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Kern LAFCO tables staff'draft letter opposing unincorporated housing growth after commissioners press for clarity

Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFCO) · April 17, 2026

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Summary

LAFCO staff proposed sending a letter to Kern County opposing further unincorporated housing growth in Metro Bakersfield; commissioners questioned scope, whether the item was a housing-element update or a pro-housing designation, and raised timing concerns ahead of a May 1 deadline, then voted 5'to'1 to table the matter for more information.

Kern LAFCO on April 1 declined to transmit a staff-drafted comment letter to Kern County about housing in unincorporated Metro Bakersfield, instead voting to table the matter for more information and supervisor input.

Executive officer Blair described staff concerns about continued county-approved housing in unincorporated areas of Metro Bakersfield, saying the dual planning authority of the City of Bakersfield and Kern County has historically produced mismatched infrastructure planning and annexation pressures. Staff recommended that the executive officer be authorized to transmit a letter expressing opposition to further unincorporated housing growth in Metro Bakersfield and urging RHNA compliance alternatives that promote efficient governance.

Several commissioners pressed staff on scope and timing. One commissioner said they would vote against the letter, arguing the county has legitimate reasons to permit development, and questioned whether the memo effectively demanded that all future infill be routed to the city. Blair replied the staff concern was limited to residential growth in unincorporated urban areas and described alternative strategies for RHNA credit sharing between city and county.

The discussion also revealed a procedural mismatch: commissioners and staff disputed whether the county material was a housing-element update or a separate "pro-housing" designation application that would make the county eligible for state priority funding. Blair said he had received an email showing a 30-day public-review period for a pro-housing application running from April 1 to May 1; several commissioners said they were not comfortable approving the letter without a supervisor present to explain county intent. Citing the short timeline and lack of clarity, the commission voted 5 yes, 1 no to table the item and seek additional county clarification before directing staff to transmit any letter.

Provenance: Staff report and commissioner debate (timeline SEG 953'SEG 1356).