the Bay Area, a group of landowners in Brentwood see robust development opportunities. The formerly diminutive Contra Costa County city, now of 51,000, is hotly debating what its next round of expansion will look like. At issue is the fate of a 740-acre tract of largely undeveloped land, which lies to the west of the county urban limit line that
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May 24, 2010
Eastvale Will Decide Whether it Can Afford Cityhood
Riverside County has gained the dubious distinction of being one of the foreclosure capitals of California, if not the country. One bright spot, however, has been the unincorporated community of Eastvale, which has grown from an exurb of scattered homesteads a decade ago to a major unincorporated bedroom community of roughly 40,000 residents. "Eastvale is really leading Riverside County in its ascendance from the recession," said Jeff DeGrandpre, president of the
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May 21, 2010
Stalled Federal Transportation Bill Puts Local Funding on Hold
With state and local government revenues shrinking throughout California, planners are increasingly looking to the federal government – and especially transportation funds – to pay for local planning efforts, especially if they involve infill and transit-oriented development efforts. But the two major possible sources of funding – the transportation reauthorization bill and the climate bill – are both stalled with little hope of passage anytime soon. The climate bill has been
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May 21, 2010
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