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Published byRodney Bradley Modified over 8 years ago
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Leading Land-Use Issues : Litigation CALIFORNIA SELF STORAGE ASSOCIATION 4 TH ANNUAL WEST COAST SELF STORAGE OWNERS CONFERENCE NAPA, CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY: DAMIEN SCHIFF PACIFIC LEGAL FOUNDATION
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When does the California Environmental Quality Act Apply? Discretionary public projects (including permits) Direct or reasonably foreseeable indirect effects on the physical environment A fair argument that the project will have a significant effect = environmental impact report No fair argument = negative declaration/mitigated negative declaration All significant effects must be mitigated to insignificance if feasible Statement of overriding considerations if unavoidable significant effects
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“Reverse CEQA” Rejected California Building Industry Association v. Bay Area Air Quality Management District Thresholds of significance and sensitive receptors If you build it, they will come CEQA is concerned about a project’s effects on the environment, rather than the environment’s effects on the project The fault-line hypothetical But, CEQA is still concerned about a project exacerbating existing issues The abandoned gas station hypothetical
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Single-family homes are not “unusual circumstances” Berkeley Hillside Preservation v. City of Berkeley Categorical exemptions for single-family residences and infill projects Claw-back provision based on “unusual circumstances” Potentially significant impact is not enough, standing alone, to void an exemption Unusual circumstances reviewed according to substantial evidence (meaning, a standard generous to the permitting agency) Whether a significant effect will ensue reviewed according to “fair argument” (meaning, a standard generous to the challenger) Analysis must be based on project as approved A court rarely can force the creation of an EIR (the permitting agency must make the initial “fair argument” determination)
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CEQA does not apply to initiatives Tuolumne Jobs & Small Business Alliance v. Superior Court Voters can petition for a land-use ordinance In response, a city can directly adopt the ordinance or request an abbreviated report on the ordinance before ordering a special election The general rule has been that CEQA does not apply to ordinances adopted through an election. What about when a city directly adopts the ordinance without putting it to a vote? CEQA does not apply: otherwise the initiative process couldn’t operate NB---CEQA does apply when an initiative originates with the council
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Greenhouse gas analysis still not clear under CEQA (oh, and it pays to be a “fully protected species”) Center for Biological Diversity v. California Department of Fish & Wildlife (Newhall Ranch) Business as Usual Methodology: does it involve using a hypothetical baseline (bad because it might result in less emission reduction and avoid a significance finding) or is it merely a handy way to measure future effects (good because it reveals efficiency and conservation effectiveness)? Be careful when you use statewide measures to grade a particular project. I.e., doing better than the statewide norm may not mean you’re doing enough for your particular project Ultimately the issue needs (i) legislation or (ii) local climate plans or (iii) numerical thresholds Development cannot harm fully protected species (like the unarmored three-spine stickleback) under any circumstances
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Can you enjoy a permit while suing over it? Lynch v. California Coastal Commission Homeowners sought permit to repair aging seawall and beach bluff stairs Agency agreed to the seawall but only for twenty years, and said no altogether to the stairs Homeowners recorded the deed restriction under protest and filed suit Court of Appeal said that the homeowners waived their rights The California Supreme Court will address: can a landowner challenge a permit while suing over it?
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Can the government take one lot without compensation if it leaves you another lot? Murr v. Wisconsin In the early 1960s, the Murr family bought a vacation cabin along the St. Croix River Shortly thereafter, they bought an adjoining, vacant lot. Several decades later, new anti-development regulations forbade the family from selling or building on the vacant lot The government must compensate you if you cannot do anything with your property Some courts have held, however, that your “property” includes adjacent or neighboring lots
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Thanks for your attention! Questions?
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