Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Walters: Environmental Exemptions Yes, but Reform No
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 4 years ago on
September 13, 2020

Share

The California Legislature has a handy website that allows users to find and track the thousands of bills that are introduced during its two-year sessions.

If one enters “California Environmental Quality Act” into the website’s search function, 171 bills pop up for the session that ended a fortnight ago, implying the Legislature’s penchant for tinkering with California’s landmark environmental legislation that then-Gov. Ronald Reagan signed 50 years ago.

Dan Walters

Opinion

As applied after enactment, CEQA evolved into a polarizing facet of governance — revered by environmental groups as a tool to block or alter developments they dislike, denounced as a wasteful impediment by public and private developers, and misused by unions and anti-housing organizations for reasons having nothing to do with the environment.

Jerry Brown, who followed Reagan into the governor’s office, later became one of CEQA’s sharpest critics, particularly after serving a stint as mayor of Oakland and seeing it used to stifle plans to remake the city.

After returning to the governorship in 2011, Brown declared that reforming CEQA was “the Lord’s work” and complained that it was being misused to thwart his plans to expand housing for low-income families.

No Legislative Session Would Be Complete Without a Flurry of CEQA Exemption Bills

Brown, in an interview with UCLA’s Blueprint magazine, lamented that “it’s easier to build in Texas” but that changing CEQA would be politically impossible because “The unions won’t let you because they use it as a hammer to get project labor agreements.”

However, instead of spending political capital for a comprehensive overhaul of CEQA to prevent its misuse, Brown continued the practice — or malpractice — of granting full or partial CEQA exemptions for individual projects whose developers had political pull, most obviously for sports arenas such as a basketball palace near the Capitol.

No legislative session would be complete without a flurry of CEQA exemption bills and the dying hours of this year’s version was typical.

When the session ended, for example, Senate Bill 995 was still sitting on the Senate floor and still needing one more vote to send it to Gov. Gavin Newsom. The death of SB 995 was especially odd since it was being personally carried by the Senate’s leader, President Pro Tem Toni Atkins, and was part of the Senate’s effort to jump-start badly needed housing by extending fast-track CEQA processing for some projects.

Although SB 995 died in the final hours, the Legislature did approve easing CEQA requirements for certain kinds of transportation projects (Senate Bill 757 and Senate Bill 288) and for drinking water improvements in disadvantaged communities (Senate Bill 974).

Moreover, They Can Sidestep the Harder Work of Reforming CEQA

There’s every reason to believe that projects receiving fast-track treatment by these three bills are deserving, but it also raises the question often posed in debates on such bills: Why not overhaul CEQA for everyone, not just those championed by particular legislators for particular reasons?

Truth is, legislators rather like the current de facto system of individualized exemptions from CEQA’s often-ponderous, time-consuming requirements. They can posture as quasi-partners in popular projects such as sports arenas, and as advocates for politically correct infrastructure such as mass transit or water systems. They can draw campaign cash from exemption-seeking developers.

Moreover, they can sidestep the harder work of reforming CEQA, which would mean confronting the law’s influential users, such as environmental groups, labor unions and the NIMBys who oppose housing development.

By catering to exemption seekers, legislators and governors make CEQA even more onerous, relatively, for those not in political favor and make much-needed comprehensive reform less likely.

CEQA reform may be, as Jerry Brown said, “the Lord’s work,” but the state’s politicians are agnostics.

CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

[activecampaign form=19]

DON'T MISS

Religion Has Been in Decline. This Christmas Seems Different.

DON'T MISS

California Limits Junk Fees: New Law Blocks Fines for Declined ATM Withdrawals

DON'T MISS

Research Finds Vaccines Are Not Behind the Rise in Autism. So What Is?

DON'T MISS

New ‘Superman’ Trailer Is Most Watched for Warner Bros., DC Comics Online

DON'T MISS

Elon Musk Is Creating His Own Texas Town. Hundreds Already Live There.

DON'T MISS

Amazon and Starbucks Workers Are Striking. What Does It Mean for Labor Under Trump?

DON'T MISS

CalFire Shares 2024’s Top Images. See Highlights of Intense Wildfire Season.

DON'T MISS

While Sherrod Motors to Boise, Entz’s Bulldogs Add a Coach, Transfers, Recruits

DON'T MISS

California and Texas Duke It Out for Worst State to Raise a Family

DON'T MISS

Musk Slams ‘Wokepedia’ for Biased Editing, Urges Donation Boycott

UP NEXT

Opinion: Does Jesus Want Christians to Be Environmentalists?

UP NEXT

New Decisions Boost California’s Zero-Emission Vehicle Mandate, but Major Hurdles Remain

UP NEXT

The Surprising Sexual Politics of Nicole Kidman’s Kinky ‘Babygirl’

UP NEXT

Tax Loopholes Cost California and Its Cities $107 Billion but Get Little Scrutiny

UP NEXT

24 for 24: GV Wire’s Top Images of 2024

UP NEXT

Did You Know Fresno County Doesn’t Have a Tax Assessor?

UP NEXT

Congress Can Give Us Clean Affordable Energy in 2025

UP NEXT

He Has Prison in His Past. Now He Hopes Law School Is in His Future

UP NEXT

Can New State Regs Resolve California’s Property Insurance Crisis?

UP NEXT

The First New Foreign Policy Challenge for Trump Just Became Clear

New ‘Superman’ Trailer Is Most Watched for Warner Bros., DC Comics Online

20 hours ago

Elon Musk Is Creating His Own Texas Town. Hundreds Already Live There.

21 hours ago

Amazon and Starbucks Workers Are Striking. What Does It Mean for Labor Under Trump?

21 hours ago

CalFire Shares 2024’s Top Images. See Highlights of Intense Wildfire Season.

2 days ago

While Sherrod Motors to Boise, Entz’s Bulldogs Add a Coach, Transfers, Recruits

2 days ago

California and Texas Duke It Out for Worst State to Raise a Family

2 days ago

Musk Slams ‘Wokepedia’ for Biased Editing, Urges Donation Boycott

2 days ago

Explore the Holiday Magic in California’s Death Valley

2 days ago

Visalia Unlicensed Driver Smashes Into Home. No Injuries Reported.

2 days ago

Penn State’s Schumacher-Cawley Is 1st Female Coach to Win NCAA Volleyball Title

2 days ago

Religion Has Been in Decline. This Christmas Seems Different.

Opinion by Ross Douthat on Dec. 21, 2024. In March, I drove with my family up from Rome into the mountains of southeastern Umbria, to reach ...

17 hours ago

Photo of a Christmas tree in the NORAD Tracks Santa Center at Peterson Air Force Base
17 hours ago

Religion Has Been in Decline. This Christmas Seems Different.

19 hours ago

California Limits Junk Fees: New Law Blocks Fines for Declined ATM Withdrawals

An autistic boy with his mother at home in Texas, Aug. 5, 2023. There is no blood test or brain scan to determine who has autism, and with no singular cause, there is no singular culprit behind autism’s rise. (Callaghan O'Hare/The New York Times)
19 hours ago

Research Finds Vaccines Are Not Behind the Rise in Autism. So What Is?

20 hours ago

New ‘Superman’ Trailer Is Most Watched for Warner Bros., DC Comics Online

The SpaceX starship rocket near the Starbase launchpad in Boca Chica, Texas, Feb. 21, 2024. Employees of SpaceX have filed a formal petition to create the city of Starbase. (Meridith Kohut/The New York Times)
21 hours ago

Elon Musk Is Creating His Own Texas Town. Hundreds Already Live There.

21 hours ago

Amazon and Starbucks Workers Are Striking. What Does It Mean for Labor Under Trump?

2 days ago

CalFire Shares 2024’s Top Images. See Highlights of Intense Wildfire Season.

2 days ago

While Sherrod Motors to Boise, Entz’s Bulldogs Add a Coach, Transfers, Recruits

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend