(MENAFN Editorial) SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 13, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --Litigation under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) is worsening the state's housing crisis, according to a new study by Holland & Knight. The study, "California Environmental Quality Act Lawsuits and California's Housing Crisis," analyzes all CEQA lawsuits filed statewide between 2013 and 2015 and reveals that housing remains the top target of CEQA lawsuits. It was published in the Hastings Environmental Law Journal and is available .
The new study uses the same methodology as Holland & Knight's earlier three-year (2010-2012) of statewide CEQA litigation. All CEQA petitions must be sent to the California Attorney General's office, and the firm was able to obtain copies under the California Public Records Act.
The top target of CEQA lawsuits in both studies were housing projects, with an increase in the share of CEQA lawsuits shown in the new study. The study also includes a more detailed review of challenged housing projects in the Southern California region (Los Angeles, Orange, Ventura, Riverside, San Bernardino and Inyo counties): 14,000 housing units were challenged, 98 percent of the challenged units were located in existing community infill locations, 70 percent were located within one-half mile of transit services and 78 percent were located in whiter, wealthier and healthier areas of the region."Given California's extraordinary housing crisis and the shame inherent in having the nation's highest poverty rate in one of the world's most successful economies, our latest research clearly demonstrates the need to update CEQA's litigation rules to bring enforcement of the law into alignment with the state's environmental, equity and economic priorities," said Jennifer Hernandez, the head of Holland & Knight's West Coast Land Use and Environment Group. "CEQA is one of the well-recognized culprits in California's housing supply and affordability crisis. The need to update CEQA litigation rules to end non-environmental abuse of this important California law is stronger than ever."
According to the latest findings, the disproportionate use of CEQA to target housing, especially apartments and condominiums, not only constrains supply, it also perpetuates land use segregation by race and class. California communities have a long history of resisting higher density housing that is affordable to workers earning lower wages, especially workers from minority groups such as African Americans, Latinos and Asians.CEQA elevates this legacy bias to the environmental "baseline" against which new housing proposals are all assessed as "impacts" to the environmental character of these communities. Under CEQA's existing lawsuit rules, anyone can sue – anonymously and repeatedly – to challenge new housing, transit, infrastructure and public service plans and projects that change existing neighborhoods.Additional key findings include:
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SOURCE Holland & Knight LLP
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