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A pro-housing move at Coastal Commission
Los Angeles Times
|December 02, 2025
Criticized as an obstacle, agency signals a shift
THE STATE commission is tasked with conserving more than 800 miles of coast.
(ALLEN J. SCHABEN Los Angeles Times)
Bone-colored bluffs and jagged cliffs line the Monterey shoreline where chalky sand meets redwoods.
Its rugged coastline, including beloved destinations such as Big Sur, is well-known California iconography protected by the California Coastal Act for nearly 50 years.
In a push to address the state’s gripping housing crisis, the California Coastal Commission last month approved a rule change to make it easier to build affordable housing in Monterey and elsewhere along the hundreds of miles of the Pacific coast.
It was the latest effort by the powerful state agency to combat its poor reputation among housing advocates and Democratic leaders who see it as an obstacle to drastic housing reform in California’s coveted coastal regions.
While minor and uncontroversial, the amendment was one of a few shifts the commission has made in recent months in an effort to be viewed as playing a part in addressing the state's crippling housing crisis.
It released a report for the first time in 2024 that showed local governments were responsible for approving the vast majority of permits in coastal regions, and this year the agency worked with housing activists to make it easier to build student housing in coastal cities.
Nor did the Coastal Commission oppose a landmark housing reform law that excludes most new developments from environmental review.
"It's going to have a real-life change," Susan Jordan, a longtime conservation activist and founder of the California Coastal Protection Network, said of the regulatory amendment at the meeting.
Twelve people — six local elected officials and six members of the public — vote on the independent, quasi-judicial state agency tasked with conserving more than 800 miles of the California coast and keeping it open to the public.
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