Cleanup On Aisle NIMBY!!

The California Legislature's new duplex bill shows that lawmakers have had it with resistance to housing.

I wrote a few weeks ago on a Terner Center report concerning SB 9, California’s law allowing single-family lots to split and put in duplexes as a matter of right throughout the state. Essentially, the message was simple: localities were engaged in a Massive Resistance to the state mandates, throwing sand in the gears at ever opportunity. Manhattanization!!, the NIMBYs cried – because as we all know, Manhattan is known as the City of Duplexes. Well, the Legisla...

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How Should We Implement the New Federal Climate Laws?

Flyer for the first panel of the Emmett Institute Symposium, titled "Dreaming Big: How to Build and Infrastructure for the Future," featuring panelists Sylvia Chi of Just Solutions Collective, Jim Salzman of UCLA and UCSB, Dustin Maghamfar of Energy Foundation, and Kimberly Clausing of UCLA, and moderator Cara Horowitz of UCLA

An upcoming symposium by the Emmett Institute will explore the key climate impacts of IIJA and the IRA and unpack some of the obstacles and controversies around their implementation.

This is the first of a series of posts previewing the Emmett Institute’s 2023 Symposium, coming up on April 12. Check out the second post, on transmission infrastructure, and the third post, on transportation; and RSVP for the Symposium here! The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 (IIJA) and the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA) represent a radical change in federal climate policy. A lot of this is the scale of funding—the two laws will spend m...

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Lobster Wars

An industry lawsuit against Monterey Aquarium is a blatant assault on free speech.

The Maine lobster industry is suing the Monterey Aquarium for advising consumers to avoid Maine lobsters. This is “cancel culture” on steroids. The Aquarium has taken a stand the industry doesn’t like, so the industry is trying to silence it and its other critics. “Silencing” here is quite literal: the industry is seeking an injunction to gag the Aquarium. It would be hard to design a more blatant violation of the First Amendment. To begin with, you can’t ...

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Critical Native American Water Rights Cases Come Before the Supreme Court: Arizona v. Navajo Nation

The Navajo Nation Has the Equities on Its Side, But the U.S. Department of the Interior May Well Have the Law in Its Favor

Today the U.S. Supreme Court hears oral arguments in the last natural resources cases on its docket this Term: Arizona v. Navajo Nation and U.S. Department of the Interior v. Navajo Nation.  These consolidated cases are consequential for several reasons: to determine the scope of the federal government's trust obligations to Native American tribes; to decide whether the Navajo Nation should have access to enough water on its arid reservation to provide the Navajo pe...

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Stakeholder Engagement in California Offshore Wind Development

State leaders have an opportunity to forge a national example on stakeholder engagement and energy justice.

As California continues to develop plans for floating offshore wind (OSW) implementation, state leaders have an opportunity to forge a national example on stakeholder engagement and energy justice. California can achieve this, not just by (for example) incorporating environmental justice (EJ) principles into agency analysis and planning or by increasing consultation with tribal entities, but by ensuring — and ensuring funding for — a seat at planning and implemen...

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How Garden-Variety Air Pollution Regulation Promotes Environmental Justice

Cleaning up our nation’s air benefits the disadvantaged most of all.

Evidence is mounting that air pollution regulation is an effective way of reducing  health disparities between disadvantaged communities and the population as a whole. The basic reason is simple: Air pollution is the biggest environmental threat to poor communities and communities of color.  As the American Lung Association has said: “The burden of air pollution is not evenly shared. Poorer people and some racial and ethnic groups are among those who often face high...

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CEQA, California’s Housing Crisis & the Little Hoover Commission

State Watchdog Agency's Scheduled CEQA Hearings Could Prompt Major Changes to California's Most Important Environmental Law

Beginning today, California's "Little Hoover Commission" will convene a series of three public hearings to consider how well--or poorly--the state's California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) is currently working.  A special focus of the Commission's deliberations will be whether and to what extent California's most important and overarching environmental law is impeding efforts by the Legislature and Governor Newsom to address the state's chronic and well-documented h...

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Why the Bay Area’s Zero-Emission Appliance Rule is a Big Deal

BAAQMD’s trailblazing rule will ban the sale of new gas furnaces and water heaters to combat nitrogen oxide pollution. It marks a big victory for public health and the planet.

Air quality officials in the San Francisco Bay Area just made history by moving to adopt the nation’s first rules phasing out new gas-fueled water heaters and furnaces in homes and businesses within about eight years. This action serves as a major step in the effort to curb health-harming and planet-warming emissions from buildings. Several cities in California, including Los Angeles and in the Bay Area, have outlawed new gas hookups, but these are the first regula...

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How Do You Solve A Problem Like A Lawless Judge?

Some counsel for the Justice Department from The Great One.

The eyes of nearly everyone are upon Texas - on Amarillo, specifically, where comically lawless federal Judge Matthew J. Kacsmaryk will soon decide if the FDA illegally approved the medication mifepristone, sometimes thought of as the "abortion pill." One might think that it's somewhat too late to challenge a two-decade old approval based upon impeccable science. One would be wrong. This is Kacsmaryk, a professional bigot who got his job precisely to enjoin perfectly...

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Solar Geoengineering in the News — Again and Again

An update on the serious and the silly

Solar geoengineering has been prominent in the news lately. It looks like the long-predicted spike of attention to these potential climate responses may finally be starting – with many attendant opportunities for controversy and confusion. For background on solar geoengineering, why it’s important to research, and what the debates over it are, check out various prior LP posting from Emmett Institute researchers here, here, here, here, here, and here. The curren...

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