County Where It Took 50 Years To Approve New Subdivision Bans New Airbnbs
Officials in Marin County, California, argue a temporary moratorium on new short-term rentals in western portions of the county is necessary to preserve the area's limited housing stock.

Last week, Marin County, California, passed an emergency 45-day moratorium on new short-term rentals in the western parts of the county to address its pressing housing supply and affordability crises. Officials have expressed the hope that pumping the brakes on new Airbnb listings will preserve some of the area's limited housing stock for native renters and homebuyers.
"Visitors from around the world enjoy our county's natural beauty and contribute to our economy," said Sarah Jones of the Marin County Community Development Agency earlier this month. "But it's a growing problem that the people who work in West Marin be able to live in West Marin."
A county report on the moratorium notes that 551 of the 5,250 homes in western Marin County are being used as short-term rentals. The report says this is contributing to a housing shortage and an attendant affordability crisis that's driven average rents to nearly $3,000 and median home prices to $1.8 million.
The moratorium is intended to buy the county time while it crafts new restrictions on Airbnbs. Limiting the supply of vacation rentals is one way to address a shortage of homes. An alternative would be to just build new homes to meet demand.
But that's easier said than done in Marin County, where regulatory red tape and legal challenges have kept one proposed 43-unit subdivision in planning hell for nearly 50 years. The long saga behind that project suggests that a world where there's enough housing for both vacationers and longtime residents in Marin County is possible—if only it didn't take half a century to approve a new subdivision.
The tangled legal history of the much-delayed project stretches back to the 1970s, when Marin County reduced the number of homes that could be built on a 110-acre site owned by developer The Martha Company from 300 to just 34.
That sparked a federal lawsuit from The Martha Company claiming the downzoning was a regulatory taking. In 1976, it reached a settlement with the county that entitled it to build 43 single-family homes on half the site. The other half would be reserved for publicly accessible open space.
Years of planning and abortive attempts to develop the property followed. By 2005, The Martha Company and the county were back in court, after the latter sued to overturn the 1976 settlement agreement. That effort failed. Another settlement was reached in 2007 once again affirming The Martha Company's right to build 43 homes on its property.
But victory in federal court only freed up The Martha Company to enter the gauntlet of state-mandated environmental review.
The 1970 California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) requires that governments prepare environmental impact reports for projects they have discretion over. That law guarantees citizens the ability to participate and make comments via public hearings on those projects. It also allows them to sue a local government if it approves an environmental impact report they think wasn't thorough enough.
The law has become a favored tool of NIMBY (Not in my backyard) activists to delay or stop projects they dislike—whether that's a new apartment building, a new hospital, or new college students—which is exactly what happened in The Martha Company development.
After filing a new development application in 2008, the company spent years going back and forth with Marin County officials and anti-development activists on the design of their project and changes that might mitigate environmental impacts it would have on landslides, fires, aesthetics, and more.
The Board of Supervisors rejected one environmental impact report prepared for the project in 2013. That sent The Martha Company back to the drawing board. In October 2017, on a narrow 3–2 vote, the board approved another, much-revised environmental impact report for a 43-home project on the site.
Several supervisors said at the time that while they didn't want to see the site developed, they nevertheless felt their hands were tied by the multiple court agreements affirming the company's right to build out the site.
But the board's approval only precipitated another lawsuit from a nearby property owner, the unincorporated activist group Tiburon Open Space Committee, and the adjacent town of Tiburon—all arguing that the 850-page environmental impact report a decade in the making failed to comply with CEQA.
A major claim in their lawsuit was that the county had illegally contracted away its powers over new development by agreeing to the 1976 and 2007 settlements allowing The Martha Company to build 43 homes. As a result, it failed in its duty under CEQA to approve a less environmentally impactful 32-unit project on the site, they argued.
A Marin County Superior Court judge rejected those arguments in January 2020. In mid-May 2022, the First District of the California Court of Appeal likewise rejected their petition and upheld the approval of the project's environmental impact report.
The appeals court found that the 1976 and 2007 settlements were valid. Therefore, the county was under no obligation to approve, or even analyze, a project with fewer units.
The court's decision was unsparing in its criticism of anti-development activists' abuse of environmental review to delay the project for so long, writing that "CEQA was meant to serve noble purposes, but it can be manipulated to be a formidable tool of obstruction, particularly against proposed projects that will increase housing density."
"Something is very wrong with this picture," the justices concluded.
That decision is good news for The Martha Company, which can finally move ahead with its project. It might also be good news for housing supply across all of California by putting some outer bounds on what CEQA requires.
Despite California's well-deserved reputation for overregulating new housing development, the state does have several pro-supply laws on the books that limit the discretion of local governments to reject zoning-compliant projects or condition projects' approval on density reductions.
Forceful as those laws might be on paper, they don't relieve local governments' obligation to comply with CEQA. It's left open the question of whether those pro-supply laws are subordinate to CEQA.
That ambiguity, in practice, has allowed localities to "launder" denials of projects state law requires them to approve through endless rounds of environmental review.
In a recent blog post, Holland & Knight attorneys Bradley Brownlow and Jessica Laughlin write that the appeals court decision in the Martha Company case makes clear that legal arrangements guaranteeing developers the right to build a certain number of units aren't superseded by CEQA, and that reasoning applies to state laws that limit local governments' ability to deny or shrink projects.
"The Court's holding is likely to be consequential with respect to the implementation of state laws that impose limitations on agency discretion over housing development projects," write Brownlow and Laughlin. "Environmental review must be tailored to account for the legal infeasibility of project alternatives and mitigation measures that conflict with the agency's legal obligation to approve projects at their proposed densities."
In other words, local governments don't have to waste their time studying the environmental impact of smaller projects or other mitigation measures they couldn't force developers to build anyway.
Brownlow and Laughlin say that the appeals court decision could "cast a long shadow" preventing CEQA abuse.
That would be a welcome development. The more time that housing projects spend on the drawing board waiting for approval, the more time people spend bidding up the prices of housing that's already been built. One seminal 2002 paper from researchers Edward Glaeser and Joseph Gyourko found that even delays of a few months can significantly increase the price of homes in subdivisions of 50 units or less.
In recent years, the California Legislature has carved out exempted things like transit projects, college admissions, and local upzoning measures from CEQA. Wholesale reform of the law is still a political third rail.
Judicial opinions that clarify and limit CEQA's scope are probably the best critics of the law can hope for. At a minimum, the appeals court decision in the Martha Company case will probably do more good than a temporary ban on new Airbnbs.
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.
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Officials in Marin County
Oh Jesus, I stopped reading right there.
"In recent years, the California Legislature has carved out exempted things like transit projects, college admissions, and local upzoning measures from CEQA."
Any law that has "exemptions" is clearly not equal treatment under the law.
Property rights are in as much danger and the 2 ed amendment..I've always lived outside cities and suburbs. If I want to build a deck, remodel rooms, paint ,whatever I can just do it.
Desirable places like Marin County - no there aren't many in red country MAGA posters, so asks someone what that's like - are having problems with Air BnBs that are absentee businesses, not with owners who live there, and it changes the character of towns. Do they have a right to try and limit that? Of course. As to more building permits, has the writer ever been to Marin County? Ever heard of mud slides? It is both a beautiful place and environmentally challenged and building a bunch of new houses would be both difficult and likely ruin much of what makes it so desirable. Hey, move to East Bay if you want a new SFR.
Fuck you and you “change character of towns” BS. You just can’t stand the thought of someone trying to make a couple bucks from their own property.
I build houses for a living jerk off and have for 40 years.
So you are the gofer for the tradesmen, good for you.
Some days yes Don't look, but I have carpenter employees (other trades are subs) and used to be one myself. Then other days I estimate, draw plans and working drawings, schmooz with clients, do the books and bills (ugh), and problem solve whatever weirdness pops up. I like it because what I do is varied, I'm in charge, help create and then complete significant structures in the material world (the largest purchase most people ever make) and when not too many problems, like the excitement and ego trip.
Wow, you are awesome! You make all us look small by comparison.
Wait - It's stupid Joe Friday who can't remember what he posted yesterday. What's one more lie on the pile, right?
Thanks rbike. Someone speculated on what I do - again - and so I told them. A favorite and particularly lame pass time here is imagining those you disagree with are terrible and failed human beings. I think I refrain from that except in sarcasm and don't really care what you all due beyond normal human curiosity. I'm here for the discussion, not personal affirmation.
"- no there aren't many in red country MAGA posters"
I guess that's why the top 50 growing counties in the United States are almost completely Red states. Texas, Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky. All MAGA country last I checked.
" building a bunch of new houses would be both difficult and likely ruin much of what makes it so desirable."
Spoken just like any NIMBY that ever was. Both clueless and entitled.
I build houses for living Overt and have for 40 years.
You're confusing cheap with desirable.
As to NIMBY, maybe you live in a shithole, but even Republicans fight against turning their neighborhood into Duplex/Condo city. While it's plenty warm in Sarasota, most houses don't have views of the beach, but of their neighbors landscaping, which indeed can be beautiful. Available land is out east bordering the Everglades. Marin county is exceedingly hilly and steep with available views of Richardson Bay and even the iconic GG Bridge and SF bay - there is no flat land left and production building is not even possible, let alone a smart plan for anyone but speculators.
"I build houses for living Overt and have for 40 years."
And? It clearly does nothing to make you knowledgeable about "desirable" counties or housing policy in general. Or grammar, evidently.
"You're confusing cheap with desirable."
No you are failing to understand that "Affordable" is a quality of "Desirable". Maybe when you brush up on your statistics, you can learn categorical taxonomies as well. But first you might want to start with phonics.
"As to NIMBY, maybe you live in a shithole, but even Republicans fight against turning their neighborhood into Duplex/Condo city. "
Yeah, Republicans can be NIMBY's too. You are just like a Republican, how bout that?
But I do love how "Joe Friday, Self-Proclaimed Champion of the Democrats that are Champions of the Downtrodden" is here to tell us the virtues of keeping dirty Duplex and Condo dwellers out of expensive neighborhoods. Please tell me more about these people, Joe. What don't you like about these working class people and their dirty used cars and filthy habits of "making ends meet"? Better for them to drive in to service the enlightened classes from abroad, amiright?
For the record, I do not live in a shit-hole. We chose our neighborhood precisely because it has large houses like ours, as well as apartments, condos, and town houses. Unlike NIMBY snobs like yourself- who think ordering the landscaper around is all the interaction their kids need with 'apartment dwellers'- my kids have grown up with dear friends all across the socio-economic spectrum.
Indeed, our community is extremely desirable to families precisely because of this quality. This is exactly the point I try to make when NIMBY assholes like yourself try to argue about "preserving the character of Irvine" as a smoke screen for "keeping the riff raff up in Tustin or Orange".
But class-obsessed asses like yourself have got to obsess about class, which is why they will abstractly bitch and moan about the plight of the little people while doing everything in their power to avoid helping them if it means having some additional traffic.
Feel better overt?
Of course I have not advocated any of what you claim, though I do think neighborhoods - including blue collar black, white, and/or brown - should have a say in major changes. Surprising to you perhaps, but historically black neighborhoods are often the 1st to face assaults by speculative developers.
Black neighborhoods cannot be "assaulted" by speculative developers unless those developers have the power of eminent domain on their side, or a government that will not enforce the rule of law.
To be honest, a majority of "the top 50 growing counties in the United States" are blue counties trapped inside red states.
it changes the character of towns. Do they have a right to try and limit that? Of course.
Actually, if the article correctly represents the attitude of the locals, the character needs to be changed. Respect for property rights needs to be enforced on them. Maybe strip some authority from the local government. Go to a "shall issue" regime on building permits; if a checklist of objective, uniform safety requirements is satisfied, the permit issues within X days.
likely ruin much of what makes it so desirable. Hey, move to East Bay if you want a new SFR.
Telling other people where to live? How about turning it around: they can buy, build, and move in, and if you don't like it YOU can go find another neighborhood.
duck, you apparently think property rights aren't very important, nor are citizens. Virtually every town and city has development rules and zoning and of course, if politics are not taken over by speculators, the citizens try to shape the town how they want it. You think that sucks? Move to Houston, the place with what, 3 concentric beltways now?
Weird how you are anti border enforcement but completely fine with anti builder. Hmm. Oh a hypocrite.
I've never discussed border security here, but of course I am in favor of it.
Huntsville Alabama was just voted number 1. Weird.
NASA, right?
LOL! "The character of Marin" was changed long ago when the woke white "progs" with bucks took over and artificially inflated the values. Fill Marin with B&B's. It is such a "desirable place" that all those folks that have the big ching can enjoy it. In spite of Marin being filled with white wokies and their lawns planted with virtue signaling BLM yard signs. And yet, blacks are not welcome. They are only about 2% of the population, if that. another example of typical "progressive" hypocrisy.
BMW stood for "Basic Marin Wheels" long ago; I imagine that's passé now. But the mentality remains.
Build More What?!?
Buy My Woke
Be Men, Women!
Don’t worry: private developers building private homes may be subject to these hassles, but local and state governments can still build million dollar units with views to house the homeless, using tax dollars.
Nothing says beautiful like government housing buildings.
You're apparently not aware of the trend - now at least 10-15 years old - of big cities replacing the soviet era public housing with attractive, usually colorful 2 story townhouses.
There will always be a moon over Marin
Something about this I don't get: If people are staying at a temporary residence, that doesn't use up the supply of permanent ones, because space is space. If you're here, you're not there.
Roberta, the objection is they are not permanent residents - you know, neighbors? - who care about the community and they reduce the number of available houses and raise prices based on an effective change of use.
It reduces the stock of housing available for people who work in Marin.
What they really want is to lower the cost of housing without increasing the number of houses.
Magic.
Lol at thinking Marin actually wants affordable housing.
80% of Marin is protected from development.