Dan Breeden, planning manager for Butte County, briefed the Planning Commission on July 24 about recent state‑level actions affecting the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). Breeden said the governor approved CEQA‑related actions in June that included trailer bills making substantial changes, largely focused on urban infill and new exemptions or streamlining for qualifying projects.
Breeden said the changes include “a lot of streamlining” and that for projects that meet eligibility criteria the altered process could mean projects “won't be subject to the California Environmental Quality Act. No studies, no anything.” He said county staff are reviewing the planning pipeline to determine whether any current or future projects could benefit from the new provisions and that a memo provided to the Board of Supervisors will be delivered at the Board’s July 29 meeting as an informational item.
Breeden also reminded commissioners that the California County Planning Commissioners Association annual conference will be in Tulare City in October and that the county typically funds two commissioners to attend; commissioners interested in attending should contact staff.
Why it matters: Changes to CEQA eligibility and streamlining can materially shorten project review for qualifying projects, potentially affecting timelines and required studies. Local planning departments must evaluate projects against the new state criteria to determine if they qualify for exemptions or streamlined review.
Next steps: Breeden said staff will circulate the memo provided to the Board to commissioners when it is released and will continue to review pipeline projects for eligibility under the new CEQA provisions. No formal county action on applying the changes was taken at the meeting.