BILL NUMBER: SB 469 AMENDED
BILL TEXT
AMENDED IN SENATE MARCH 30, 2011
INTRODUCED BY Senator Vargas
FEBRUARY 17, 2011
An act to add Section 65964.5 65957.3
to the Government Code, relating to land use.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 469, as amended, Vargas. Land use: development project review:
superstores.
(1) The Permit Streamlining Act requires the lead agency that has
the principal responsibility for approving a development project, as
defined, to approve or disapprove the project within 6 months from
the date of certification of an environmental impact report or within
3 months from the date of adoption of a negative declaration or the
determination by the lead agency that the project is exempt from the
California Environmental Quality Act, unless the project proponent
requests an extension of time.
This bill would in addition require a city, county, or city and
county, including a charter city, prior to approving or disapproving
a proposed development project that would permit the construction of
a superstore retailer, as defined, to require an economic impact
report to be prepared, as specified, to be paid for by the project
applicant, and that includes specified assessments and projections
including, among other things, an assessment of the effect that the
construction and operation of the proposed superstore retailer will
have on retail operations and employment in the same market area. The
bill would also require the governing body to provide an opportunity
for public comment on the economic impact report. By increasing the
duties of local public officials, the bill would impose a
state-mandated local program.
(2) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse
local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the
state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that
reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this
act for a specified reason.
The Planning and Zoning Law sets forth various requirements
relating to the review of development project permit applications,
and the issuance of development permits for, particular, specified
classes of development projects.
This bill would require an applicant to a local government for a
permit to develop a superstore, as defined, to submit to that local
government an economic and community impact analysis report,
including various, specified assessments, prior to the review of the
permit application.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no
yes . State-mandated local program: no
yes .
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature to
promote economic development in all communities of the state and to
address the impact on the state's small businesses from the
superstore retail model. Therefore, the Legislature finds and
declares all of the following:
(a) It is in the interest of local governments to promote economic
development in their jurisdictions.
(b) Land use decisions are frequently linked to fiscal policy
because local governments receive a share of sales tax revenues
generated within their borders. California cities thus often seek
large sales tax revenue sources, such as superstores, without taking
into account all of the external economic effects that superstores
bring to communities.
(c) Transformations in the big box retail industry have altered
retail business nationwide. The engine of this change is the retail
format known as the superstore--a big box retail store that also
contains the equivalent of a full-size grocery store, with the total
floor space often three to four times as large as that of a
conventional supermarket.
(d) As a result of the restructuring of retail business,
particularly the grocery sector in California, the following effects
may be seen: local grocers, who yield a greater community return on
investment, are driven out of business; less community access to
viable superstore alternatives; lower wages and benefits paid to
grocery workers by superstore retailers; and a host of complex land
use, traffic, and fiscal impacts.
(e) Superstores typically combine a large variety of discount
general merchandise with full service grocery sales to the general
public under one roof, thereby generating more intense land use and
environmental impacts than other large-scale retailers and wholesale
membership clubs.
(f) Industry and academic studies indicate superstores rarely add
any retail services not currently provided within a community, and
the majority of sales growth at a superstore comes from a direct
shift of dollars from existing retailers within a community,
primarily from grocery stores.
(g) Land use decisions regarding superstores fall to city and
county governments, even if the impacts will be regional as well as
local.
(h) Currently, local governments that desire to perform due
diligence for their constituents by performing an economic analysis
are placed at a disadvantage because a neighboring city or county may
not perform an economic analysis. This a situation may result in the
shifting of sales tax and destruction of the business community in a
city or county that simply wants to study the impacts of the
development project before making a final approval.
SEC. 2. Section 65957.3 is added to the
Government Code , to read:
65957.3. (a) As used in this section, "superstore" means a
business establishment that exceeds 90,000 square feet of gross floor
area, sells a wide range of consumer goods, and devotes 10 percent
of the sales floor area to the sale of items that are exempted from
the Sales and Use Tax Law pursuant to Section 6359 of the Revenue and
Taxation Code. "Superstore" shall include retail establishments with
multiple tenants, and the cumulative sum of related or successive
permits that may be part of a larger project, including piecemeal
additions to a building, so long as consumer goods and nontaxable
items are sold under the same roof with shared checkout stands,
entrances, and exits. This definition excludes discount warehouses
and discount retail stores that sell more than half of their items in
large quantities or bulk, and also require shoppers to pay a
membership or assessment fee.
(b) As used in this section, the term "market area" has the same
meaning as that term is defined in Section 53084.
(c) Prior to approving or disapproving a permit for the
construction or conversion of a superstore retailer, a city, county,
or city and county shall require an economic impact report.
(1) The city, county, or city and county shall contract with a
private consultant, other than the permit applicant, for the
preparation of the economic impact report. The consultant shall be
qualified by education, training, and experience to conduct economic
and fiscal impact analyses.
(2) The applicant for the development project shall pay the city,
county, or city and county for the costs of preparing the economic
impact report.
(3) The economic impact report shall include, but is not limited
to, all of the following:
(A) An assessment of the extent to which the proposed superstore
retailer will capture a share of retail sales in the market area.
(B) An assessment of how the construction and operation of the
proposed superstore will affect the supply and demand for retail
space in the market area.
(C) An assessment of how the construction and operation of the
proposed superstore will affect employment in the market area,
including all of the following:
(i) The number of persons employed in existing retail stores in
the market area.
(ii) An estimate of the number of people who will likely be
employed by the proposed superstore.
(iii) An analysis of whether the proposed superstore will result
in a net increase or decrease in employment in the market area.
(iv) The effect on wages and benefits of employees of other retail
businesses, and community income levels in the market area.
(D) A projection of the costs of public services and public
facilities resulting from the construction and operation of the
proposed superstore retailer and the incidence of those costs.
(E) A projection of the public revenues resulting from the
construction and operation of the proposed superstore retailer and
the incidence of those revenues.
(F) An assessment of the effect that the construction and
operation of the proposed superstore retailer will have on retail
operations, including grocery or retail shopping centers, in the same
market area, including the potential for blight resulting from
retail business closures and the nature of any businesses displaced.
(G) An assessment of the effect that the construction and
operation of the proposed superstore will have on the ability of the
city, county, or city and county to implement the goals contained in
its general plan, including, but not limited to, local policies and
standards that apply to land use patterns, traffic circulation,
affordable housing, natural resources, including water supplies,
open-space lands, noise problems, and safety risks.
(H) An assessment of the effect that the construction and
operation of the proposed superstore will have on average total
vehicle miles traveled by retail customers in the same market area.
(I) An assessment of the potential for long-term vacancy of the
property on which the superstore is proposed in the event that the
business vacates the premises, including any restrictions that exist
on the subsequent use of the property on which the superstore is
proposed to be located, including the provisions of any lease that,
in the event the owner or operator of the superstore vacates the
premises, would require the premises to remain vacant for a
significant amount of time.
(J) An assessment of whether the superstore would require the
demolition of housing or any other action or change that would result
in a decrease or negative impact on the creation of extremely low,
very low, low-, or moderate-income housing.
(K) An assessment of whether the superstore would result in the
destruction or demolition of park or other green space, playgrounds,
child care facilities, or community centers.
(L) An assessment of whether the superstore would result in any
other adverse or positive economic impacts or blight.
(M) An assessment of whether any measures are available that may
mitigate any materially adverse economic impacts identified by the
applicant.
(d) This section shall not preclude a city, county, or city and
county from conducting additional studies of the effects of the
construction and operation of a proposed superstore retailer.
(e) At any regularly scheduled meeting or meetings of the city,
county, or city and county governing body, after the completion of
the economic impact report required by subdivision (b), and 30 days
prior to the issuance of any entitlement, including, but not limited
to, a building permit, a city, county, or city and county shall
provide the opportunity for public comment on the economic impact
report and its findings.
(f) (1) The Legislature finds that the construction and operation
of a superstore retailer has land use, environmental, economic,
fiscal, and social equity effects that extend beyond the boundaries
of the city, county, or city and county in which it is located.
(2) The Legislature finds that it is essential for the statewide
public health, safety, and welfare to require cities, counties, and
cities and counties to understand the potential spillover effects of
approving the construction and operation of superstore retailers.
(3) The Legislature further finds and declares that the review and
regulation of superstore retailers is a matter of statewide concern
and not merely a municipal affair, as that term is used in Section 5
of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, this section
shall apply to charter cities and to charter cities and counties.
SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act
pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
Constitution because a local agency or school district has the
authority to levy service charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to
pay for the program or level of service mandated by this act, within
the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code.
SECTION 1. Section 65964.5 is added to the
Government Code, to read:
65964.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to do both of
the following:
(1) Encourage local governments to provide minimum standards
applicable to the review and approval of a permit to develop a
superstore.
(2) Assist local communities in assessing whether the development
of a superstore would cause adverse impacts on small businesses,
traffic congestion, and air quality by requiring that an applicant to
develop a superstore submit an economic and community impact
analysis report to the appropriate permitting agency prior to the
initiation of the review of the permit for approval.
(b) (1) For purposes of this section, "superstore" means either of
the following:
(A) A single tenant retail establishment that exceeds 90,000
square feet gross floor area.
(B) A multiple tenant retail establishment that exceeds 90,000
square feet gross floor area, more than 10 percent of the sales floor
area is devoted to the sale of nontaxable merchandise, and the
multiple tenants share common check stands, a controlling interest,
storage areas, warehouses, or distribution facilities.
(2) "Superstore" does not include wholesale clubs or other
discount retail establishments that primarily sell bulk merchandise
and that charge membership dues or otherwise restrict merchandise
sales to customers paying a periodic assessment fee.
(c) An applicant to a local government for a permit to develop a
superstore shall submit to that local government an economic and
community impact analysis report prior to the review of the permit
application. The economic and community impact analysis report shall
include, but not be limited to, all of the following:
(1) An assessment of the extent to which the proposed superstore
will capture a share of retail sales in the economic and community
impact area.
(2) An assessment of how the construction and operation of the
proposed superstore will affect the supply and demand for retail
space in the economic and community impact area.
(3) An assessment of the number of persons employed in existing
retail stores in the economic and community impact area, including,
but not limited to, an estimate of the number of persons who will
likely be employed by the proposed superstore, an analysis of whether
the proposed superstore will result in a net increase or decrease in
employment in the economic and community impact area, and a
projection of the costs of public services and public facilities that
will result from the construction and operation of the proposed
superstore and a description of how those services and facilities
will be financed.
(4) An assessment of how the development of the proposed
superstore conforms to an applicable general plan and the goals and
policies of that general plan.
(5) An assessment of the effect that the construction and
operation of the proposed superstore will have on average total
vehicle miles traveled by retail customers in the same economic and
community impact area.
(6) An assessment of whether there will be any restrictions on the
subsequent use of the proposed superstore project site, including,
but not limited to, restrictions hindering or preventing residential
and small business uses.
(7) An assessment of whether the proposed superstore would require
the demolition of housing, or any other action or change that
results in a decrease in or negative impact on the creation of
extremely low, very low, low-, or moderate-income housing in the
jurisdiction.
(8) An assessment of whether the proposed superstore would result
in the destruction or demolition of park and other open green space,
playground, childcare facility, or community center.
(9) An assessment of whether the proposed superstore would result
in any other adverse or positive impacts to neighborhood and small
businesses.
(10) An assessment of whether any measures are available that
would mitigate any material adverse impact of the proposed
superstore.