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Presidential Candidates Bypass Substantive Land Use, Metropolitan Policy Issues
Barack Obama and John McCain are both selling themselves to the American people as reformers. And neither was raised in a conventional American city or suburb. So you'd think that they would have unconventional ideas about how to deal with growth, planning, and development issues.

CP&DR Staff
Oct 2, 2008
State Budget Hits Redevelopment, Public Transit
The state budget signed by Gov. Schwarzenegger in late September shifts $350 million from redevelopment agencies to schools, and it provides no funding at all for transit projects contained in the State Transportation Improvement Program. Still, the sentiment among many local government officials was that the budget could have been far worse.

CP&DR Staff
Oct 2, 2008
Property Rights Case Law Evolves With 9th Circuit Decision
The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals continued to flesh out its property rights jurisprudence with a decision from Spokane, Washington — this time by siding with property owners seeking to protect their own rights by enforcing historic preservation regulations.

CP&DR Staff
Oct 2, 2008
Environment Group Sues Wrong Parties Over Bird Death Controversy
Members of the public may sue to defend the public trust resource of wildlife, but the suit must be filed against public agencies responsible for protecting the wildlife, according to the First District Court of Appeal.

CP&DR Staff
Oct 2, 2008
EPA Ordered To Write Rules For Construction Site Runoff
The Environmental Protection Agency has until December 1, 2009, to promulgate standards for runoff from construction sites. The deadline is contained in a 2006 federal district court ruling that the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals recently upheld.

CP&DR Staff
Oct 2, 2008
Inclusionary Housing Ordinance Withstands Property Rights Suit
A property owner challenging the constitutionality of an inclusionary housing ordinance may not employ the nexus and rough proportionality tests from the Nollan and Dolan cases, the Second District Court of Appeal has ruled.

CP&DR Staff
Oct 2, 2008
Marina Approves Huge Subsidies to Restart Key Project
Faced with the potential demise of a highly anticipated 430-acre commercial and residential project, the City of Marina has added more than $80 million worth of subsidies and incentives to a deal with developers. In the recently approved deal, the city also reduced the developer's workforce housing obligations and agreed to cover half of water connection fees.

CP&DR Staff
Oct 2, 2008


Downtown L.A. Park is Naive, Yet Essential
We've all seen in recent weeks the cruelty of hurricanes uprooting houses as easily as trees, tossing cars into fields and reducing farms to rubbish heaps. Tropical storms go where they want, and anything less than monolithic masonry is a goner. Even with the damage they bring, however, hurricanes are kinder than freeways. Only two exceptions are available to alter the impact of freeways: In the case of elevated roadways, we can take them down, as San Francisco did with the E

CP&DR Staff
Oct 2, 2008
9th Circuit Endorses Local Antenna Siting Regulation
In a major reversal, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that wireless telecommunications providers can no longer challenge local zoning regulations on the basis that the zoning has the potential to prohibit telecommunications services. Instead, providers will have to show that local regulation does in fact prohibit telecommunications services.

CP&DR Staff
Sep 26, 2008
Court Bolsters Agricultural Land Preservation
In a decision bolstering farmland preservation, the First District Court of Appeal has ruled that Humboldt County can enforce updated land use regulations against a landowner whose original Williamson Act contract predates the regulations.

CP&DR Staff
Sep 25, 2008
Federal Housing Funds For California May Have Limited Impact
The state and federal governments are throwing a lot of "new money" at the housing market in hopes of stabilizing prices and bailing out subprime mortgage borrowers. For California alone, the total looks to be several hundred million dollars – at least – in the next year alone. But is that anywhere near enough to make a dent in the problem?

CP&DR Staff
Sep 6, 2008
New Grid, Old Tracks Aid Santa Rosa
Stem-cell therapy and urban design have little in common, or so I thought, until I saw Dan Solomon's design for New Railroad Square in Santa Rosa. In the San Francisco architect's plan for the former rail yards in downtown Santa Rosa, the typical block from the older sections of Santa Rosa takes the role of the healthy cell. The imported block, with its small dimensions, helps weave the New Railroad Square project into the fabric of the historic downtown.

CP&DR Staff
Sep 6, 2008
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