LA's Metro agency approved a new 96th Street station on its Crenshaw rail line to serve the LAX airport more directly than the previously planned Century/Aviation station. LA Curbed calls the design "a very fancy stop with all the extras." See http://bit.ly/1rSKRNK. For a clearer view of the logistics see the agency's diagram at http://bit.ly/1lSMxWp.

Cal Supremes to review Property Reserve case
The California Supreme Court agreed to review the Property Reserve appellate ruling on whether the state must bring an eminent domain action to get access to private property for geological testing for a future project. See http://bit.ly/V6KCDR for the Nossaman firm's take on what's at stake in the appeal. On the prior decision, issued in March by the Third District Court of Appeal, see http://www.cp-dr.com/articles/node-3448. The current California Supreme Court docket is at http://bit.ly/1lNkZlN. (A prior California Supreme Court review on the same case was concluded in 2011.)

Two review denials may disappoint conservatives
The U.S. Supreme Court turned down California conservatives two ways in late June. It refused to take up an appeal of last year's Ninth Circuit ruling upholding the low-carbon fuel standard that operates alongside AB 32 in California's cap-and-trade program: see http://bit.ly/1nX5Vi2 for a news account of reactions to the denial of review, and http://bit.ly/1sTMQFy for the Stoel Rives firm's legal analysis. The high court also refused to hear an appeal by Kevin Lunny, owner of Drakes Bay Oyster Co., of an order to shut down his oyster beds on Point Reyes National Seashore property. See http://bit.ly/1z3eVLn.

Ocean Beach Community Plan approval postponed

A big San Diego City Council hearing set for June 30 on the Ocean Beach Community Plan was called off because the Coastal Commission offered 43 last-minute change proposals. The local OB Rag published the text of the Commission's six-page memo at http://obrag.org/?p=84919. The Coastal Commission proposals include several emphasizing effects of sea level rise on bluffs and beaches. More detail from the Times of San Diego is at http://bit.ly/1luPKHg. The community plan page is at http://www.sandiego.gov/planning/community/profiles/oceanbeach/.

Wintersburg structures rated among most endangered

The National Trust for Historic Preservation has listed the Wintersburg Village structures in Huntington Beach as among the 11 most endangered historic places in the U.S., raising its profile and hence possibly improving its chances of preservation. The site was an early center of Japanese American settlement in Orange County, and one of the few land parcels that Japanese owners managed to acquire before passage of the 1913 Alien Land Law. (See http://bit.ly/TyTNeP.) The six surviving Wintersburg structures include a Presbyterian mission church and the farmhouse established by the pioneering Furuta family. The Huntington Beach City Council has voted to allow demolition of the structures but the property's current owner, a waste company known as Rainbow Environmental Services, may yet arrive at a way to preserve them. See http://bit.ly/1qeqYRQ. JK Yamamoto has more detail in the Rafu Shimpo at http://bit.ly/1pSvELb.

San Francisco Grand Jury's port report: worth a read
San Francisco's grand jury issued three reports in late June: criticizing the Port of San Francisco for over-friendliness to private developers; expressing concern over the extent of preparation for rising sea levels; and criticizing ethical disclosure standards applied to public officials and candidates. See http://civilgrandjury.sfgov.org/report.html for all the reports. The Port of San Francisco report is worth a read for reasons other than criticism: it provides a useful summary of recent proposals and ongoing plans for San Francisco waterfront construction and mentions steps the city took toward use of infrastructure financing districts in the context of the now-abandoned Golden State Warriors development plan. (See http://www.cp-dr.com/articles/node-3510.)

In other news:

  • The lawsuit by environmental groups against Plan Bay Area settled in late June in an agreement that includes emphasis on safer methods of moving truck and train cargoes through neighborhoods. The link-rich Planetizen writeup at http://www.planetizen.com/articles/node-69937 includes mentions of overlapping concerns between environmentalist and right/libertarian challengers to the plan.
  • The annual "State of the Nation's Housing" report by the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies says most of California has some of the highest housing cost burdens in the U.S. See http://bit.ly/1k9tjb1 for the Sacramento Bee's California-centric take. The report itself is at http://www.jchs.harvard.edu/research/state_nations_housing.
  • The Sacramento advocates who last week were seeking more social and housing benefits from the Kings arena project (see http://www.cp-dr.com/articles/node-3518) went ahead and filed their suit. See http://bit.ly/1pSBUCy for the Bee account. The complaint seeks to overturn the EIR as having insufficiently disclosed, analyzed and mitigated several kinds of impacts, including inconsistency with the city's housing element. It also asks the court to declare SB 743 unconstitutional because of special provisions it contains that purport to streamline review of the arena project.
  • An extended post-Redevelopment dispute over the 700 block of K street in Sacramento settled in late June with an agreement between the city and the state, allowing a start on long-delayed rebuilding plans for the block. See http://bit.ly/1mElp9w.
  • A new lawsuit against the high-speed rail project, this time by a San Rafael environmental group, TRANSDEF, alleged the project wouldn't provide net greenhouse gas reductions for a decade. For news reports see http://bit.ly/1pGoH41 and http://bit.ly/1lNaPSb.
  • The LA Times reported the High Speed Rail Authority had decided strategically to start the timetable toward construction of the rail line's Burbank-Palmdale segment: http://lat.ms/TLxgvQ
  • Moody's upgraded its rating of California general obligation bonds to Aa3 from A1: http://bit.ly/1x9iE8c
  • The San Francisco Chronicle reported San Francisco was finding housing for some of its homeless families by renting places for them in other towns from Vallejo to Sacramento: http://bit.ly/1nYDbXD
  • Mountain View may increase the compensation it requires landlords to pay low-income tenants in certian kinds of no-fault evictions: http://bit.ly/1iQx9et
  • Ellen Hanak's team at the Public Policy Institute of California were suggesting a statewide water surcharge as a way to raise money for regional projects as an alternative to bonds: http://www.ppic.org/main/blog_detail.asp?i=1553
  • The city of Davis was hearing proposals from developers for environmentally conscious design of an "innovation center". Three proposals are from groups led respectively by Hines, Ramco Enterprises and Capitol Corridor Ventures: http://bit.ly/1lFliPm
  • Mayor Eric Garcetti of LA set up a "Mayor's Fund for Los Angeles" nonprofit to fund projects beyond the support they receive from public budgets. Goals for the fund include work on the LA River: http://lat.ms/1m4EA0h
  • Kern County adopted a regional transportation plan and sustainable communities strategy under SB 375. Planetizen has a summary and links to an extended commentary by NRDC consultant Ella Wise: http://www.planetizen.com/articles/node-70026
  • The Association of Monterey Bay Area Governments (AMBAG) approved a sustainability strategy June 11 that predicted 20% population growth from 2010 through 2035: http://bit.ly/1o28hxo
  • Details emerged on San Francisco's Schlage Lock development proposal, which calls for a stunning 1,700 units of housing on a long-neglected factory campus in the southeastern Visitacion Valley district. A city Office of Economic Analysis presentation said construction spending could reach $637 million. See http://bit.ly/1lMKHqC for the SF Business Times writeup. The presentation is at http://sfcontroller.org/Modules/ShowDocument.aspx?documentid=5460. The plan goes to the Board of Supervisors next week: http://bit.ly/1rUTyHp
  • The League of California Cities included clippings in its daily briefs from a couple of disputes over economics and housing in Orange County: homeowners opposed a 70-unit proposed affordable housing development in Santa Ana: http://bit.ly/1nYANyP. Costa Mesa planners were recommending a separate new permitting process for motels to allow long-term stays: http://bit.ly/1jFeuNv