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Stockton Property Acquisition Rejected; City Gets Another Chance
The City of Stockton had no right to take private property on which it later built a minor league baseball stadium, the Third District Court of Appeal has ruled. "This is a case of ‘condemn first, decide what to do with the property later," Justice Kathleen Butz wrote for the unanimous three-judge appellate panel.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 16, 2009
Hopes For Airport Regionalization Grounded In Palmdale
When United Airlines canceled its service between the airport in Palmdale and San Francisco International, it provide a significant setback to Southern California's long, frustrating effort to spread an immense amount of air traffic more evenly across the region. Palmdale may yet thrive as a commercial airport, but experts predict it could take decades.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 10, 2009


Downtown L.A.: The Rise, Fall And Plateau
More than 30 years ago, Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley dreamed on an economically dominant downtown that would be on par with great downtowns like those in Chicago and San Francisco. Although Bradley's dream never came true, downtown L.A. has become a great residential neighborhood and a significant office market. It's easy to argue, though, that developers and market forces ultimately played a bigger role than government or public policy in downtown's evolution si

CP&DR Staff
Mar 3, 2009
The Other State Budget Breakthrough: Environmental Review Exemptions
It was a little-noticed aspect of the final California budget deal, but Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger made California Environmental Quality Act history when he signed the long-delayed 2008-09 budget in February. Schwarzenegger asked for and got something no governor had ever gotten through the budget process before: an exemption under the California Environmental Quality Act for certain state construction projects based on economic hardship, rather than on natural disaster.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 3, 2009
What's The Rush? Lawsuit Questions SLO County Project Approval
Opponents of a proposed development on the Santa Margarita Ranch outside of San Luis Obispo have sued the county, arguing it violated numerous state laws when it approved the project during a special meeting two days before Christmas. The lawsuit is only the latest in the long-running controversy regarding the fate of the 13,800-acre ranch.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 3, 2009
In Brief: Inland City Sues Over Port Expansion
In this month's roundup of land use news: Riverside lawsuit says train traffic from port expansion is unacceptable; Beaumont loses CEQA suit; Fanita Ranch project stalls, for now; Santa Barbara County approves wind farm near Lompoc; Park district and supporters sue over huge Richmond waterfront project.

CP&DR Staff
Mar 2, 2009
County's Attempt To Withhold GIS Base Map Rejected
A local government may not use the Homeland Security Act, copyright law or cost concerns to shield its geographic information system (GIS) base map from public disclosure, the Sixth District Court of Appeal has ruled. Although the court ruled squarely for the California First Amendment Coalition in its litigation with Santa Clara County, the court did not decide whether the county could charge extraordinary fees for providing the GIS information. Instead, the appellate panel

CP&DR Staff
Feb 28, 2009
New Infrastructure Financing Needed, Says PPIC
The Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) has released a new report in which it urges less reliance on state general obligation (GO) bonds to fund infrastructure improvements. The report, "Paying For Infrastructure: California's Choices," recommends reducing the voter requirement for local bonds from two-thirds to 55%, more user fees and expanded experimentation with public-private partnerships.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 28, 2009
Commission Recommends State Water Boards Reform
The state's system for regulating water quality is failing, according to the Little Hoover Commission. In a recent report, the investigative panel concluded the current system managed by the State Water Resources Control Board and nine Regional Water Quality Control Boards lacks transparency, consistency and accountability, and that the system does not demonstrably improve water quality.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 28, 2009
Cities Try To Stir Local Economy
Faced with rapidly declining revenues and extremely difficult budget choices, local governments are starting to invent their own economic stimulus programs. Cities have begun loaning money to car dealerships, cutting development fees, promoting buy-local programs and undertaking new redevelopment projects, among other things.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 27, 2009
Mitigation Fee Program Must Get Environmental Review, Court Decides
A county may not assume that fees paid under a mitigation fee program constitute full environmental mitigation for a project when the program has not undergone California Environmental Quality Act review, the Third District Court of Appeal has ruled.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 27, 2009
Challenge Of San Bernardino County Billboards May Proceed
A lawsuit challenging San Bernardino County's approval of billboards along desert freeways has been reinstated by the Fourth District Court of Appeal. The court ruled the lawsuit, filed by a county resident, need not comply with the speedy filing requirement of a state law pertaining to First Amendment matters.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 27, 2009
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