In an effort to provide legal guidance to the broad range of interests impacted by tomorrow’s dissolution of redevelopment agencies in California, Alvarez-Glasman & Colvin (AGC) is proud to announce the formation of its newest practice group: the AGC Redevelopment Transition Practice Group.
Formation of the Redevelopment Transition Practice Group comes in response to the enactment of Assembly Bill 1X26 – recently upheld by the California Supreme Court in its ruling, California Redevelopment Association v. Matosantos – which provides for the dissolution of all redevelopment agencies in California by Wednesday, February 1, 2012. The consequences of Matosantos decision, coupled with the recent failure of other lawsuits challenging AB1X26, promise to drastically reshape urban development in California and will transform the way local governments will operate for decades to come.
Comprised of attorneys with extensive experience in representing redevelopment agencies, municipalities, and private sector parties engaged in redevelopment transactions, the Redevelopment Transition Practice Group is intended to serve as a comprehensive legal resource to address the complex and diverse challenges created by the dissolution of redevelopment agencies throughout the State. Among the legal issues which the Redevelopment Transition Practice Group is presently addressing are:
The vast majority of attention on redevelopment dissolution has thus far come from the public sector – cities, counties, and agencies themselves grappling with the meaning and consequences of losing redevelopment agencies. However, the loss of redevelopment will likewise have extensive impacts in the private sector, as a very uncertain future is emerging for lenders, developers, financial institutions, bond holders, public housing advocates, and others involved in redevelopment transactions. AGC’s Redevelopment Transition Practice Group is able to address the interests of these sectors – both public and private – who are each impacted by the loss of redevelopment in unique ways.
With more than fifty years of combined experience in the areas of redevelopment and municipal law, AGC’s attorneys are practicing on the cutting edge of events in the changing field of California redevelopment law. If your city, agency, organization or business is responding to AB1X26 or has otherwise engaged in transactions with redevelopment agencies, we urge you to explore the impacts, and exposure, and opportunities posed by this precedent-setting legislation.
For more information on AGC’s Redevelopment Transition Practice Group, please contact AGC at (562) 699-5500, or e-mail any of the Practice Group directors: Andrew Jared at ajared@agclawfirm.com; Scott Nichols at snichols@agclawfirm.com; and Matthew Gorman at mgorman@agclawfirm.com.