Politics & Government

Court: State Can Dissolve Redevelopment Agencies

Ruling appears to be bad news for the future of Hercules Redevelopment Agency.

By Bay City News Service

California Supreme Court on Thursday upheld a law that dissolves the state's 400 redevelopment agencies and allows the state to seize $1.7 billion in property tax revenue to fund schools and special districts.

Read about the Hercules Redevelopment Agency

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But the court struck down a second law that would have enabled the agencies to come back into existence if they agreed to contribute $400 million annually in future years to schools, transit and firefighting programs.

The panel said the second measure violated a 2010 voter initiative that barred the state from diverting property tax revenues from redevelopment agencies.

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Justice Kathryn Werdegar wrote that the Legislature had the power to terminate the agencies, but did not have the authority to require mandatory payments as a condition of future existence.

Both laws were enacted by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Jerry Brown in June as steps to help close the state's $25 billion budget deficit.

The state high court issued its ruling in San Francisco in a lawsuit filed by the California Redevelopment Association, League of California Cities and the cities of San Jose and Union City.

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