California Land Use & Development Law Report: Coastal Commission Erred With Respect To Permit Condition

  • by BPC Staff
  • on October 29, 2014
  • 0 Comments

The California Land Use & Development Law Report
Legal Commentary on Planning and Development

 

We’ve posted an article to our California Land Use & Development Law Report on a development that we think will be of interest to you. Our report publishes articles on recent legal and policy developments in the field of land use, environmental impact review, and permitting, and presents an easy way to keep current. You can choose to subscribe so that you don’t miss a single article. 

 

Coastal Commission Erred in Finding Property Owner is Stuck with Unconstitutional Dedication Condition

In an opinion on rehearing, the Second District Court of Appeal overturned a California Coastal Commission decision that a condition of a county-issued coastal development permit could not be eliminated by a second coastal development permit the county issued for the same project. Bowman v California Coastal Commission, No. B243015, Oct. 23, 2014. Focusing on the equities of the case, and the unfairness of the condition, the court refused to find that the county was barred from deleting the condition.

 

 

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