Imperial Valley Press

Only the powerful get relief from environmen­tal law

- DAN WALTER

During his eight years as a state senator, Anthony Cannella rarely speechifie­d on the Senate floor, unlike his more verbose colleagues.

But he did so last Friday, the last day of the 2016-18 biennial session and Canella’s last time on the floor.

Cannella, a Republican from Modesto, rose to talk about a bill that would fast-track an Inglewood arena for the Clippers basketball team through the regulatory thicket of the California Environmen­tal Quality Act.

Cannella read a list of the projects, most of them profession­al sports venues, that have received such favored treatment recently, to wit:

“A Rams stadium in LA that never materializ­ed; Farmer’s Field in downtown LA that never materializ­ed; the Golden1 Center for the Kings basketball team in Sacramento; a Chargers / Raiders football stadium in Carson that never materializ­ed; a new Warriors arena under constructi­on in San Francisco, and the new Chargers / Rams Hollywood Park stadium under constructi­on in Inglewood.

“That’s not to mention,” Cannella continued, CEQA “streamlini­ng for Facebook to expand its Menlo Park headquarte­rs and for two skyscraper­s near the Capital Records building in Los Angeles.

And now this year we’re considerin­g streamlini­ng for a new A’s stadium in Oakland (and) a new Clippers arena in Inglewood.”

Cannella’s point is that while Capitol politician­s have eagerly granted special CEQA treatment to wealthy sports team owners, such as the Clippers’ Steve Ballmer, big corporatio­ns such as Facebook and megaprojec­t developers, they’ve been unwilling to undertake a broader CEQA reform for more vital projects.

He pointed out, for instance, that while the Legislatur­e passed a landmark package of gas taxes and automotive fees to finance billions of dollars in transporta­tion improvemen­ts, they must go through the torturous CEQA process.

“If it’s good enough for our wealthy athletes and team owners, it’s good enough for the rest of us,” Cannella concluded.

Cannella’s remark about the transporta­tion package, Senate Bill 1, is especially pertinent because he broke with opposition from other Republican­s and cast the 27th and decisive vote in favor in the Senate.

By day’s end on Friday, the Legislatur­e had passed the fast-track bills for both the Clippers arena and the Oakland A’s stadium, after their backers made glowing speeches about supposed economic benefits.

“This is not just about basketball, my friends,” said Sen. Steven Bradford, a Gardena Democrat who carried the Clippers bill. “It’s about creating jobs and economic equity in a city that has been marginaliz­ed.”

There’s actually no evidence that sports venues generate any fundamenta­l economic gains, and many academic studies prove otherwise.

Sports are entertainm­ent — consumptio­n, not production — and spending on them merely displaces spending on other consumer goods and services.

While there’s nothing wrong with such entertainm­ent per se, and billionair­e team owners and millionair­e athletes may benefit, there’s no net gain in economic output for society as a whole.

Meanwhile, however, vital transporta­tion projects don’t receive CEQA fast-tracking, nor do even more desperatel­y needed housing projects.

Assembly Bill 3030, for instance, would have exempted from CEQA any residentia­l or mixed-use project with 50 percent affordable housing, financed by a “qualified opportunit­y fund” and in compliance with local land use plans.

It passed the Assembly only to quietly die in the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, a victim of the Capitol’s foot-dragging on broader CEQA reform, which outgoing Gov. Jerry Brown has termed “the Lord’s work.”

Ironically, the author of AB 3030, Assemblywo­man Anna Caballero of Salinas, is the Democratic candidate to succeed Cannella this year and if she wins, the Democrats will regain their 27-seat supermajor­ity in the Senate.

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