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California Senate Bill 35 (SB 35) is a statute streamlining housing construction in California counties and cities that fail to build enough housing to meet state mandated housing construction requirements. [1] The bill was introduced to the California State Assembly by State Senator Scott Wiener (D-SF) on December 15, 2016. [2]
SB 35 was one of the first efforts to put teeth behind the state’s housing laws. SB 35’s fast tracking is allowed only in cities that have failed to meet their housing construction targets ...
It is considered as a companion bill to the Middle-Class Housing Act of 2022 (SB 6), which mandates that projects meeting SB 6 criteria (either a 100-percent residential project or a mixed-use project where at least 50 percent of the square footage is dedicated to residential uses) may invoke SB 35 and the Housing Accountability Act. SB 6 ...
SB 35 (2017), SB 6 (2022): prohibits local governments from levying parking mandates upon SB 35 projects within a half-mile of either public transit, within an architecturally and historically significant historic district, within one block of a car share vehicle, or when on-street parking permits are required but not offered to the occupants of the development.
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Another bill was Senate Bill 35 (SB 35), authored by state Senator Scott Wiener which shortens the approval process by eliminating environmental and planning reviews for new infill housing in cities which have failed to meet their state housing production goals. The state sets goals for production of different types of housing: market-rate, low ...
Starting with 2026 models, 35% of new cars, SUVs and small pickups sold in California would be required to be zero-emission vehicles, with quotas increasing each year until 2035.
In 2023, Newsom signed AB 434, which empowers the Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) to enforce the streamlining of HOME Act projects concerning ministerial processing of lot splits in single-family residential zones, along with the streamlining of projects which fall under the ADU law, SB 6 (2022), SB 4 (2023), SB 684 (2023) and AB 1218 (2023), and requires the department ...