Streetsblog Los Angeles
Top Categories
Legislative Wrap: How Livable Streets Bills Fared in Sacramento
Last week was a busy one in Sacramento as lawmakers scrambled to compromise and pass important pieces of legislation while others will have to “wait ’til next year.” Streetsblog offers the following scorecard for some of the most important pieces of legislation that will impact the drive to create livable streets.
September 16, 2013
New “Kings Arena” CEQA Bill Would Still Nix LOS in “Transit Priority Areas”
Steinberg's hasty press conference held after the passage of SB 743
September 13, 2013
CEQA Reform Update: Is This the End for LOS?
Finally, some sanity may be coming to California's most important environmental protection law, the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). Under current law, all projects, be they rail lines, bike plans, or new buildings would have to prove that it would not impact local driving times or it would have to complete a costly mitigation plan.
September 11, 2013
In Battle Over Pensions, Feds Let Unions Hold Transit Hostage
Labor unions weren't happy when Governor Jerry Brown signed the Public Employees Pension Reform Act of 2012. The law, which applies to government workers across the state, allows government agencies more flexibility in extending the retirement age, increase employee contribution, and halt the practice of "pension spiking" for new employees. A full summary of the legislation is at the bottom of Brown's press release from last September.
August 15, 2013
Why You Should Be Angry About CA’s “Highest Gas Tax in the Country”
I know it's tempting to gloat.
July 1, 2013
New Report Outlines How California Can Kick Its Addiction to Oil
The government is encouraging you to drive a car, and if California is truly serious about reducing its oil dependency that needs to change. This is the unequivocal conclusion of Unraveling Ties to Petroleum a new report commissioned by Next 10 California and written by UCLA researchers Juan Matute, Director of the UCLA Local Climate Initiative, and Stephanie Pincetl, Adjunct Professor and Director of the California Center for Sustainable Communities at UCLA.
June 20, 2013
California Bike Coalition Sets An Ambitious Reform Agenda for 2013
The top priority for California bicycle advocates this year? To ensure state funding for biking and walking gets better, not worse.
January 30, 2013
More News on State Transpo Bills from Governor Brown’s Office
In addition to the mixed news on legislation impacting bicyclists, Governor Brown acted on many other pieces of legislation that will have a direct impact on transportation planning and public safety.
October 1, 2012
Gov. Brown Denies Cyclists “3,” But Signs Two Bills Boosting Bike Lanes
For the second year in a row, California Governor Jerry Brown issued a last-minute veto of legislation mandating a minimum three-foot distance for motor vehicles to pass cyclists. However, two other bills making it easier for cities to implement bike lanes got the governor's signature, albeit in watered-down form: AB 2245, which exempts bike lanes from excessive review under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), and AB 819, which establishes a Caltrans experimentation process for adopting currently non-standard innovative bike lane designs, like physically protected bike lanes.
October 1, 2012
NRDC, Move L.A. Push Governor Brown to Sign Smart Growth Bill
Over the last year, three large regional transportation authorities have passed regional transportation plans that tie together transportation, land use, greenhouse gas emissions and public health mandated by S.B. 375 in 2008. Today, a new study by the Natural Resources Defense Council and Move L.A. praises the Los Angeles, Sacramento and San Diego regional planning areas for passing these plans and promotes legislation that could make future plans even better.
September 24, 2012