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Historic Power Plant on Sacramento River Converted to the New SMUD Museum of Science and Curiosity
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You Can Have This Oakland Victorian For Free — But You Have to Pay to Move It
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Letters to the Editor: U.S. should ship vaccines to other nations
San Francisco Chronicle readers
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Nurse Andrea Delacueva, left, gives a COVID-19 vaccination to Matt Block, 34, of Culver City, California, on April 15, 2021, in Los Angeles.Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times/TNS
COVID-19 shots are now widely available nationwide: About ⅓ of American adults are now vaccinated, protected, and almost never have serious side effects. Many others are wary of taking the vaccine because it was developed so quickly.
However, it is a cruel reality that millions of individuals in other countries such as India are dying because of the lack of vaccine, while so many of us in the United States are turning it down.
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California s First District Court of Appeal recently issued a lengthy and consequential decision reaffirming the State s ability to pass housing legislation limiting local governments discretion to deny housing projects. In
Ruegg & Ellsworth v. City of Berkeley (Case No. A159218, April 20, 2021), the court was specifically tasked with interpreting and applying – for the first time – SB 35 (codified at Gov. Code. § 65913.4). However,
Ruegg & Ellsworth will likely have implications for developers seeking to benefit from other pro-housing statutes.
BACKGROUND OF SB 35
Enacted in 2017 and effective January 1, 2018, SB 35 is one of a number of bills passed in recent years which seek to address the ongoing housing crisis in California and penalize local governments that fail to meet their obligations to increase statewide housing supply. SB 35 provides a streamlined, ministerial approval process for certain residenti
Monday, May 3, 2021
California s First District Court of Appeal recently issued a lengthy and consequential decision reaffirming the State s ability to pass housing legislation limiting local governments discretion to deny housing projects. In
Ruegg & Ellsworth v. City of Berkeley (Case No. A159218, April 20, 2021), the court was specifically tasked with interpreting and applying – for the first time – SB 35 (codified at Gov. Code. § 65913.4). However,
Ruegg & Ellsworth will likely have implications for developers seeking to benefit from other pro-housing statutes.
BACKGROUND OF SB 35
Enacted in 2017 and effective January 1, 2018, SB 35 is one of a number of bills passed in recent years which seek to address the ongoing housing crisis in California and penalize local governments that fail to meet their obligations to increase statewide housing supply. SB 35 provides a streamlined, ministerial approval process for certain residential projects in localities
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