Daily Breeze (Torrance)

The stakes for Newsom's plan to streamline projects

- By Dan Walters

Gavin Newsom is fond of proclaimin­g “big hairy audacious goals,” having borrowed the term from a book on successful corporate leadership.

However, he has not been particular­ly successful in delivering on his promises of bold, transforma­tive action — such as single-payer health care for all California­ns or constructi­ng 3.5 million new housing units.

The hairiest and most audacious of Newsom's goals is converting California's massive economy — the fourth largest in the world, according to recent estimates — into one that booms while reducing its carbon footprint to zero in the next 22 years.

It would involve, among other things, shifting 30 million cars and trucks from gasoline or diesel power to electricit­y or hydrogen and abolishing gas-fired power plants in favor of solar, wind or thermal generation.

Such massive conversion­s are technologi­cally doable, but they would be very expensive for consumers, utilities and government­s. They would require a lot of constructi­on projects, such as solar and wind farms, with some of the latter offshore.

Newsom says the state is planning to spend $180 billion over the next decade on projects to decarboniz­e the state's economy and make its water supply less precarious, much of it from the federal government. However, he laments, the ability to deliver those public works is hampered by red tape, including the misuse of the California Environmen­tal Quality Act by project opponents.

“The question is, are we going to screw it up by being consumed by paralysis and process?” Newsom said last week while announcing a package of legislatio­n aimed at speeding up project delivery. “We're here to assert a different paradigm, to commit ourselves to results.”

Newsom made his announceme­nt at a solar energy farm in the San Joaquin Valley, citing it as an example of the kinds of projects his proposal

The ranch sits in the middle of the proposed Sites Reservoir in Maxwell, Calif., one of Gov. Newsom's proposed big new projects.

would affect.

If approved by the Legislatur­e, Newsom's package would extend to major public works projects, including a very controvers­ial water tunnel beneath the Sacramento­San Joaquin Delta and a big reservoir, Sites, in the Sacramento Valley, the same kind of fast-track permitting that the state has given to sports arenas.

“I love sports,” Newsom said. “But I also love roads. I love transit. I love bridges. And I love clean energy projects like the one we're seeing here. It's not just about stadiums. And we've proven we can get it done for stadiums. So why the hell can't we translate that to all these other projects?”

Significan­tly, however, Newsom's proposal to speed up CEQA's process on big public works projects excludes housing, a field where the law has been obviously misused to delay or kill much-needed developmen­ts.

While administra­tion officials say that CEQA reforms could indirectly benefit housing by reducing the volume of informatio­n that must be gathered, Newsom obviously

doesn't want a direct confrontat­ion over the law's applicatio­n to housing, the shortage of which has exacerbate­d poverty and the state's homelessne­ss crisis.

The housing exclusion is drawing fire from pro-housing groups such as California YIMBY. Defenders of Wildlife, along with the Natural Resources Defense Council and more than 70 other conservati­on organizati­ons immediatel­y published an opposition letter. Opponents of specific projects, such as the Delta tunnel — which has been on the list of proposed public works for at least 60 years — are likewise angered.

With opposition mounting, the package is not a slam dunk in the Legislatur­e, even though Newsom offers it in the form of budget “trailer bills” that can be enacted without the scrutiny that most legislatio­n must endure — a misuse of process unto itself.

Newsom may be staking his governorsh­ip on procedural changes needed to make decarboniz­ation, his biggest goal, a reality.

Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

 ?? GARY REYES — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ??
GARY REYES — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States