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Lawsuit Over National City Eminent Domain Authority Reinstated
A lawsuit challenging National City's updated blight findings and extended eminent domain authority for about 700 parcels in a redevelopment project area has been reinstated after a trial court judge threw out the suit on procedural grounds.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 27, 2009
Responsible Agency's Contract Fails CEQA Test
A San Diego County water district should have completed an environmental study before approving an agreement to provide recycled water to operators of a proposed landfill, the Fourth District Court of Appeal has ruled. Even though Olivenhain Municipal Water District was not the "lead agency" for review of the landfill itself, the district was a "responsible agency" with obligations under the California Environmental Quality Act. The district did not fulfill those obligations

CP&DR Staff
Feb 17, 2009
Developers' Creative Compensation Argument Fails
An appellate court has declined to allow additional compensation in an eminent domain case to San Francisco landowners who argued that they should be made whole for the expected revenue on an approved but unbuilt mixed-use project on their land.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 11, 2009
City of Mill Valley, Community Development Director
Community Development DirectorCity of Mill Valley, California The City of Mill Valley (pop. 14,000) encompasses the hillsides and canyons of the southeast flank of Mount Tamalpais, 11 miles north of the Golden Gate Bridge and San Francisco in Marin County. Residents value the City's unique natural beauty and are committed to protecting natural resources, promoting quality of life including performing and visual arts and community enhancement through public service. Citizenry

CP&DR Staff
Feb 4, 2009
Court Permits Landowner To Challenge Growth Control Extension
A state appellate court has cleared the way for a property owner to challenge an extension of a Morgan Hill growth control ordinance. The court ruled that the 10-year extension of an ordinance that was scheduled to sunset in 2010 could be contested even if the ordinance was unchanged from the original.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 3, 2009
Decision Time On The Delta
Pressure is rising to "solve" the problems plaguing the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, and there are indications that state officials may start making difficult choices during 2009. The Governor's Delta Vision Committee issued a report in January that contains an ambitious schedule for setting policy and beginning on-the-ground improvements to the plumbing system and environment. Only a few days after the Delta Vision Committee report came out, The Nature Conservancy bec

CP&DR Staff
Feb 3, 2009


Uptown Oakland Plan More Interesting Than You Think
Initially, the Uptown Oakland plan may not seem that exciting. But look closely, and you'll see heavy use of pleasant courtyard housing, the promise of better street life and close proximity to two BART stations.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 3, 2009
Bell's $35 Million Railroad Yard Expansion Gets Off Track
The City of Bell's plan to purchase property from the federal government and lease it to a railroad for use as a truck yard has been stalled and possibly killed by an environmental justice organization's successful California Environmental Quality Act lawsuit. The litigation has also raised questions about $35 million in bonds that the city issued in 2007 to fund property acquisition and improvements.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 3, 2009
Concord Base Reuse Plan Departs From Suburbia
The City of Concord has chosen a preferred alternative plan for reuse of the shuttered Concord Naval Weapon Station that emphasizes transit-oriented development and job growth while designating 65% of the 5,000-acre site for open space and parks.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 3, 2009
News In Brief: LNG Terminated, Industry's Football Stadium, CEQA Litigation And More
In this month's roundup of land use news: Another LNG terminal development has been scrapped; About 60 City of Industry voters have approved $500 million in bonds for infrastructure; A proposed private university and housing development is the subject of two CEQA suits; the lead developer of a controversial San Pedro infill project has been replaced; Former Assemblywoman Nicole Parra has a new economic development position in the Schwarzenegger administration; Madera Coun

CP&DR Staff
Feb 3, 2009
Beachfront House Bypasses Coastal Commission
A decision by the Coastal Commission not to intervene in a dispute between Malibu property owners was upheld by the Second District Court of Appeal. The court affirmed the Commission's refusal to conduct a hearing on a proposed beachfront house that was approved by the City of Malibu but opposed by the next door neighbors. The court also found that a State Lands Commission failure to investigate the project's potential impact on public tidelands was not enough to disturb the

CP&DR Staff
Feb 3, 2009
Coastal Commission Fenced Out In Torrance
The Coastal Commission has no jurisdiction over a fence at the base of a coastal bluff in Torrance because a 1988 boundary agreement among state entities and landowners authorized the fence, the Second District Court of Appeal ruled.

CP&DR Staff
Feb 3, 2009
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