Skip to main content
Home
Home

California Land Use & Development Law Report

tree in grassy meadow

California Land Use & Development Law Report

California Land Use & Development Law Report offers insights into legal issues relating to development and use of land and federal, state and local permitting and approval processes.

Supreme Court Outside
April 19, 2024 Exactions and Assessments Takings

Supreme Court Rules Legislatively Adopted Exactions Not Exempt From Nollan/Dolan Scrutiny 

In a dispute over a traffic impact fee imposed on a residential building permit by El Dorado County, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously rejected the long-standing position of California and other state courts that the Takings Clause of the U.S. Constitution applies differently when permit conditions are imposed legislatively rather than administratively. View blog post
Water Coastal
February 16, 2024 California Coastal Act

City’s Interpretation of its Ordinance Regarding Coastal Development Permit Requirement for Attached ADU Was Not Entitled to Deference

The City of Malibu determined that an attached accessory dwelling unit (ADU) did not fall within the coastal development permit exemptions set forth in its local coastal program (LCP). View blog post
Gavel banging
November 28, 2023 Housing

Court Invalidates Ordinance Reducing Floor Area Ratio on Residential Lots

The Housing Crisis Act of 2019, which enacted Government Code section 66300, generally precludes a city from reducing the intensity of land use on a parcel where housing is allowed below what was allowed on January 1, 2018. View blog post
Housing Real Estate
November 28, 2023 Housing

Housing Accountability Act Provision That Prohibits an Agency From Requiring a Rezoning When Zoning Is Inconsistent with the General Plan Inapplicable Where City Found Zoning Consistent

A court rejected a developer's attempt to take advantage of provisions in the Housing Accountability Act that prohibit a City from requiring a rezoning when zoning is inconsistent with the General Plan.  View blog post
coastal highway on sunny day
August 2, 2023 California Coastal Act

Coastal Commission Has De Novo Authority Over Issuance of Coastal Development Permits

The court upheld the authority of the California Coastal Commission to decide appeals of coastal development permits under a de novo standard of review. View blog post
Buildings Stores
June 26, 2023 Exactions and Assessments

Agreement Purporting to Prevent City from Imposing New Impact Fees on Project Infringed Police Powers

 

The Court of Appeal held that a city-developer agreement that ostensibly precluded the City of Oakland from imposing any new impact fees on the project constituted an impermissible infringement of the City's police power. Discovery Builders Inc v City of Oakland, 92 Cal. App. 5th 799 (2023).

View blog post
two people on laotops
April 10, 2023 Housing

Court Held That Obligation to Further Fair Housing Requires More Than the Absence of Discrimination and That Base Zoning Allowing Lower Densities Violated Housing Element Law Even Though Overlay Zoning Required Minimum Densities

A court addressed the City of Clovis' repeated failures to accommodate lower-income housing needs.

View blog post
view above looking down at forrest
March 24, 2023 Exactions and Assessments

Court Orders Refund of All Unexpended Fees in Landmark Mitigation Fee Act Case

A recent case involving developer Charles Keenan and the City of Palo Alto highlights the importance of strict compliance with Mitigation Fee Act's requirement that findings be made every five years concerning unexpended fees.

View blog post
Real Estate and Housing Construction
June 22, 2022 California Coastal Act CEQA

CEQA Challenge to Campus Town Project in Monterey County Was Untimely

 

View blog post
Housing Buildings
May 10, 2022 California Coastal Act

Ban on Short-Term Rentals Required Coastal Commission Approval

The Court of Appeal held that absent a distinction between short- and long-term rentals, both are permitted under city zoning ordinances, and any ban on short-term rentals that changes the status quo is an amendment that requires Coastal Commission approval. Darby T. Keen v. City of Manhattan Beach 77 Cal. App. 5th 142 (2022).

View blog post
Housing Real Estate
April 28, 2022 Exactions and Assessments

Suit Challenging City’s Interpretation of 20-Year-Old Affordable Housing Agreement Was Timely

The Court of Appeal ruled that a suit concerning an affordable housing fee that plaintiff had agreed to pay two decades earlier was still timely because the 90-day limitations period under the Subdivision Map Act did not begin to run until a dispute arose over the interpretation of provisions in the affordable housing agreement. Schmeir v. City of Berkeley, 76 Cal. App.

View blog post
Housing Real Estate
March 11, 2022 California Coastal Act Environmental and Land Use Litigation

Action Challenging Restrictions on Short-Term Vacation Rentals Was Barred by 90-Day Statute of Limitations

The Court of Appeal held that an action to set aside an ordinance restricting short-term vacation rentals. View blog post
bridge in coastal area with view of ocean
January 14, 2022 California Coastal Act CEQA

Coastal Commission Must Complete Environmental Review Under Its Certified Regulatory Program Before Approving Permit

The court of appeal found that the California Coastal Commission erred by approving a coastal development permit for a residential development before environmental review for the project had been completed. Friends, Artists and Neighbors of Elkhorn Slough v. California Coastal Commission, 2021 WL 5905714 (No. H048088, 6th Dist., December 14, 2021).

View blog post
coastal highway on sunny day
July 15, 2021 California Coastal Act Planning and Zoning

Public Notice Need Not State That Permit Will Be Deemed Approved in Order for Permit Streamlining Act to Apply

https://keepersecurity.com/vault/# View blog post
bridge in coastal area with view of ocean
June 8, 2021 California Coastal Act

City’s Ban on Short-Term Vacation Rentals in Coastal Zone Violated Coastal Act

A city's ban on short-term vacation rentals in the coastal zone constitutes "development" under the California Coastal Act. Therefore, the Coastal Commission must first approve a coastal development permit, an amendment to the city's certified local coastal program, or an amendment waiver before such a ban can be imposed. Kracke v. City of Santa Barbara, 63 Cal. App. 5th 1089 (2021).

View blog post
Home
Jump back to top