top of page
Articles
Proposed SCAG Plan Falls Short Of Likely SB 375 Target
Southern California's regional planning agency unveiled a new "conceptual land use plan" on Friday, May 8 –but the plan does not meet the presumed greenhouse gas emissions target for the region under SB 375, and SCAG has not revealed yet how growth would be split up under the most transit-oriented interpretation of the plan.

CP&DR Staff
May 12, 2009
Lawmakers Address Climate, Water, Local Planning
State lawmakers have introduced an extraordinarily diverse collection of bills regarding land use planning, natural resources and infrastructure this year. While lawmakers' interest in affordable housing and redevelopment reform appears to have waned, the number of bills related to climate change or renewable energy has increased dramatically in 2009. Legislators have proposed at least five measures that would place water bonds before voters. Other measures are aimed at enhan

CP&DR Staff
May 1, 2009


SF Draws Line On Industrial Area Gentrification
The Eastern Neighborhoods Community Plans are complex, comprehensive documents that attempt to safeguard surviving industrial sites for business, while providing both incentives and requirements for new housing. The long-awaited planning documents essentially are declaring, "Gentrification stops here."

CP&DR Staff
May 1, 2009
CEQA Guidelines Proposed For GHG Emissions Analysis
The Governor's Office of Planning and Research has completed proposed California Environmental Quality Act Guidelines for greenhouse gas emissions. The guidelines now move to the Natural Resources Agency, which intends to invite additional comment and conduct at least two public hearings this summer before releasing a final version.

CP&DR Staff
Apr 29, 2009
L.A. Density Bonus Law Struck Down
The City of Los Angeles's closely watched density bonus ordinance has been struck down because the city did not subject the ordinance to California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) review.

CP&DR Staff
Apr 29, 2009
Cities, Counties Weigh SB 375 Strategies While Rules Evolve
SB 375 is now law, but another year and a half will pass before the California Air Resources Board adopts the follow-up numerical regional targets for greenhouse gas emissions reductions. This puts California's cities and counties in a pretty big bind: How can they adopt plans for the future that will conform with the climate change law if they don't know what standard they are going to have to comply with?

CP&DR Staff
Apr 28, 2009
Diamond Bar Settles With Industry On Football Stadium
The City of Diamond Bar has reached an agreement with the neighboring City of Industry regarding development of a proposed pro football stadium in Industry.

CP&DR Staff
Apr 28, 2009
Petaluma Disbands Its Planning Department
In a budget-cutting move, the City of Petaluma is disbanding its Community Development Department. After slashing the department from 23 to 11 employees in September 2008, the City Council more recently voted 4-2 to lay off all remaining planners, including the community development director.

CP&DR Staff
Apr 28, 2009
Another Antiquated Subdivision Map Rejected
In the third decision in an emerging line of cases regarding antiquated subdivisions, an appellate court has refused to recognize the legality of a parcel shown on a 1909 subdivision map. The First District Court of Appeal ruled the Solano County map did not satisfy the requirements of the Subdivision Map Act's grandfather clause because the law in effect in 1909 did not address the "design and improvement" of subdivisions.

CP&DR Staff
Apr 24, 2009
Court Upholds Reliance On Unspecified Mitigation Bank
In a case regarding a proposed "town center" project in Rancho Cordova, the Third District Court of Appeal has overturned nearly every portion of a Superior Court ruling in favor of environmentalists who oppose the development.

CP&DR Staff
Apr 22, 2009
San Joaquin Valley Leaders Adopt Regional Blueprint
A regional panel of elected officials in the San Joaquin Valley has approved a growth blueprint that calls for increased housing densities in the eight-county region. In approving a plan for a new housing density of 6.8 units per acre for the region, the San Joaquin Valley Policy Council rejected an alternative of 10 units per acre that would have preserved more farmland and cut forecast greenhouse gas emissions.

CP&DR Staff
Apr 22, 2009
Energy Companies Win Supreme Court's Clean Water Act Ruling
WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court has given power plant operators in California and around the nation an important victory by upholding the Environmental Protection Agency's power to use cost-benefit analyses in deciding whether to require expensive retrofitting to minimize fish-kills. Environmental groups, however, say they hope the Obama administration EPA will shift policy and take a stricter view of what existing power plants must do to reduce the impact on aquatic life from

CP&DR Staff
Apr 2, 2009
bottom of page
