
After Half a Century, California Democrats are Starting to Realize They Should Have Been Listening to Conservatives After All
The LA times on June 2 ran an article titled “After half a century, California Legislators on the verge of overhauling a landmark environmental law.” The article chronicles the efforts of the Legislature to reform the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) because it has been abused by unions, environmental organizations, “community organizers,” and, some cases, business competitors who used CEQA to advance their personal purposes, rather than environmental protection. The result? hardly anyone who is not a multimillionaire can afford to buy a house in California. Gasoline is not far behind.
Of course, conservatives have been pushing these changes since the California Supreme Court rewrote the law in the late ’70’s to apply the law, originally meant only to apply to government projects, to private development across the state. Interesting fact: in 1974, seventy per cent of Californians could afford to buy a median priced home in California. The Supreme Court rewrote the law in 1976 and by 1980, only 17% of Californians could afford to buy a median priced home. Since that time, it has only gotten worse. Gas prices were… Read More