CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CEQA BATTLE LINES: ‘NEEDLESS DELAYS’ VS. ‘DO NO HARM’”
The battle lines over what may become
this year’s most contentious, intractable legislative battle began to form
within a day or two of when Gov. Jerry Brown uttered two key sentences in his
mid-January state of the state speech:
“We also need to rethink and
streamline our regulatory procedures, particularly the California Environmental
Quality Act,” he said. “Our approach needs to be based more on consistent
standards that provide greater certainty and cut needless delays.”
A huge portion of the Internet chatter
that followed Brown’s talk centered around those 34 words, which made up about
one percent of what his talk.
The two sentences embellished only
slightly on Brown’s oft-quoted previous sentiment: “I’ve never seen a CEQA
exemption I didn’t like.” That feeling stems from his eight years as mayor of
Oakland, where, among other projects, his efforts to start a military academy
for inner-city youth suffered CEQA-related delays.
Brown’s speech spurred enthusiasm from
major business groups who have never cared for the sometimes voluminous
environmental impact reports (EIRs) required by the early 1970s law (originally
signed by then-Gov. Ronald Reagan) for almost all significant projects.
“Modernizing CEQA is essential if
we’re to successfully grow our economy,” said Gary Toebben, president of the
Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce. “…CEQA can be modernized in a way that
contributes to, not stands in the way of, the economic and environmental
vitality of California.”
Chimed in Carl Guardino, head of the
Silicon Valley Leadership Group, “CEQA is a great law that has unfortunately
been misused, discouraging investments in our communities that not only foster
economic growth and job creation, but help us meet our environmental and
greenhouse gas reduction goals.”
When business leaders say CEQA
discourages investment and has been misused, they mean there have been times
when opponents of projects, often in the NIMBY (not in my back yard) mode,
challenged the adequacy of EIRs and delayed things for weeks, months or years,
costing developers large sums.
Businesses sometimes also use CEQA to
hold up their competitors’ projects and labor unions have been said to threaten
developers with CEQA lawsuits (sometimes labeled extortion) and delays if they
use non-union labor.
But CEQA also has created open space
and parks, as developers can use these kinds of amenities to mitigate some ill
effects of their projects. It has helped cities and neighborhoods limit
building heights and forced builders to provide adequate parking, organize
carpools and expand streets and public transit.
CEQA also has not prevented major
projects like AT&T Park in San Francisco, the San Francisco 49ers new
stadium under construction in Santa Clara, Staples Center and the LA Live
complex in Los Angeles, Petco Park and a host of major hotels in San Diego. And
much more.
Just because Brown wants change does
not mean it will take the precise shape he eventually recommends to the
Legislature, which he has not yet discussed in any detail.
Whatever he seeks will likely meet
resistance from environmentalists there. State Senate President Darrell
Steinberg and fellow Democratic Sens. Noreen Evans of Santa Rosa and Michael
Rubio of Bakersfield, for example, told a meeting of the state Planning and
Conservation League that they will approach any change with a “first do no
harm” test.
Like Steinberg, Democratic state
Assembly Speaker John Perez has said he’s open to discussing CEQA changes that
might make the law less of a tool for manipulative special interests than it
sometimes has been. Perez says he wants full public discussion of proposed
changes before allowing any votes.
Steinberg, who last year blocked a
last-minute, end-of-session attempt to make major changes easing CEQA without
any public hearings or input, has said he feels similarly.
It’s not certain yet just where the
CEQA reform effort will lead, although the law has already been altered in the
past few years to promote projects near public transit and speed up judicial
reviews of projects.
But momentum toward changing CEQA to
streamline its processes and avoid duplication with other state and federal
permitting requirements has probably reached the point of being unstoppable.
The remaining question is how extreme the change will be.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The
Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the
Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover
fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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