In a reversal of recent trends, ballot initiatives to restrict growth appear to be on the upswing - especially in Southern California, where few ballot measures have appeared in recent years. The hotbeds of controversy appear to be in Ventura and San Diego counties, which have historically had more "ballot-box zoning" than other parts of Southern California. In Ventura County, slow-growthers have mounted a coordinated November effort to pass urban growth boundaries in six cities as well as a voter ap...
With the election-year session coming to a close, the California Legislature has not moved aggressively on most issues associated with planning and development.
A deal to place a multibillion-dollar school bond on the November ballot may still materialize - and if it does it could repeal or reform the state's long-standing Mira doctrine on school impact fees. A constitutional amendment to permit sales-tax sharing is still moving forward, as it a minor revision of the housing element law and a few...
It is not too much of an overstatement to suggest that the California planning and development landscape as we know it today was created by Proposition 13 when it was passed by the voters 20 years ago this month.
Prop. 13 didn't invent most of the impulses at work in California's communities today, of course. Fiscal zoning and competition between municipalities for tax revenue is nothing new. Neither is the vigorous political jockeying within any community over who pays for new growth, nor the sl...