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<br /> <br />June 27, 2022 <br />Page 2 <br /> <br />If the City determines that a project is consistent with its objective standards, or a project <br />is deemed consistent with such standards, but the City nevertheless proposes to reject it, it must <br />make written findings, supported by a preponderance of the evidence, that the project would have <br />a “specific, adverse impact upon the public health or safety,” meaning that the project would have <br />“a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified written <br />public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the application <br />was deemed complete.” Gov. Code § 65589.5(j)(1)(A); see Gov. Code § 65589.5(k)(1)(A)(i)(II). <br />Once again, “objective” means “involving no personal or subjective judgment by a public official <br />and being uniformly verifiable by reference to an external and uniform benchmark or criterion <br />available and knowable by both the development applicant or proponent and the public official.” <br />Gov. Code § 65589.5(h)(8). <br />Even if the City identifies legally sufficient health and safety concerns about a project, it <br />may only reject the project if “[t]here is no feasible method to satisfactorily mitigate or avoid the <br />adverse impact . . . other than the disapproval of the housing development project . . . .” Gov. <br />Code § 65589.5(j)(1)(B). Thus, before rejecting a project, the City must consider all reasonable <br />measures that could be used to mitigate the impact at issue. <br />For projects that provide housing for lower-income families, the Act is even more <br />restrictive. In many cases, the City must approve such a project even if it fails to meet the City’s <br />objective land use standards. See Gov. Code § 65589.5(d). <br />These provisions apply to the full range of housing types, including single-family homes, <br />market-rate multifamily projects, and mixed-use developments. Gov. Code § 65589.5(h)(2); see <br />Honchariw v. Cty. of Stanislaus, 200 Cal. App. 4th 1066, 1074-76 (2011). And the Legislature <br />has directed that the Act be “interpreted and implemented in a manner to afford the fullest possible <br />weight to the interest of, and the approval and provision of, housing.” Gov. Code <br />§ 65589.5(a)(2)(L). <br />When a locality rejects or downsizes a housing development project without complying <br />with the rules described above, the action may be challenged in court in a writ under Code of Civil <br />Procedure Section 1094.5. Gov. Code § 65589.5(m). The legislature has significantly reformed <br />this process over the last few years in an effort to increase compliance. Today, the law provides a <br />private right of action to non-profit organizations like Californians for Homeownership. Gov. <br />Code § 65589.5(k). A non-profit organization can sue without the involvement or approval of the <br />project applicant, to protect the public’s interest in the development of new housing. A locality <br />that is sued to enforce Section 65589.5 must prepare the administrative record itself, at its own <br />expense, within 30 days after service of the petition. Gov. Code § 65589.5(m). And if an <br />enforcement lawsuit brought by a non-profit organization is successful, the locality must pay the <br />organization’s attorneys’ fees. Gov. Code § 65589.5(k)(2). In certain cases, the court will also <br />impose fines that start at $10,000 per proposed housing unit. Gov. Code § 65589.5(k)(1)(B)(i).