Daily Shig (Blog)
Land Use Legislation Fares Poorly In Governor's Office
10 October 2008 - 4:10pmWhile Gov. Schwarzenegger signed the high-profile SB 375, he vetoed nearly every other land use bill of consequence this year. Legislation regarding financing, fire safety, school fees, the California Environmental Quality Act and other matters all failed to escape the governor’s red pen.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog
Joel Ellinwood: Transit Tales
9 October 2008 - 1:36pmOne of my personal commitments during the last year or so to a more sustainable future is to take the train and transit whenever I travel if time and routes permit.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blogMore Than Ever, Planners Need To Understand Markets
7 October 2008 - 11:34amWith news of yet another Wall Street icon or banking giant tumbling arriving on an almost daily basis, the Congress and Bush administration enacting a massive $700 billion bailout to prevent a complete meltdown (which is probably only the first installment), and the stock market gyrating wildly with each new shockwave, planners may wonder what all this may mean for planning practice (that is, after they finish anguishing over their own pension plan or investment portfolio).
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog
SB 375 Is Now Law -- But What Will It Do?
1 October 2008 - 8:32amSB 375, the anti-sprawl bill signed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger last night, is both more and less powerful than it’s advertised to be, and whether it leads to sweeping change depends on how aggressively California’s regional planning agencies implement it.
» read more | Bill Fulton's blogThe SB 375 Waiting Game
28 September 2008 - 4:42pmGov. Arnold Schwarzenegger acted on more than 200 bills over the weekend and went to the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco to commemorate the second anniversary of signing AB 32 – but those waiting for him to sign SB 375 are kind of like all those refugees stuck in Casablanca: They wait, and wait, and wait …
» read more | Bill Fulton's blogConference Introduces The Vertical, Transit-Oriented L.A.
25 September 2008 - 9:05amNew mixed-use and adaptive reuse projects are located all around the conference site in Hollywood, often within easy walking distance of a Red Line subway station. Conference attendees who ventured onto the Red Line encountered a bustling public transit system no matter the time of day.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog
Planners And Climate Change – Saving The World Is Hard
23 September 2008 - 10:33pmAt last year’s CCAPA conference, planners embraced the issue of climate change this gusto. They clearly saw climate change as their issue, and the conversation was very enthusiastic, even somewhat heady at times.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog
The Disconnect Between SB 375 And Local Planning
23 September 2008 - 11:46amCan California and its communities fit together regional plans, local plans, state housing requirements, and new state requirements on greenhouse gas emissions reductions?
Probably not, according to panelists speaking this morning at the California Chapter, American Planning Association conference in Hollywood.
» read more | Bill Fulton's blogPlanners, Welcome To Hollywood
21 September 2008 - 1:01pmIt' s understandable that California planners will focus at their Hollywood conference this week on “planners in tinseltown” – as evidenced by everything from the conference organizers’ spoof of “The Office” to the chapter’s “Lights … Planning … Action!” motto for the conference.But Hollywood has a many-layered 120-year history that dates back before the invention of the movies and includes a series of real estate booms and busts that have shaped the urban district that planners will see this » read more | Bill Fulton's blog
State Budget And SB 375: Incompatible Priorities
16 September 2008 - 11:03amOnly three weeks after insisting that California should encourage dense development near transit lines, state lawmakers have approved a budget that yanks funding from transit and redevelopment.
And that might be the nicest thing that anyone can say about the spending and revenue plan approved after last call on Monday night (Tuesday morning, actually).

