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Articles
Planning, Development To Feel State Budget Cuts
While California's yawning budget gap remains wide open, the revenue and spending plan eventually approved by legislators will likely have significant ramifications for land use planning and development.
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Jul 2, 2009


Clever Project Develops School, Housing Together
A working-class neighborhood north of downtown L.A. is slated for a development project unlike any other previously built in the state: A combination of housing and a public school on a shared site. Set to start construction this winter, the Glassell Park project is being built jointly by Los Angeles Unified School District and Abode Communities, the nonprofit homebuilder formerly known as Los Angeles Design Center.
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Jul 2, 2009
County Attorney Guidance Withheld From Project Opponents
Tehama County did not have to disclose publicly advice it received from an outside law firm on how to comply with the California Environmental Quality Act while dealing with a controversial development project, the Third District Court of Appeal has ruled. The unanimous three-judge panel ruled that the four documents were protected by attorney-client privilege or work product privilege, even though Tehama County shared the documents with the project's developer.
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Jul 1, 2009
Ontario Seeks To Make Its General Plan An Everyday Tool
The City of Ontario is on the verge of adopting a general plan unlike any in California. Its goal of transforming Ontario into a bustling urban place of 350,000 residents with the state's most elaborate transit hub is not what sets the plan apart. Instead, it is how the plan is being developed on the Internet and in conjunction with other city plans and policies.
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Jul 1, 2009
Researchers Question Value Of Enterprise Zones
There is no evidence that California's enterprise zone program – the state's largest economic development effort – has increased jobs in program areas, according to a Public Policy Institute of California study. "Our main finding is that, on average, enterprise zones have no effect on business creation or job growth," PPIC researchers Jed Kolko and David Neumark wrote.
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Jun 27, 2009
Prop 218 Challenge To Pomona BID Assessments Rejected
Property assessments levied to fund the downtown Pomona Property and Business Improvement District did not violate Proposition 218, the Second District Court of Appeal has ruled for a second time.
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Jun 25, 2009
No EIR Needed For Warehouse Covered By Specific Plan, Court Rules
Approval of an 88-acre warehouse distribution facility at March Air Reserve Base was exempt from environmental review because the project was included in a general plan and a specific plan, both of which received environmental analysis, the Fourth District Court of Appeal has ruled.
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Jun 25, 2009
State High Court Clears Way For Proposition 218 Challenge
For the second time in less than a year, the California Supreme Court has ruled for individual property owners contesting local government assessments, opening the door for future challenges based on Proposition 218.
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Jun 17, 2009
CP&DR has converted to an improved, all-electronic format!
California Planning & Development Report has joined the electronic communications revolution. On July 1st, we delivered the first PDF of our newsletter directly to subscribers' email inboxes! <p> </p> If you're not already a subscriber, now's the time to sign up. Because we have eliminated our printing and mailing costs, we've rolled our subscription price clear back to the 2000 level. That's right – you'll get an even better, more topical CP&DR at a ni
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Jun 5, 2009
Horse Racing's Decline May Be Cities' Infill Opportunity
And away they're going. The grandstands of Churchill Downs will probably always fill with what bourbon-soaked pundit P.J. O'Rourke described as the "tremendous squash and jostle" of seersucker suits and saturnine headwear every May. And yet, out West no fewer than four of California's once-proud of racetracks have entered some form of bankruptcy, redevelopment, or uncertainty. With attendance and handle down at California tracks – as at tracks across the country –

Josh Stephens
Jun 1, 2009
Lawsuit Over San Clemente Homes Reinstated
Opponents of the proposed construction of two houses on a coastal bluff in San Clemente may pursue their lawsuit to overturn the California Coastal Commission's approval of the projects, even though the suit was filed after a statute of limitations had ostensibly expired, the Fourth District Court of Appeal has ruled.
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Jun 1, 2009
Cabaret Loses 1st Amendment Argument Over Use Permit
A state appellate court has upheld the City of Los Angeles's refusal to grant a conditional use permit for the sale and on-site consumption of alcohol at an adult cabaret. The court ruled that the decision to deny the permit strictly concerned alcohol and did not prohibit the expression of protected speech.
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May 29, 2009
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