Vol. 21 No. 10 Oct 2006
Governor Acts On Land Use Bills
1 October 2006 - 12:00am | Author: CP&DR Staff• AB 1387 (Jones). Expands a CEQA exemption for urban infill to projects of up to 100 units with a minimum density of 20 units per acre. The projects also must be within half a mile of a transit stop and comply with the local circulation element. Signed by governor.
Price: $2.95Broadly Written Proposition 90 Doesn't Generate Expected Support
1 October 2006 - 12:00am | Author: William FultonShould Californians vote to “protect our homes,” or should they vote against a “taxpayer trap?” This, in a nutshell, is the campaign about Proposition 90, the property rights initiative on the ballot in November.
Price: $2.95Court Rules Recall Petitions Need Not Be Circulated in Multiple Languages
1 October 2006 - 12:00am | Author: CP&DR StaffA Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rules that recall petitions need not be circulated in multiple languages, while a referendum in SF is declared invalid because it did not contain the entire redevelopment plan. An eminent domain action has been dropped by Yolo County to acquire farmland and open space while in Del mar, after fifteen years of planning, restoration of San Dieguito Lagoon has commenced.
Price: $2.95Redevelopment Reform Approved: Legislature Passes Biggest Changes Since 1993 Overhaul
1 October 2006 - 12:00am | Author: Paul ShigleyChanges to redevelopment law that are short of sweeping but still significant enough to stir the industry won legislative approval this year. The measures tighten blight requirements, ease challenges to redevelopment decisions and potentially limit use of eminent domain, but the bills do not go as far as originally proposed.
Price: $2.95Lengthy And Multiple Moratoriums Don't Keep Map Alive, Court Rules
1 October 2006 - 12:00am | Author: CP&DR StaffThe life of a tentative map for a subdivision may be extended for up to five years if the map is subject to a local development moratorium, but the map does not live on if the moratorium continues for more than five years, the First District Court of Appeal has ruled.
Price: $2.95Attorney General Says LAFCO May Require Tax For New City
1 October 2006 - 12:00am | Author: CP&DR StaffA local agency formation commission may impose as a condition on its approval of the incorporation of a new city the requirement that voters support a general tax funding the new city, the attorney general’s office has concluded.
Price: $2.95Community Built Into Affordable Units
1 October 2006 - 12:00am | Author: Morris NewmanI confess I have not read the book A Choice over Our Heads, but the resonant title of Lawrence Butler’s book chimed in my brain the other day, when I first hearing about Sequoia Village. The project is an attempt to combine affordable housing and the philosophy of co-housing, a semi-communal way of living in which people agree to contribute labor, such as cooking one day for a week in exchange for communal meals the rest of the time.
Price: $2.95Lake Berryessa Residents Told To Make Way For Visitors
1 October 2006 - 12:00am | Author: Paul ShigleyLake Berryessa, a 30-square-mile federal reservoir in the hills northeast of the more famous Napa Valley, may be California’s most secret lake. But a new land use and management plan could change that by promoting a more high-end tourist activity than the lake has seen in the past.
Price: $2.95Redding and Colton Lauch The "Fourth Chapter" in American Conservation
1 October 2006 - 12:00am | Author: CP&DR StaffThe Bush administration brought its efforts to change environmental regulations to California in September, when high-ranking appointees conducted “listening sessions” in Redding and Colton — two of 24 informal hearings across the country intended to carry out a 2004 executive order calling for “cooperative conservation.”
Price: $2.95Convention Center, Hotels, High-Rises Planned For Chula Vista
1 October 2006 - 12:00am | Author: Paul ShigleyA plan that would overhaul the San Diego Bay waterfront in Chula Vista with a convention center, large hotels, as many as 2,000 housing units in towers up to 17 stories tall, and extensive parkland may be headed toward final approval after more than three years of work.
Price: $2.95
