CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 2022, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“AT
LAST, SOMEONE SLOWS WILDLAND DEVELOPMENT”
For
decades, it’s been a truism of California life and politics: The more
development pushes out into formerly wild lands, the more damaging the forest
and brush fires that follow.
This
has played out to the tune of tens of billions of dollars in damage and more
than 100 lives lost over the last five years, with fire after fire destroying
homes and cutting off escape routes.
But
still, development continued virtually unabated. Until early this year, when a
judge in sparsely populated Lake County said “No!” to a 16,000-acre luxury
mixed use project on land partly singed by past fires and partly deemed likely
to flare up in future ones.
Most
seriously, Lake County Superior Court Judge J. David Markham wrote in his
landmark ruling, the development could close off or overcrowd fire evacuation
routes, dooming many to death, as happened during the 2018 Camp Fire in Butte
County.
Markham
also noted that parts of the land involved in the putative Maha Guenoc Valley
project have burned in 1952, 1953, 1963, 1976, 1980, 1996, 2006, 2014, 2015 and
2018.
It’s
hardly surprising that such a landmark ruling comes in Lake County, which since
2012 has been victimized by the Cache Fire, the Clearlake Fire, the Ranch Fire
portion of the Mendocino Complex, the Jerusalem Fire, the Pawnee Fire, the
Valley Fire, the LNU Lightning Complex Fire and the August Complex Fire, which
covered 1.032 million acres by itself in Lake, Glenn, Mendocino, Tehama,
Trinity and Shasta counties after originating as 38 separate blazes.
The
judge ruled in a lawsuit brought by state Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta and several
environmental groups claiming the project could prove disastrous to both its
own future residents and guests but also to present area residents.
So
Lake County and the developer are back to Square 1. This project won’t happen unless
it is reduced, with major design changes and perhaps more roads.
Other
judges had previously struck down smaller developments in both San Diego and
Los Angeles counties due to fire risks, but the likelihood is that they will
ultimately proceed, with a few changes. The fate of the Lake County project is
less certain.
What
is certain is that every time a major fire burns hundreds or thousands of
homes, California’s serious housing shortage gets worse.
But
state legislators don’t even try to be innovative or forward looking about
this. Their steady answer for housing problems: More new development.
That
was the thinking behind last year’s SB 9 and SB 10, which all but eliminated
single family zoning. They are now law, allowing virtually every current
one-house lot to be split, with six new units replacing today’s one. But those
new laws require no new parking, no new water supplies, no new school
buildings, no traffic mitigation – none of the measures developers of new
tracts have had to provide over the last few decades.
The
only way to keep these laws allowing massive amounts of piecemeal new housing
from becoming permanent is to qualify a currently circulating ballot initiative
for the November ballot and pass it, thus returning local land use decisions to
locally elected city councils and county supervisors.
State
lawmakers, many of whose campaigns are funded in large part by developers,
assiduously ignore the fast-expanding vacancies in office buildings all around
the state. These are created when white collar workers at law firms, insurance
companies, stock brokerages and many other concerns shift to working at home,
as happened en masse when the coronavirus pandemic began two years ago.
Now
a huge part of California’s work force says it will continue working at home
indefinitely, and major companies from Google to Twitter to Hulu are saying OK.
Meetings and conversations happen virtually, and employers say efficiency has
not suffered much, if at all.
Some
conversion of the office space left vacant by all this has already begun. But
it needs to happen on a much larger scale if it’s to put a real dent in the
housing problem.
Maybe,
just maybe, the increasing difficulty of building near the convergence of
wildland and urban sprawl will force legislators to make OKs automatic for the
much less expensive conversions, even if that mean less profit for their
developer patrons.
-30-
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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