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The
California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) is the most important
environmental protection law in effect within the State of California.
Assembly Bill 406 will significantly strengthen this critically
important statute. Monterey County Assembly Member Simon Salinas
will probably cast a key vote on AB 406. You can contact Assembly
Member Salinas through his local office at 831-759-8676, or by email
at assemblymember.salinas@assembly.ca.gov.
The
California Native Plant Society, the Planning and Conservation League
and other major environmental organizations all support AB 406,
by Assemblywoman Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara). AB 406 was
voted out of the Assembly Appropriations Committee Wednesday, May
28, and will now head to the Assembly floor, where it must earn
41 votes out of 80 by the end of next week.
AB
406 amends the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) in two
ways. First, it requires the lead public agency for any development
project be responsible for preparing the environmental review documents
needed for the public and public decision makers to understand the
projects full environmental impact. Under current law, developers
are allowed to prepare or control the preparation of these important
public reports. It is simply good public policy to have public agencies,
who do not have a financial stake in the outcome of an environmental
analysis and who are accountable to the public, be responsible for
the CEQA process. Current law allows project proponents who may
gain financially and who are not accountable to the public to prepare,
or to hire a consultant to prepare for them, the environmental report
necessary to comply with CEQA. AB 406 would end this practice.
Second,
AB 406 also ends the practice of allowing "confidentiality
agreements" between developers and consultants they hire to
do the environmental analysis on their project. Confidentiality
agreements can prevent the public and public agencies from knowing
and understanding the full potential environmental damage caused
by a proposed project. Recently, the Newhall Land Co., a developer
in southern California, tried to use a confidentiality agreement
to hide the existence of the San Fernando Valley spineflower, an
endangered native plant, on a site the developer intended to develop.
Only a criminal investigation yielded the finding of the flower
on the property. Confidentiality agreements undermine the publics
right to know what the CEQA process intends to be public. AB 406
would disallow confidentiality agreements.
Every
vote will be critical to getting AB 406 off of the Assembly floor
next week. You can find out who your Assemblymember is and how to
contact him or her by going to the California Assembly web site
at www.assembly.ca.gov and clicking on "Find my district."
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to the State Planning Issues]
06.02.03
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