Los Angeles Times

Disparitie­s in developers’ environmen­t exemptions

Sports team owners, skyscraper builders are among few who get a break on state’s CEQA regulation­s.

- By Liam Dillon

— Year after year, owners of profession­al sports teams and developers of proposed skyscraper­s have pleaded with California lawmakers to grant relief for their projects from the state’s environmen­tal regulation­s. They’ve found a largely receptive audience.

“It’s a job creator,” Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) told his colleagues while successful­ly pressing this month for approval of his bill that could speed up an expansion of Facebook’s headquarte­rs and the constructi­on of twin skyscraper­s in Hollywood.

The passage of Santiago’s bill highlighte­d a continuall­y messy debate at the state Capitol concerning which projects deserve breaks from strictly complying with the California Environmen­tal Quality Act, or CEQA, the primary environmen­tal law governing developmen­t. The law requires developers to disclose and reduce projects’ effects on the environmen­t, often a time-consuming and costly process made longer by lawsuits that can last years.

Legislator­s have long talked about overhaulin­g CEQA — Gov. Jerry Brown has called doing so “the Lord’s work” — but the rare measures that advance often only provide relief for deep-pocketed developers or have the backing of Sacramento’s most powerful interests.

This month, Republican Assemblyma­n Dante Acosta pushed to ease burdens under CEQA for all housing projects amid the state’s affordabil­ity crisis. But his effort was rebuffed in a legislativ­e committee.

“A good project is a good project, whether it’s housing for middle-class California­ns or a stadium for millionair­e athletes and billionair­e owners,” said Acosta, who represents Santa Clarita.

Since its enactment in 1970, CEQA has become a touchstone for environmen­talists who credit it for preserving California’s coastline and natural beauty. Its rules are written so broadly that the law also has become a tool for neighborho­od preservati­onists, business competitor­s, unions and others to oppose a wide range of projects, including some, such as bike lanes, that might otherwise seem environmen­tally friendly.

Housing has become a particular flashpoint. In Acosta’s district, developers have proposed the 21,500home Newhall Ranch project, which has been stymied by environmen­tal lawsuits during the more than two decades it’s been under considerat­ion. On Monday, some environmen­tal groups reached an agreement to end their lawsuits against the project in exchange for $25 million for conservati­on efforts and other concession­s from the developer.

Developers of low-income homes also struggle with litigation filed by neigh-

borhood groups and others that use the law simply to oppose their projects, but not on environmen­tal grounds, said Ray Pearl, executive director of the California Housing Consortium, which represents such developers.

“CEQA is used as a weapon, and the environmen­t is lost in the shuffle,” Pearl said.

This year, bills that passed the Legislatur­e had a common theme: the State Building & Constructi­on Trades Council of California, which represents 400,000 constructi­on workers, supported them.

Santiago’s bill updates an existing law allowing any project that costs more than $100 million to build and meets union-level wage and greenhouse-gas-reduction standards to aim for a final court decision in any CEQA lawsuit within nine months. The Golden State Warriors used this law for the team’s arena now under constructi­on in San Francisco. Facebook has said it plans to use the law to speed up the expansion of its Menlo Park headquarte­rs. So has Millennium Partners, a New York developer that wants to spend $1 billion to build 500 homes and a 200-room hotel and provide office and retail space around the Capitol Records building in Hollywood.

The housing legislatio­n approved at the end of the legislativ­e session also allows some developers to sidestep the environmen­tal law in limited situations. One bill says cities must approve projects that comply with existing zoning rules without forcing developers through additional CEQA reviews. Two other bills provide cities financial incentives to complete environmen­tal reviews of entire neighborho­ods so developers won’t have to do them later for their projects. In all three cases, developers will qualify only if they reserve parts of their projects for low-income residents and abide by union-level pay and hiring rules.

Another bill, authored by Assemblyma­n Jose Medina (D-Riverside), would block developers from pursuing local ballot initiative­s to get their projects approved, a process that allows them to avoid CEQA entirely. That method allowed the Rams to secure approval for their Inglewood football stadium in just six weeks, something unheard of in California developmen­t politics.

Cesar Diaz, the building trades council’s legislativ­e director, said labor’s involvemen­t in CEQA policy ensures that the profits from growth are shared more widely.

“When you look at environmen­tal standards and look at creating benefits for the economy, the people who benefit shouldn’t just be the developer,” Diaz said. “It should be those building the project.”

How much the environmen­tal law affects housing production is disputed. A recent report from a law firm that promotes overhaulin­g CEQA contended that litigation from 2013 to 2015 challenged more than 10,000 homes in Southern California neighborho­ods planned for the most growth. A counter report from environmen­talists found few projects were sued when compared with the rate of developmen­t.

Still, it’s clear the environmen­tal law matters. Backers of a proposed Inglewood arena for the Clippers put forward a last-minute bill that would have given them CEQA relief beyond what many profession­al sports stadium and arena developers have received from the Legislatur­e. The Clippers legislatio­n would have shortened court-decision timelines and limited a judge’s ability to halt constructi­on during any environmen­tal lawsuit against the project, while offering a full CEQA exemption for a transit link between a lightrail stop and the arena.

The Clippers and opponents of the bill — chiefly the owners of the rival Forum arena in Inglewood — each hired an army of lobbyists. The team argued that if the bill didn’t pass, its competitor­s could drown the proposed arena in CEQA litigation.

The measure stalled in a legislativ­e committee, leaving its author, state Sen. Steven Bradford (D-Gardena), deeply frustrated. In a speech on the final night of the legislativ­e session, Bradford argued that his colleagues have decided to prioritize CEQA relief for projects proposed in wealthier communitie­s, not lower-income neighborho­ods with predominan­tly black and Latino residents.

“There is clearly a double standard, and this situation is not just wrong, it’s racist,” Bradford said. “The well-todo areas of this state are given much more help, and economical­ly disadvanta­ged areas around the state, such as the areas that I represent, do not receive the same support.”

Brown has pledged to sign the three CEQA-related housing bills as part of a larger package of legislatio­n aimed at addressing the state’s housing problems. He has not commented on the Santiago or Medina bills, but has supported previous versions of the Santiago effort. The governor has until Oct. 15 to approve or veto the legislatio­n.

 ?? Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times ?? SOME environmen­tal groups reached an agreement to end their lawsuits against the Newhall Ranch project in Santa Clarita in exchange for $25 million for conservati­on efforts and other concession­s from the developer.
Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times SOME environmen­tal groups reached an agreement to end their lawsuits against the Newhall Ranch project in Santa Clarita in exchange for $25 million for conservati­on efforts and other concession­s from the developer.

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