Would the Mother of All NIMBY Ballot Initiatives Accidentally Allow More Development?
California activists have proposed a ballot initiative that would effectively strip the state government of the ability to regulate land use.

In response to increasingly successful state-level efforts in California to nudge local governments into allowing more housing, anti-development opponents have introduced a sweeping ballot measure that would effectively strip the state of its ability to regulate land use.
This past week, activists submitted language for their "Californians for Community Planning Initiative" to the state's attorney general. Their measure would amend the state's constitution to specify that in the event of a conflict between state and local land use laws, local laws will prevail.
The immediate target of the initiative, according to the group's website, is a series of state bills—S.B. 9, S.B. 10, and A.B. 1401—that respectively legalize duplexes statewide, allow local governments to skip lengthy environmental reviews when zoning for small apartment buildings, and forbid local governments from requiring that new development near transit stops include parking spaces.
"For far too long, California has relied on a broken land use planning system driven by Sacramento politicians and special interests that incentivizes over-development of market rate housing," said John Heath, an initiative proponent and president of Los Angeles' United Homeowners' Association, in a press release. "We the people get to determine what our neighborhoods look like instead of relying on one-size-fits-all social engineering policies from Sacramento."
Both S.B. 9 and S.B. 10 passed the legislature this week. A.B. 1401 was killed in committee.
The idea behind these bills—alongside past state legislative efforts to legalize mid-rise apartment buildings near transit stops and job centers—is to route around local governments who too often stymie new housing development.
Bills that shift land-use decisions to the state level, where policy makers are theoretically more inclined to support new development, have popped up in state legislatures from Maryland to Oregon in recent years.
The preamble to the Community Planning initiative raises a number of issues with this approach. Local officials, it says, are better positioned to address the impacts of new development on infrastructure and the environment. Allowing denser apartments close to bus and rail stops will "eliminate the availability of low or very low income housing near public transit," it reads.
To that end, the initiative would render unenforceable any manner of state laws designed to boost housing production.
A homeowner trying to use the newly passed S.B. 9 to build a duplex on a plot the city has zoned for single-family housing would be stopped cold. Larger developers, meanwhile, would be prevented from making use of state "density bonus" laws that let them construct larger apartment buildings in exchange for including units that are below market rate.
The initiative would also take the teeth out of laws requiring local governments to allow accessory dwelling units. Those have proven remarkably successful at goosing new housing production. State laws that require local communities to plan for enough housing to accommodate population growth would also have to go.
The Community Planning initiative does carve out exemptions for state laws governing power plants, and water, communications, and transportation infrastructure. It would also leave in place state land use regulations of coastal areas, which are incredibly hostile to new development.
On the other hand, the breadth of the ballot measure's language would, perhaps unintentionally, also prevent the enforcement of state laws that limit the development of new housing.
That would include the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), a state law that requires government agencies to study and mitigate the impacts of a new development before approving it.
Because the law empowers third parties to sue if they think an agency hasn't studied a new development enough, activists and special interests frequently use CEQA to stop new construction or extract concessions from developers.
The ballot initiative—by overriding state laws when they conflict with local zoning codes—would therefore override local activists' ability to use CEQA to slow up development.
"Ironically enough, [CEQA] is something that has been widely championed by the interest groups that are usually on the opposition side of state housing legislation," says Christopher Elmendorf, a professor at the University of California Davis School of Law. "It's a law that procedurally, and through the requirement of mitigation conditions, substantively, regulates the use of land."
The Community Planning initiative wouldn't stop there; it would also potentially prevent the enforcement of new building code standards that require new construction to come equipped with solar panels, and which add an estimated $20,000 to the cost of a single home.
The state's rent control law, which arguably reduces developers' willingness to build new housing, would also be unenforceable. (The flip side is that state limits on a local government's ability to adopt stricter rent control policies would also be unenforceable.)
"It's uncertain how it would affect housing production in the aggregate," says Elmendorf. "It is likely to change the pattern of housing production so that there's more housing that's built in far-flung areas that tend to be relatively pro-growth and less housing to be built in existing residential neighborhoods where there tends to be organized homeowner opposition."
The ultimate scope of the initiative, he says, would end up being hashed out by the courts.
On Wednesday, supporters of the Community Planning measure filed their initiative text with the state's attorney general, who will then write a title and summary of the measure. Petitioners will then be allowed to start gathering signatures to get it on the ballot.
They say their goal is to get their initiative on the November 2022 ballot.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
It's California, no one cares.
Except...every bad idea that California adopts gets copied by other wanna be states.
I'm torn on this one.
Seriously I don’t know why more people haven’t tried this, I work two shifts, 2 hours in the day and 2 in the evening…FEx And i get surly a check of $12600 what’s awesome is I m working from home so I get more time with my kids.
Try it, you won’t regret it!…….. VISIT HERE
Start working from home! Great job for students, stay-at-home moms or anyone needing an extra income…You can work this job As part time or As A full time job.HNy You only need a computer and a reliable internet connection… Make $90 hourly and up to $12000 a month by following link at the bottom… You can have your first check by the end of this week…Lifetime Opportunity
This is what I do.................. VISIT HERE
I made over $700 per day using my mobile in part time. I recently got my 5th paycheck of $19,632 and all i was doing is to copy and paste work online. this home work makes me able to generate more cash daily easily.FBn simple to do work and regular income from this are just superb. Here what i am doing.
Try now................... VISIT HERE
CEQA has also been ruled to freeze enrollments to Berkley.
https://slate.com/business/2021/08/judge-rules-uc-berkeley-must-freeze-enrollment-under-environmental-regulation.html
Cali seems kinda crazy.
Does the court ruling include an environmental impact statement?
Cali has much bigger problems than this.
Yes, by all means, let's all concentrate on the one single biggest problem of them all, as determined by ... buckleup?
Every single other problem will be ignored, until such time as buckleup changes xer mind on what the current biggest problem is.
I mean, buckleup is apparently incapable of multi-tasking, and heaven knows, the 40M inhabitants of Caliland can't be allowed to form groups to work on different problems, because they might work on a problem that is not as big as the biggest problem, as determined at the sole and transitory discretion of buckleup.
You know how it goes. Reason is wrong about literally everything because they were mean to Trump. So when they post a good article it still must be wrong because they were mean to Trump. In this case the article is wrong because it's focusing on the wrong problem, all because Reason was mean to Trump. If Reason hadn't lost all credibility by being mean to Trump then this would have been a great article. But they were, so it isn't.
buckleup specifically said "Cali". You've got TDS.
I'm not the one who whines and cries and bitches and moans at literally every article coming from this magazine.
Actually, you are.
Actually, he might be right for once. His whining and bitching is about the commenters who dare to call out faux-libertarianish articles.
Most of the time, Reason doesn't even manage to be wrong; most of their articles have become meaningless, repetitious drivel.
Regular firestorms, severe electricity shortages and a looming water crisis tend to rank pretty high on "biggest problems" lists by any objective measure.
There is not a snowball's chance in hell that a California court would hold that CEQA no longer has the force of law as a result of this initiative. I don't know to what degree of contortions they would need to resort, but I'm confident that they would find a way.
Why do you think that is "unintentional"?
The purpose of the initiative is to return zoning and planning to local communities. That includes overriding state zoning mandates just as much as overriding state environmental laws.
["For far too long, California has relied on a broken land use planning system driven by Sacramento politicians and special interests that incentivizes over-development of market rate housing," said John Heath, an initiative proponent...]
Right, and California has SUCH an "over-development of market rate housing."