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State Supreme Court Overturns Lower Court's Rejection Of Short Statutes Of Limitations In CEQA Suits
In supporting the City of Stockton's refusal to accept a lawsuit filed by a citizens group against a proposed big-box store, the California Supreme Court has, for the second time in two months, made clear that if a public agency provides notice of a California Environmental Quality Act decision, legal challenges to that decision may be barred by the shortest statute of limitations, among several that the CEQA statute provides for, applies to legal challenges regardless of the

CP&DR Staff
Apr 10, 2010
Existing Conditions, Not Permits, Provide Baseline For Air Impacts
The California Supreme Court has ruled that a project's air impacts are to be measured against existing ambient conditions, not against a permitted level of operations for the emitter.

CP&DR Staff
Apr 1, 2010
State Seeks 1.5 Million Missing People in 2010 Census
This month more Census forms will arrive in California mailboxes than in those of any other state. And, while anxieties about response rates and undercounts persist nationwide, it is likely that California will fill out and submit more of them than will any other state. In its rawest state, the resulting data will give planners their most fundamental piece of data - the sheer number of people the state must accommodate.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 31, 2010
Political Firestorm Flares Up Over Rancho Cucamonga Development
Covered by chaparral and dry brush, the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains in Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties are at a perennial risk of wildfire. And when the seasonal Santa Ana winds sweep through, they bring Apocalyptic storms of fire and ash that rain down on, and sometimes consume, the communities that press up against these slopes.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 16, 2010
As Cities Forge Ahead, Journalism Faces Its Own Rebuilding
In planning, as with anything else, the progress does not arrive merely with the flow of time. The enthusiasm and ideas that swept over these pages in the first decade of this century -- smart growth, downtown revitalization, AB 32, SB 375, and all the rest -- are now met with delay, deferral, and, in some cases, bankruptcy.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 12, 2010
New Tsunami Maps Depict Extreme High-Water Mark
California has a yet another seismic threat to prepare for, thanks to a set of new maps that depict a ferocious line of water that may, if earth moves in just the wrong way, someday surge inland along the state's coastline. Experts are saying that these new maps should be used to plan for emergency evacuations, not changes in land use planning. In at least one case, however, the Coastal Commission is already considering policies that would take tsunamis into account when

CP&DR Staff
Mar 11, 2010
Local CEQA Appeals Not Exempt From Filing Fees
Upholding a 27-year-old California Supreme Court determination, the Second District Court of Appeal has ruled that local agencies may impose a fee for the filing of an administrative appeal of a California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) decision.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 10, 2010
Local Planning Funds Will Flow Through Water Bond
The old saying in government is that in order to understand what's going on, you've got to follow the money. In local planning throughout California, that's becoming increasingly easy to do. Local government revenues - property tax, sales tax, development fees, redevelopment funds - are in steep decline.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 10, 2010
First District Upholds CEQA Distinction Between �Agreement' and �Project'
In yet another California Environmental Quality Act case involving whether an agreement between a tribe and a city constitutes a "project," the First District Court of Appeal has held that the law did not apply to an agreement requiring a city's formal support of a proposed casino in exchange for the tribe's funding of undefined city services and improvements.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 9, 2010
Land Use Legislation For 2010
CP&DR's regular roundup of legislation pending in Sacramento.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 8, 2010
Low-Cost Housing Goes Affordably Green in Chula Vista
Hey you, Mr./Ms. Conventional Apartment Developer! Yes, you. Don't attempt to ignore me by rolling up your construction-loan documents and sticking them in your ears.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 8, 2010
While Cities Rise, Journalism Faces Uncertain Future
n planning, as with anything else, the mere flow of time does not bring progress. The enthusiasm and ideas that swept over these pages in the first decade of this century -- smart growth, downtown revitalization, AB 32, SB 375, and all the rest -- are now met with delay, deferral, and, in some cases, bankruptcy.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 7, 2010
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