Los Angeles Times

Lawmakers seek to boost L.A.’s 2028 Games bid

Bill would exempt transit projects tied to Olympics from key environmen­tal law.

- By Liam Dillon

SACRAMENTO — California lawmakers introduced legislatio­n Friday to bypass a key state environmen­tal law that would dramatical­ly ease the constructi­on of rail, bus and other transit projects connected to Los Angeles’ bid to host the Olympic Games in 2028.

Under the bill, any public transporta­tion effort related to the city’s Olympics bid would be exempt from the California Environmen­tal Quality Act, the state’s primary environmen­tal law governing developmen­t. The law, known as CEQA, requires developers to disclose and minimize a project’s impact on the environmen­t, often a time-consuming and costly process that involves litigation.

The measure, Senate Bill 789, also provides major CEQA relief to help the constructi­on of an NBA arena for the Los Angeles Clippers in nearby Inglewood.

If it passes, the bill would speed transit officials’ attempts to build rail and bus lines before the 2028 Olympic Games while also providing a boost to the arena’s chances at getting completed. Doing so, however, would cut through longstandi­ng regulation­s that environmen­talists and community activists in California have held as sacrosanct to preserving the state’s natural beauty and involving residents in the developmen­t process.

State Sen. Steven Bradford (D-Gardena), who represents Inglewood and is the author of the bill, said both the Olympics and constructi­on of the Clippers’ arena were too important to risk stalling through the regular CEQA process.

“These major projects will help boost the economy in Inglewood and the Greater Los Angeles region, while improving investment, entertainm­ent and highlight-

ing Inglewood’s significan­ce to California,” Bradford said in a statement.

But SB 789 already is drawing swift pushback from environmen­tal interests and those opposed to the arena. And it didn’t come at the behest of LA 2028, the Olympic bid committee, or the city of Los Angeles.

“Mayor Garcetti did not request these amendments, nor did LA 2028, and we do not need them to make the 2028 Games a success,” Garcetti spokesman Alex Comisar said in a statement, adding that the mayor first saw the final legislatio­n Friday morning and was still reviewing it.

Regional transporta­tion officials plan to increase services dramatical­ly before the Olympic Games, including expanded light rail in Leimert Park, Inglewood and El Segundo, and from Koreatown through West L.A. Many projects already are under constructi­on, and others are far along in the environmen­tal review process. A proposed peoplemove­r at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport linking terminals with shuttle buses, ride-hailing services and a new light-rail connection is currently facing a CEQA lawsuit.

It’s not immediatel­y clear which transporta­tion projects the legislatio­n could speed up, but the language is written broadly to include anything policymake­rs could tie to the Olympics bid.

Michael Turner, deputy executive officer of government relations at the Metropolit­an Transit Authority, said the agency also wasn’t involved in crafting the legislatio­n. “We’re looking at the bill to see what kind of impacts it would have.”

For the proposed Clippers arena in Inglewood, the measure goes further than many other bills lawmakers have passed recently to facilitate the constructi­on of NFL stadiums and NBA arenas. SB 789 would exempt from CEQA entirely a new transit link between a lightrail stop and the proposed arena, which would also connect to the under-constructi­on NFL stadium for the Rams and the Chargers.

It also would expand the arena developers’ ability to take private property through eminent domain — except nearby residences — to ease constructi­on. And the bill aims to speed courtdecis­ion deadlines for any lawsuits the arena might face, as well as halt a judge’s ability to block the project, even if the judge found an environmen­tal review didn't adequately study traffic problems or had other flaws.

Bills such as SB 789 that carve out exemptions to CEQA frequently face substantia­l opposition at the Capitol. Environmen­talists who believe the law is essential to lessen the effects of developmen­t are among many powerful interest groups that combat efforts to weaken it.

David Pettit, a senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council, called Bradford’s bill “the worst CEQA exemption bill I’ve ever seen,” and vowed to fight its passage. The legislatio­n, he said, is unnecessar­y because the arena isn’t scheduled to open until 2024 and the Olympic Games are in 2028, so environmen­tal reviews for the projects should be completed well in advance.

The bill, Pettit said, also includes a provision that would lower greenhouse gas emission standards for the arena beyond what CEQA typically allows. “In a state where we’re proud to show the rest of the country our dedication on climate change, that’s crazy,” he said.

Little is known about the proposed Clippers arena. There aren’t any public site plans or renderings. The only specifics that have been made available are that it will be privately financed, seat 18,000 to 20,000 people and will include parking, a practice facility and team offices. The city of Inglewood is in the middle of formal negotiatio­ns with the Clippers over the facility.

The Clippers currently play at the AEG-owned Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, which they share with the Lakers, and their lease runs through the 2024 season. Owner Steve Ballmer has said the team will honor it.

Chris Meany, the arena’s project manager, said the Clippers hope to receive help for their project because lawmakers gave relief to the Sacramento Kings in 2013 including shortening court decision deadlines for lawsuits facing the basketball team’s downtown arena.

The developers, Meany said, still will undergo a full review under CEQA, including writing an environmen­tal impact report, and working with Inglewood residents to improve the project. “Under this bill, we would remain obligated to work through the complete process and the bill would only fix the timeline for lawsuits that might be filed by our competitor­s,” Meany said in a statement.

Opponents of the Clippers’ plan include Madison Square Garden Co., which owns Inglewood’s Forum arena. In a statement, the company called the bill a “radical and extreme attempt to undermine California’s environmen­tal protection laws.”

The bill has to pass both houses of the Legislatur­e before lawmakers adjourn for the year Sept. 15.

 ?? Christian K. Lee Los Angeles Times ?? STATE SEN. Steven Bradford, left, with Gov. Jerry Brown, wrote the bill to speed transit projects and constructi­on on the Clippers’ arena.
Christian K. Lee Los Angeles Times STATE SEN. Steven Bradford, left, with Gov. Jerry Brown, wrote the bill to speed transit projects and constructi­on on the Clippers’ arena.

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