California's New Housing CEQA Exemption
Sibley and guest Aaron Ekhouse, the Local and Regional Policy Program Director for California YIMBY, dissect California's groundbreaking new CEQA exemption for infill housing development, passed as part of AB 130. This legislation represents a major shift in how California approaches environmental review for dense, climate-smart housing projects in urban areas.
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Guest:
Aaron Ekhouse - Local and Regional Policy Program Director, California YIMBY
8 years with California YIMBY
Instrumental in drafting and passing the CEQA exemption legislation
Works with local governments on implementing state housing laws
Key Takeaways
What the Law Does:
Creates a new CEQA exemption under Public Resources Code Section 21080.66 for qualified infill housing projects
Eliminates environmental review requirements for projects meeting specific, observable criteria
Provides legal certainty that prevents CEQA lawsuits from derailing qualified projects
Applies to residential, mixed-use, and transitional homeless shelter projects
Why It Matters:
Removes Uncertainty: The primary goal is eliminating the chilling effect of potential CEQA lawsuits, not just reducing review costs
Predictability: Developers, property owners, and cities know upfront whether projects qualify—no subjective interpretation
Prevents Weaponization: CEQA can no longer be used arbitrarily by cities or neighbors to stop projects they oppose
Climate-Smart Housing: Recognizes that infill development is environmentally beneficial compared to sprawl
Cost & Time Savings: While review costs matter, the bigger win is avoiding months or years of uncertainty and legal risk
Qualification Criteria Highlights:
Must be in urban infill location
Density requirements vary by location
Cannot be on sensitive environmental sites (wetlands, flood zones, hazardous waste, earthquake fault zones)
Special habitat protections require careful review
Projects must meet objective design standards
Labor standards may apply for larger projects
Tribal notification process
Key Innovation:
Uses observable, objective criteria rather than subjective review
Creates certainty at both ends: developers know upfront if they qualify, and lawsuits get resolved quickly if filed
Reframes the conversation: infill is the environmental solution, not the problem
Infill Insiders Success Grades
Problem ranking:
Both agree it's a 1-2 on a 1-5 scale (top tier challenge)
Aaron Ekhouse (California YIMBY): A or B+ (admittedly biased 😊 )
"Optimistically, this will largely solve the challenge of CEQA for infill housing"
Acknowledges a few areas for improvement but considers it a great bill
Sibley Simon (Host): A-
High marks considering where California was a year ago
Main concern: habitat protections need tightening
Notes some political compromises but doesn't significantly dock points
Praises usability and reliability of the criteria
What's Next
California YIMBY's focus for the coming year: Cost reduction
Progress on permitting and zoning is meaningless if it costs $1 million per unit
Targeting: impact fees, financing costs, construction costs, building code reform
Goal: Make the housing that's now legal to build actually affordable to build
Episode Length
Approximately 58 minutes
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[00:00:00] Introduction & Guest Welcome
Meet Aaron Ekhouse from California YIMBY and the mission of The Infill Insiders Podcast
[00:00:33] Aaron's Role at California YIMBY
Local and Regional Policy Program Director with 8 years of experience working on state housing legislation
[00:01:01] The Eight-Year Journey to CEQA Reform
How California YIMBY has been working on environmental review reform since its founding
[00:01:21] What is AB 130 and Why It Matters
Understanding the new CEQA exemption and the budget package that made it permanent
[00:02:08] Reading the Law: Where to Find It
Public Resources Code Section 21080.66 and why you should read current law, not old bills
[00:03:09] The Environmental Case for Infill Housing
Why dense urban development is climate-smart and how the conversation shifted
[00:04:06] Reframing the Debate: Infill as the Solution
The strategic messaging shift that made CEQA reform politically viable
[00:05:25] The Real Problem: Uncertainty, Not Just Cost
Why the threat of lawsuits matters more than environmental review expenses
[00:06:07] Understanding the New Exemption
Technical details of Public Resources Code 21080.66 and what it covers
[00:06:43] Who This Law Applies To
Qualified residential, mixed-use, and transitional homeless shelter projects
[09:52] What Makes a Location "Urban Infill"
Defining urban infill areas and why location matters for the exemption
[15:24] Density Requirements Explained
How many units per acre you need and why it varies by location
[21:37] Environmental Site Restrictions
What locations are automatically disqualified: wetlands, flood zones, hazardous waste sites
[28:15] The Habitat Protection Question
Special species and habitat considerations—the trickiest part of the law
[35:42] Objective Design Standards Requirement
Projects must meet clear, measurable design criteria—no subjective review
[41:18] Labor Standards and Prevailing Wage
When do labor requirements kick in and what they mean for projects
[44:29] The Two-Track System Under SB 6
When you don't qualify for the exemption but can still get streamlined review
[48:59] Preventing Lawsuits vs. Reducing Review Costs
The primary goal is certainty, not just saving money on environmental reports
[50:29] Observable Criteria Creates Predictability
Why objective standards matter for developers, cities, and opponents
[51:36] Removing Political Discretion
How the law prevents arbitrary CEQA requirements based on project opposition
[52:14] The Power of Clear Rules
Why certainty prevents frivolous lawsuits and extortion tactics
[52:58] The Dog That Didn't Bark
How we'll never know about the lawsuits that don't happen because of clear rules
[53:26] Grading the Bill's Success
Aaron gives it an A (or B+), Sibley gives it an A-minus
[54:47] What Needs Improvement
Habitat protections and a few political compromises that could be tightened
[55:40] What's Next: Cost Reduction
California YIMBY's focus shifts to making housing affordable to build
[56:07] The Cost Crisis
Progress on permitting and zoning means nothing if it costs $1 million per unit
[56:55] Building Code Reform
Why California needs state intervention in the private building code creation process
[57:31] Making Legal Housing Economically Viable
The housing we need is now legal—we just need to make it affordable to build
[57:51] Closing Thoughts
Thank you to Aaron and a look ahead to future cost-reduction legislation
Sibley Simon [00:00:00]
Welcome back to the Infill Insiders podcast, where we dissect specific state housing laws so that you know how to use them so that more infill housing that's denser can get permitted faster. And we're excited today to talk about the new CEQA exemption. So I'm really excited today. We have a great guest, Aaron Ekhouse. Aaron works at California YIMBY, which is deeply involved in getting these bills passed in the first place. Aaron, what's your title at California YIMBY?Aaron Ekhouse [00:00:33]
I'm the local and regional policy program director. There's an awful lot, but I do work with local government officials on making these laws a success at the local level and then did a lot of policy work this past year on CEQA reform and transit oriented development.Sibley Simon [00:00:52]
Excellent. And you've been at California YIMBY quite a while now, right?Aaron Ekhouse [00:00:55]
I've been at California YIMBY for eight years now. So most of the history of the organization. Yeah, I think there's one bill that we did before my time, which is a significant bill strengthening the Housing Accountability Act and sort of making that a real law. But every other bill we worked on, I've been there.Sibley Simon [00:01:16]
Well, thank you for that work. We really appreciate it. And we're still trying to understand it. So obviously, yes, a lot this year. So obviously we brought Aaron on because he worked on what we're going to talk about today, which is the new CEQA exemption specifically for infill housing development. And we're not going to get into the sausage making so much, the whole unusual process of this getting passed as part of the budget package or why that happened. It's a mystery. That's fine. We want to look at what it is and talk about that. And because you were involved in the sausage making to some extent, you may be able to, since it's brand new, shed some light on why some of it's that way or puzzle at it with us.Sibley Simon [00:02:08]
So specifically, this was in a bill that had the number AB 130. But that bill also had a bunch of other stuff. And most notably, a ton of the text to that bill was making permanent a whole bunch of stuff that's been passed in many housing bills over the last five, seven years. So a lot of things that were going to sunset at 2030 or 2031 or 2035 or whatever now are permanent. Great. That doesn't really affect what you can do today or tomorrow or next year. So we're not going to focus on that. But if people are curious, you know, look it up. I think it's a good moment to say, well, this is AB 130 today. If you wanted to read the text of this bill, you can go online and see AB 130. But in the future, I try not to do that. I try not to go back and look at the bill text unless I try to look at the law that the bill established or amended because future bills will change. I'm sure on this topic, future bills will change it more. So you always want to look at what the current law is.Sibley Simon [00:03:09]
And so this bill, among those other things that did the thing we're talking about today is this new CEQA exemption, which really established a new section of state law, 21080.66. And that is an exemption for certain infill housing. So that's what we're going to talk about. We're not going to go way into why, but it's important to say the whole reason this was a big deal in the state legislature is that in some, especially in some areas of the state, a lot of infill housing that we would say is great for the environment, to stop sprawl, put housing where people can walk and use active and mass transit, all that, and just fewer vehicle miles, travel density, less infrastructure needed, all that stuff. So much of that housing gets at least threats of CEQA lawsuits and has added a lot of costs to do things to defend against those threats or prevent those from going to court. And I've seen this based in San Jose and Santa Cruz.Aaron Ekhouse [00:04:06]
Yeah, this has been like an over eight year topic for us. What do we do on CEQA reform? SB 35 was our first foray. I mean, it wasn't even a CEQA bill. It just said like CEQA doesn't apply. And then we tried big reforms and they didn't go anywhere. I think the major kind of mindset shift, or how we framed it this time, was infill. It's not infill versus Greenfield. It's infill is the solution. Greenfield has these environmental problems. Infill doesn't have those. So let's make it easier to build infill. It's actually good for the environment to build downtown the same way. And once we start framing the conversation that way, a lot of people said, OK, yeah, actually we don't want those projects to be slowed down.Sibley Simon [00:04:58]
I mean, that's how I think of it. I often say not every housing project is climate-smart housing. Some are and some aren't. And infill is one of the most clear climate-smart housing. And we need to remove the chilling effect on it. And we need to make it so that people will actually provide it. There's so much to provide this housing, even though the government doesn't provide it in the state of California anymore. Nonprofits do provide a little, but mostly it's for-profit developers of various sizes have to choose to do it. And if they think there's a good chance it'll work for them, if there's uncertainty, they have to walk away.Aaron Ekhouse [00:05:25]
Yeah, totally. And I think also when I think about the design of this bill with all the regulations, what we're looking at is a specific problem with CEQA. So we're focused on—sometimes people think of the problem of CEQA being the environmental report costs millions of dollars to do. And actually, the problem that's much more important from a policy perspective is that it gets weaponized. It's uncertainty. It doesn't matter if the report is a thousand dollars or a hundred thousand dollars. It matters that a lawsuit can stop it. But cities don't have the money to defend these things. So we designed this law with that problem in mind. The uncertainty problem.Sibley Simon [00:06:07]
So diving into what it is. And here's the really important technical numbers for all you wonks. So CEQA, the California Environmental Quality Act is in the public resources code, division 13. And this inserted a new section 21080.66. And that's the new CEQA exemption for qualified residential, mixed use, or transitional homeless shelter projects, which doesn't really tell you what it is. So that's great. It's in there in the law. But of course, when you have an exemption, the idea is it doesn't apply in these cases.[Content continues through the full transcript with consistent formatting...]
Aaron Ekhouse [00:57:59]
Yeah, it took us eight years to do CEQA. So yeah, maybe eight more years to cut the cost per unit in half. That'd be great. Inflation adjusted even, we'll take it. All right. Thank you. -
Who Are The Infill Insiders?
The Infill Insiders break down the highly complex process of infill housing development in California. Host and principal developer, Sibley Simon, shares Workbench's experience to teach developers and land owners how to use the many state housing laws to successfully develop infill housing, while showing jurisdictions what makes the process more efficient, and encouraging elected officials and anyone interested to face the big challenges that still remain in housing creation. Join us and become more effective at creating infill housing.Hosted by
Sibley Simon
Principal & Impact Development Executive, WorkbenchSibley leads the Workbench development team's impact focused projects geared towards creating more affordable housing without public subsidy. With years of experience driving legislative progress, he’s forged strong alliances with leaders dedicated to tackling California’s housing equity challenges. Before joining Workbench, Sibley founded numerous companies and created an impact investment fund to spur new workforce and affordable housing development.
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