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	<title>AB 2011 Archives - JDJ Consulting Group</title>
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	<description>LA Land Use Consultants &#38; Permit Expediter</description>
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		<title>Ministerial vs Discretionary Permits – Understanding the Difference</title>
		<link>https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/ministerial-vs-discretionary-permits-understanding-the-difference/</link>
					<comments>https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/ministerial-vs-discretionary-permits-understanding-the-difference/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[JDJ Admin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Jul 2025 17:11:30 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Land Use Consulting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[AB 2011]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[California planning process]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CEQA Exemption]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[conditional use permit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[discretionary permit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entitlement strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[land use approval]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ministerial permit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[permit types California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[planning commission]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[planning permits Los Angeles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SB 35]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[zoning decisions]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Navigating California’s permit process can feel overwhelming, especially when you're trying to understand the difference between ministerial and discretionary approvals. Whether you're building housing, launching a mixed-use project, or planning a site change, knowing which type of permit you need can save you time, money, and legal headaches. </p>
<p>The post <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/ministerial-vs-discretionary-permits-understanding-the-difference/">Ministerial vs Discretionary Permits – Understanding the Difference</a> appeared first on <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com">JDJ Consulting Group</a>.</p>
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									<h1 data-start="253" data-end="350">Ministerial vs Discretionary Permits – Understanding the Difference</h1><p data-start="373" data-end="538">If you&#8217;re planning to build, develop, or renovate in California, you’ll need city or county approval before you begin. But not all approvals follow the same process.</p><p data-start="540" data-end="708">Some permits are simple and based only on rules written in the city’s code. Others require more review—often including public input, environmental studies, or hearings.</p><p data-start="710" data-end="782">These two permit types are called <strong data-start="744" data-end="759">ministerial</strong> vs <strong data-start="764" data-end="781">discretionary</strong>.</p><p data-start="784" data-end="1039">At JDJ Consulting Group, we help clients understand which path they’re on from the start. Why does it matter? Because the type of permit you need will affect your timeline, budget, environmental requirements, and even the community&#8217;s role in your project.</p><p data-start="1041" data-end="1163">In this guide, we’ll break down the differences, show real examples, and explain how you can move forward with confidence.</p>								</div>
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  <h3 style="color:#2c3e50;">Permit Approval Process Flow</h3>
  <p style="font-size:14px;color:#555;">A quick look at how projects flow through ministerial and discretionary approval paths.</p>
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      <h4 style="color:#2980b9;">Ministerial Permit</h4>
      <ul style="list-style:disc;padding-left:20px;">
        <li>Project submitted</li>
        <li>Staff checks objective standards</li>
        <li>If compliant → Approved</li>
        <li>No public hearings or discretion</li>
      </ul>
    </div>
    <div style="flex:1;min-width:280px;padding:10px;">
      <h4 style="color:#c0392b;">Discretionary Permit</h4>
      <ul style="list-style:disc;padding-left:20px;">
        <li>Application submitted</li>
        <li>CEQA review or exemptions evaluated</li>
        <li>Hearing with Planning Commission or Council</li>
        <li>Public input considered → Approval/Denial</li>
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									<h2 data-start="1170" data-end="1227">What Are Ministerial Permits and How Do They Work?</h2><p data-start="1229" data-end="1383">A <a href="https://rma.venturacounty.gov/divisions/planning/ministerial-permits/#:~:text=A%20ministerial%20permit%20is%20a%20permit%20that,the%20proposed%20project%20complies%20with%20established%20standards." target="_blank" rel="noopener"><strong data-start="1231" data-end="1253">ministerial permit</strong></a> is an approval that doesn’t involve any judgment. If your plans follow the city’s code exactly, the agency must issue the permit.</p><p data-start="1385" data-end="1556">These permits are based on clear, objective standards. The staff simply checks your application against the rules. If you meet all the requirements, the permit is granted.</p><h3 data-start="1558" data-end="1589">Common Ministerial Permits</h3><p data-start="1591" data-end="1680">Ministerial permits are often used for simple or routine projects. Some examples include:</p><ul data-start="1682" data-end="1840"><li data-start="1682" data-end="1701"><p data-start="1684" data-end="1701">Interior remodels</p></li><li data-start="1702" data-end="1721"><p data-start="1704" data-end="1721">Roof replacements</p></li><li data-start="1722" data-end="1755"><p data-start="1724" data-end="1755">Electrical or plumbing upgrades</p></li><li data-start="1756" data-end="1792"><p data-start="1758" data-end="1792">Small additions within code limits</p></li><li data-start="1793" data-end="1840"><p data-start="1795" data-end="1840">Certain zoning-compliant housing developments</p></li></ul><p data-start="1842" data-end="1958">These are also known as <strong data-start="1866" data-end="1890">“by-right” approvals</strong> because you have the right to build if your plans follow the rules.</p><h3 data-start="1960" data-end="1998">How the Ministerial Process Works</h3><div class="_tableContainer_80l1q_1"><div class="_tableWrapper_80l1q_14 group flex w-fit flex-col-reverse" tabindex="-1"><table class="w-fit min-w-(--thread-content-width)" data-start="2000" data-end="2655"><thead data-start="2000" data-end="2108"><tr data-start="2000" data-end="2108"><th data-start="2000" data-end="2035" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2002" data-end="2010">Step</strong></th><th data-start="2035" data-end="2108" data-col-size="md"><strong data-start="2037" data-end="2052">Description</strong></th></tr></thead><tbody data-start="2219" data-end="2655"><tr data-start="2219" data-end="2327"><td data-start="2219" data-end="2254" data-col-size="sm">Submit application</td><td data-start="2254" data-end="2327" data-col-size="md">You turn in your plans and forms to the city or county agency</td></tr><tr data-start="2328" data-end="2437"><td data-start="2328" data-end="2363" data-col-size="sm">Staff reviews for code compliance</td><td data-start="2363" data-end="2437" data-col-size="md">Officials compare your plans to zoning and building code standards</td></tr><tr data-start="2438" data-end="2546"><td data-start="2438" data-end="2473" data-col-size="sm">No judgment or conditions</td><td data-start="2473" data-end="2546" data-col-size="md">The agency cannot deny your application if it meets the written rules</td></tr><tr data-start="2547" data-end="2655"><td data-start="2547" data-end="2582" data-col-size="sm">Permit issued</td><td data-start="2582" data-end="2655" data-col-size="md">Approval is granted quickly—often within a few days or weeks</td></tr></tbody></table><div class="sticky end-(--thread-content-margin) h-0 self-end select-none"><div class="absolute end-0 flex items-end"> </div></div></div></div><p data-start="2657" data-end="2882">Because there is no discretion, the agency cannot require changes or ask for additional analysis. As a result, <strong data-start="2768" data-end="2827">ministerial permits do not trigger environmental review</strong> under CEQA (the California Environmental Quality Act).</p><h3 data-start="2884" data-end="2923">Benefits for Developers and Owners</h3><p data-start="2925" data-end="2949">Ministerial permits are:</p><ul data-start="2951" data-end="3192"><li data-start="2951" data-end="3004"><p data-start="2953" data-end="3004"><strong data-start="2953" data-end="2963">Faster</strong> – Many are processed in days, not months</p></li><li data-start="3005" data-end="3070"><p data-start="3007" data-end="3070"><strong data-start="3007" data-end="3027">More predictable</strong> – If you meet the code, you get the permit</p></li><li data-start="3071" data-end="3129"><p data-start="3073" data-end="3129"><strong data-start="3073" data-end="3091">Cost-effective</strong> – No added studies or public hearings</p></li><li data-start="3130" data-end="3192"><p data-start="3132" data-end="3192"><a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/common-ceqa-exemptions-in-los-angeles-a-developers-guide-to-faster-project-approvals/"><strong data-start="3132" data-end="3147">CEQA-exempt</strong></a> – No environmental documentation is required</p></li></ul><p data-start="3194" data-end="3379">At JDJ Consulting Group, we help clients confirm whether their project qualifies for ministerial approval and assist in preparing complete, accurate submissions to speed up the process.</p><h2 data-start="242" data-end="308">What Are Discretionary Permits and Why Do They Take Longer?</h2><p data-start="310" data-end="464">A <a href="https://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/permits/discretionary-permit#:~:text=Important:%20Once%20a%20discretionary%20approval,Commission%20or%20the%20City%20Council." target="_blank" rel="noopener"><strong data-start="312" data-end="336">discretionary permit</strong></a> is different from a ministerial one. Instead of automatic approval, these permits involve <strong data-start="427" data-end="439">judgment</strong> from the city or county.</p><p data-start="466" data-end="628">That means an agency reviews your plans not just for code compliance but also for their <strong data-start="554" data-end="615">impact on the community, environment, and long-term goals</strong> of the city.</p><p data-start="630" data-end="796">In most cases, discretionary permits require public notice, environmental review, and sometimes a public hearing. The process is more involved and often takes months.</p><p data-start="630" data-end="796"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class=" wp-image-5681 aligncenter" src="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2222036267-612x612-1.jpg" alt="BUILDINGS PERMIT CONCEPT WITH GENERAL URBAN PLAN AND CADASTRAL MAP - Building activity and construction industry concept with building work permission" width="688" height="480" srcset="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2222036267-612x612-1.jpg 612w, https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2222036267-612x612-1-300x209.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 688px) 100vw, 688px" /></p><h3 data-start="798" data-end="836">Examples of Discretionary Permits</h3><p data-start="838" data-end="888">Discretionary permits are common in projects that:</p><ul data-start="890" data-end="1040"><li data-start="890" data-end="949"><p data-start="892" data-end="949">Propose something not allowed by right in the zoning code</p></li><li data-start="950" data-end="992"><p data-start="952" data-end="992">Need exceptions to development standards</p></li><li data-start="993" data-end="1040"><p data-start="995" data-end="1040">May impact traffic, noise, or the environment</p></li></ul><p data-start="1042" data-end="1063">Common types include:</p><div class="_tableContainer_80l1q_1"><div class="_tableWrapper_80l1q_14 group flex w-fit flex-col-reverse" tabindex="-1"><table class="w-fit min-w-(--thread-content-width)" data-start="1065" data-end="1881"><thead data-start="1065" data-end="1167"><tr data-start="1065" data-end="1167"><th data-start="1065" data-end="1099" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1067" data-end="1082">Permit Type</strong></th><th data-start="1099" data-end="1167" data-col-size="md"><strong data-start="1101" data-end="1112">Purpose</strong></th></tr></thead><tbody data-start="1270" data-end="1881"><tr data-start="1270" data-end="1371"><td data-start="1270" data-end="1303" data-col-size="sm">Conditional Use Permit (CUP)</td><td data-start="1303" data-end="1371" data-col-size="md">Allows uses not typically permitted in a zone</td></tr><tr data-start="1372" data-end="1473"><td data-start="1372" data-end="1405" data-col-size="sm">Variance</td><td data-start="1405" data-end="1473" data-col-size="md">Allows exceptions to zoning rules like setbacks or height limits</td></tr><tr data-start="1474" data-end="1575"><td data-start="1474" data-end="1507" data-col-size="sm">Zone Change</td><td data-start="1507" data-end="1575" data-col-size="md">Requests a new zoning designation for a parcel</td></tr><tr data-start="1576" data-end="1677"><td data-start="1576" data-end="1609" data-col-size="sm">Site Plan Review</td><td data-start="1609" data-end="1677" data-col-size="md">Reviews layout, design, circulation, and impacts</td></tr><tr data-start="1678" data-end="1779"><td data-start="1678" data-end="1713" data-col-size="sm">Subdivision (Tract or Parcel Map)</td><td data-start="1713" data-end="1779" data-col-size="md">Splits a property into multiple legal lots</td></tr><tr data-start="1780" data-end="1881"><td data-start="1780" data-end="1813" data-col-size="sm">Coastal Development Permit</td><td data-start="1813" data-end="1881" data-col-size="md">Required for projects within the Coastal Zone</td></tr></tbody></table><div class="sticky end-(--thread-content-margin) h-0 self-end select-none"><div class="absolute end-0 flex items-end"> </div></div></div></div><p data-start="1883" data-end="2018">These permits give cities flexibility to review a project’s fit with the surrounding area—but that also means more steps and more time.</p><h3 data-start="2020" data-end="2064">Why Discretionary Means More Complexity</h3><p data-start="2066" data-end="2216">Unlike ministerial permits, discretionary approvals allow cities to say no—or to attach conditions. Staff or elected officials can review things like:</p><ul data-start="2218" data-end="2342"><li data-start="2218" data-end="2246"><p data-start="2220" data-end="2246">Neighborhood compatibility</p></li><li data-start="2247" data-end="2276"><p data-start="2249" data-end="2276">Traffic and parking impacts</p></li><li data-start="2277" data-end="2300"><p data-start="2279" data-end="2300">Aesthetics and design</p></li><li data-start="2301" data-end="2325"><p data-start="2303" data-end="2325">Environmental concerns</p></li><li data-start="2326" data-end="2342"><p data-start="2328" data-end="2342">Public opinion</p></li></ul><p data-start="2344" data-end="2372">This process often includes:</p><ul data-start="2374" data-end="2478"><li data-start="2374" data-end="2398"><p data-start="2376" data-end="2398">Planning staff reports</p></li><li data-start="2399" data-end="2416"><p data-start="2401" data-end="2416">Public hearings</p></li><li data-start="2417" data-end="2430"><p data-start="2419" data-end="2430">CEQA review</p></li><li data-start="2431" data-end="2478"><p data-start="2433" data-end="2478">Opportunities for community comment or appeal</p></li></ul><p data-start="2480" data-end="2684">JDJ Consulting Group helps clients prepare for these challenges from the start. We coordinate the right studies, prepare clean application packages, and guide projects through hearings and agency reviews.</p><h2 data-start="2691" data-end="2773">Legal &amp; Environmental Rules: Why CEQA Only Applies to Discretionary Permits</h2><p data-start="2775" data-end="2919">In California, most large projects must comply with the <a href="https://lci.ca.gov/ceqa/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><strong data-start="2831" data-end="2878">California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA)</strong></a>. But not every permit triggers this law.</p><p data-start="2921" data-end="3020">The rule is simple: <strong data-start="2941" data-end="2991">Only discretionary permits require CEQA review</strong>. Ministerial permits do not.</p><p data-start="3022" data-end="3115">This makes knowing your permit type even more important for your project timeline and budget.</p><h3 data-start="3117" data-end="3146">CEQA and the Permit Path</h3><div class="_tableContainer_80l1q_1"><div class="_tableWrapper_80l1q_14 group flex w-fit flex-col-reverse" tabindex="-1"><table class="w-fit min-w-(--thread-content-width)" style="height: 291px;" width="804" data-start="3148" data-end="3897"><thead data-start="3148" data-end="3271"><tr data-start="3148" data-end="3271"><th data-start="3148" data-end="3177" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="3150" data-end="3160">Factor</strong></th><th data-start="3177" data-end="3223" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="3179" data-end="3201">Ministerial Permit</strong></th><th data-start="3223" data-end="3271" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="3225" data-end="3249">Discretionary Permit</strong></th></tr></thead><tbody data-start="3397" data-end="3897"><tr data-start="3397" data-end="3521"><td data-start="3397" data-end="3426" data-col-size="sm">CEQA Applies?</td><td data-start="3426" data-end="3473" data-col-size="sm">No</td><td data-start="3473" data-end="3521" data-col-size="sm">Yes</td></tr><tr data-start="3522" data-end="3647"><td data-start="3522" data-end="3552" data-col-size="sm">Environmental Report Needed?</td><td data-start="3552" data-end="3599" data-col-size="sm">No</td><td data-start="3599" data-end="3647" data-col-size="sm">Yes (IS, MND, or full EIR)</td></tr><tr data-start="3648" data-end="3772"><td data-start="3648" data-end="3677" data-col-size="sm">Public Review?</td><td data-start="3677" data-end="3724" data-col-size="sm">Rarely</td><td data-start="3724" data-end="3772" data-col-size="sm">Often required</td></tr><tr data-start="3773" data-end="3897"><td data-start="3773" data-end="3802" data-col-size="sm">Conditions or Mitigation?</td><td data-start="3802" data-end="3849" data-col-size="sm">Not allowed</td><td data-start="3849" data-end="3897" data-col-size="sm">Allowed—and often required</td></tr></tbody></table><div class="sticky end-(--thread-content-margin) h-0 self-end select-none"><div class="absolute end-0 flex items-end"> </div></div></div></div><h3 data-start="3899" data-end="3940">Why Ministerial Approvals Avoid CEQA</h3><p data-start="3942" data-end="4091">Ministerial permits are based only on objective standards. Because the agency has <strong data-start="4024" data-end="4069">no power to deny or condition the project</strong>, CEQA does not apply.</p><p data-start="4093" data-end="4315">In contrast, discretionary permits let agencies make decisions. They can deny the project, ask for design changes, or add mitigation measures to reduce impacts. This level of control means that <strong data-start="4287" data-end="4314">CEQA review is required</strong>.</p><h3 data-start="4317" data-end="4356">A Court Case That Set the Standard</h3><p data-start="4358" data-end="4452">In 2016, the <strong data-start="4371" data-end="4425">Stanislaus Audubon Society v. County of Stanislaus</strong> case clarified this issue.</p><p data-start="4454" data-end="4655">The court ruled that if an agency has <strong data-start="4492" data-end="4510">any discretion</strong> in approving a permit—like changing how it’s built or requiring environmental fixes—then the permit is discretionary, and CEQA must be followed.</p><p data-start="4657" data-end="4825">This decision affects many land use approvals in California. Even if your project is small, you may still need CEQA review if it involves any type of agency discretion.</p><p data-start="4827" data-end="4958">At JDJ Consulting Group, we help clients avoid costly delays by determining early whether CEQA will apply—and planning accordingly.</p>								</div>
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  <h3 style="color:#333;text-align:center;">Average Permit Processing Time (Days)</h3>
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    <rect x="50" y="80" width="60" height="100" fill="#3498db" />
    <text x="80" y="195" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12">Ministerial</text>
    <text x="80" y="75" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12">~20</text>

    <rect x="150" y="20" width="60" height="160" fill="#e67e22" />
    <text x="180" y="195" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12">Discretionary</text>
    <text x="180" y="15" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12">~120</text>
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									<h2 data-start="330" data-end="405">Real-World Differences Between Ministerial and Discretionary Permits</h2><p data-start="407" data-end="526">Now that we’ve covered the definitions, let’s look at how these two permit types affect your project in the real world.</p><p data-start="528" data-end="731">At JDJ Consulting Group, we often guide clients through both processes. While some projects qualify for fast approvals, others require careful planning, outreach, and coordination with multiple agencies.</p><p data-start="733" data-end="785">Below is a side-by-side view of the key differences.</p><h3 data-start="787" data-end="838">Comparing Ministerial vs Discretionary Permits</h3><div class="_tableContainer_80l1q_1"><div class="_tableWrapper_80l1q_14 group flex w-fit flex-col-reverse" tabindex="-1"><table class="w-fit min-w-(--thread-content-width)" data-start="840" data-end="2125"><thead data-start="840" data-end="982"><tr data-start="840" data-end="982"><th data-start="840" data-end="874" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="842" data-end="860">Project Factor</strong></th><th data-start="874" data-end="927" data-col-size="md"><strong data-start="876" data-end="898">Ministerial Permit</strong></th><th data-start="927" data-end="982" data-col-size="md"><strong data-start="929" data-end="953">Discretionary Permit</strong></th></tr></thead><tbody data-start="1127" data-end="2125"><tr data-start="1127" data-end="1269"><td data-start="1127" data-end="1161" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1129" data-end="1147">Review Process</strong></td><td data-start="1161" data-end="1214" data-col-size="md">Checked against set rules—no judgment involved</td><td data-start="1214" data-end="1269" data-col-size="md">Agency evaluates based on impact and intent</td></tr><tr data-start="1270" data-end="1411"><td data-start="1270" data-end="1303" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1272" data-end="1291">CEQA Triggered?</strong></td><td data-start="1303" data-end="1356" data-col-size="md">No</td><td data-start="1356" data-end="1411" data-col-size="md">Yes – environmental review often required</td></tr><tr data-start="1412" data-end="1553"><td data-start="1412" data-end="1445" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1414" data-end="1440">Public Hearing Needed?</strong></td><td data-start="1445" data-end="1498" data-col-size="md">No</td><td data-start="1498" data-end="1553" data-col-size="md">Usually yes</td></tr><tr data-start="1554" data-end="1699"><td data-start="1554" data-end="1587" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1556" data-end="1576">Staff Discretion</strong></td><td data-start="1587" data-end="1640" data-col-size="md">Not allowed</td><td data-start="1640" data-end="1699" data-col-size="md">Allowed – staff or officials can deny or add conditions</td></tr><tr data-start="1700" data-end="1841"><td data-start="1700" data-end="1733" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1702" data-end="1721">Processing Time</strong></td><td data-start="1733" data-end="1786" data-col-size="md">Fast (days to weeks)</td><td data-start="1786" data-end="1841" data-col-size="md">Longer (months to a year or more)</td></tr><tr data-start="1842" data-end="1983"><td data-start="1842" data-end="1875" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1844" data-end="1866">Cost of Processing</strong></td><td data-start="1875" data-end="1928" data-col-size="md">Lower—fewer submittals and no studies</td><td data-start="1928" data-end="1983" data-col-size="md">Higher—includes technical reports and legal review</td></tr><tr data-start="1984" data-end="2125"><td data-start="1984" data-end="2017" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1986" data-end="2013">Risk of Appeal or Delay</strong></td><td data-start="2017" data-end="2070" data-col-size="md">Low</td><td data-start="2070" data-end="2125" data-col-size="md">Higher – subject to hearings and CEQA challenges</td></tr></tbody></table><div class="sticky end-(--thread-content-margin) h-0 self-end select-none"><div class="absolute end-0 flex items-end"> </div></div></div></div><p data-start="2127" data-end="2331">These differences shape your strategy. Projects that qualify for ministerial review move faster and carry fewer risks. Discretionary projects require more attention, coordination, and often legal support.</p><h3 data-start="2333" data-end="2386">Why It Matters to Developers and Property Owners</h3><p data-start="2388" data-end="2537">If you’re trying to meet tight deadlines, secure financing, or avoid public opposition, you need to understand your project’s pathway from the start.</p><p data-start="2539" data-end="2645">Ministerial projects allow you to plan with confidence. You’ll know what’s required and how long it takes.</p><p data-start="2647" data-end="2804">Discretionary projects, on the other hand, need flexibility. Community feedback, city council votes, or CEQA studies can add months or more to your timeline.</p><p data-start="2806" data-end="2924">At JDJ Consulting Group, we help clients reduce delays, prepare smart strategies, and navigate both paths efficiently.</p><h2 data-start="2931" data-end="2985">Planning and Operational Impacts for Developers</h2><p data-start="2987" data-end="3226">Whether your project involves a ministerial permit or a discretionary one, the planning process must be strong from the start. JDJ Consulting works with clients to map out the right approval path based on their goals, timeline, and budget.</p><p data-start="2987" data-end="3226"><img decoding="async" class=" wp-image-5682 aligncenter" src="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-1613648265-612x612-1.jpg" alt="Land surveyor team standing working together at construction field consult study looking building location with floor plan" width="704" height="469" srcset="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-1613648265-612x612-1.jpg 612w, https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-1613648265-612x612-1-300x200.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 704px) 100vw, 704px" /></p><h3 data-start="3228" data-end="3288">How JDJ Consulting Helps with Ministerial Approvals</h3><p data-start="3290" data-end="3385">Ministerial permits may sound simple—but small mistakes can still lead to rejections or delays.</p><p data-start="3387" data-end="3402">We help you by:</p><ul data-start="3404" data-end="3598"><li data-start="3404" data-end="3455"><p data-start="3406" data-end="3455">Reviewing your project to confirm code compliance</p></li><li data-start="3456" data-end="3505"><p data-start="3458" data-end="3505">Gathering and organizing the required documents</p></li><li data-start="3506" data-end="3552"><p data-start="3508" data-end="3552">Submitting a complete package the first time</p></li><li data-start="3553" data-end="3598"><p data-start="3555" data-end="3598">Coordinating directly with city departments</p></li></ul><p data-start="3600" data-end="3722">This approach helps clients get fast approvals—sometimes within days—without the back-and-forth that can slow things down.</p><h3 data-start="3724" data-end="3781">How JDJ Consulting Guides Discretionary Projects</h3><p data-start="3783" data-end="3886">For discretionary permits, early planning is key. We guide your project through every stage, including:</p><ul data-start="3888" data-end="4184"><li data-start="3888" data-end="3943"><p data-start="3890" data-end="3943">Reviewing zoning, land use, and General Plan policies</p></li><li data-start="3944" data-end="3998"><p data-start="3946" data-end="3998">Managing pre-application meetings with city planners</p></li><li data-start="3999" data-end="4059"><p data-start="4001" data-end="4059">Coordinating required studies (e.g., traffic, noise, CEQA)</p></li><li data-start="4060" data-end="4125"><p data-start="4062" data-end="4125">Preparing staff reports, exhibits, and public hearing materials</p></li><li data-start="4126" data-end="4184"><p data-start="4128" data-end="4184">Leading communications with local officials and agencies</p></li></ul><p data-start="4186" data-end="4336">We also help with <strong data-start="4204" data-end="4228">community engagement</strong> to reduce opposition. This includes letters to neighbors, community meetings, and managing online feedback.</p><h3 data-start="4338" data-end="4383">Preventing Delays Before They Happen</h3><p data-start="4385" data-end="4529">Discretionary permits often hit delays because of incomplete applications or last-minute objections. JDJ’s job is to <strong data-start="4502" data-end="4528">spot those risks early</strong>.</p><p data-start="4531" data-end="4612">We prepare a full entitlement strategy, so you know what’s ahead before you file.</p><p data-start="4614" data-end="4645">Our consultants help you avoid:</p><ul data-start="4647" data-end="4730"><li data-start="4647" data-end="4662"><p data-start="4649" data-end="4662">CEQA lawsuits</p></li><li data-start="4663" data-end="4684"><p data-start="4665" data-end="4684">Incomplete findings</p></li><li data-start="4685" data-end="4711"><p data-start="4687" data-end="4711">Public hearing surprises</p></li><li data-start="4712" data-end="4730"><p data-start="4714" data-end="4730">Missed deadlines</p></li></ul><p data-start="4732" data-end="4817">By planning the right path early, we save you time and reduce costly surprises later.</p>								</div>
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  <h3 style="margin-top:0;color:#2c3e50;">Need Help Navigating Ministerial or Discretionary Permits?</h3>
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    JDJ Consulting Group specializes in land-use consulting and entitlement strategies across California. Whether your project qualifies for streamlined approvals or requires a discretionary review, we can help you move forward with confidence.
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									<h2 data-start="329" data-end="411">Case Studies: Real JDJ Projects Using Ministerial and Discretionary Permits</h2><p data-start="413" data-end="629">At JDJ Consulting Group, we’ve helped clients across California navigate both permit types. Here are two real-world examples showing how the choice between ministerial and discretionary paths shaped project outcomes.</p><h3 data-start="631" data-end="693"><strong data-start="636" data-end="693">Case Study 1: Ministerial ADU Approval in Los Angeles</strong></h3><p data-start="695" data-end="851"><strong data-start="695" data-end="712">Project Type:</strong> Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) on a single-family parcel<br data-start="768" data-end="771" /><strong data-start="771" data-end="787">Permit Type:</strong> Ministerial<br data-start="799" data-end="802" /><strong data-start="802" data-end="815">Timeline:</strong> 3 weeks from submission to approval</p><p data-start="853" data-end="1040">Our client wanted to build a backyard ADU for rental income. Because of recent state ADU laws, the project qualified for <strong data-start="974" data-end="995">by-right approval</strong>—meaning no hearings or environmental review.</p><p data-start="1042" data-end="1045">We:</p><ul data-start="1047" data-end="1194"><li data-start="1047" data-end="1086"><p data-start="1049" data-end="1086">Verified zoning compliance up front</p></li><li data-start="1087" data-end="1145"><p data-start="1089" data-end="1145">Submitted a complete application with all site details</p></li><li data-start="1146" data-end="1194"><p data-start="1148" data-end="1194">Communicated directly with the LADBS reviewers</p></li></ul><p data-start="1196" data-end="1300"><strong data-start="1196" data-end="1208">Outcome:</strong> The project was approved without delay, and construction started a month ahead of schedule.</p><h3 data-start="1302" data-end="1378"><strong data-start="1307" data-end="1378">Case Study 2: Mixed-Use Development with Discretionary Entitlements</strong></h3><p data-start="1380" data-end="1587"><strong data-start="1380" data-end="1397">Project Type:</strong> 22-unit mixed-use project with ground-floor retail<br data-start="1448" data-end="1451" /><strong data-start="1451" data-end="1467">Permit Type:</strong> Discretionary (Zone Change + Density Bonus + CEQA review)<br data-start="1525" data-end="1528" /><strong data-start="1528" data-end="1541">Timeline:</strong> 13 months from pre-application to entitlement</p><p data-start="1589" data-end="1687">This project required multiple approvals, including a <strong data-start="1643" data-end="1658">zone change</strong> and CEQA review. We managed:</p><ul data-start="1689" data-end="1857"><li data-start="1689" data-end="1737"><p data-start="1691" data-end="1737">Pre-application strategy with Planning staff</p></li><li data-start="1738" data-end="1776"><p data-start="1740" data-end="1776">Traffic and shade studies for CEQA</p></li><li data-start="1777" data-end="1800"><p data-start="1779" data-end="1800">Two public hearings</p></li><li data-start="1801" data-end="1857"><p data-start="1803" data-end="1857">Community engagement with a local neighborhood group</p></li></ul><p data-start="1859" data-end="2023"><strong data-start="1859" data-end="1871">Outcome:</strong> The project was approved with minor conditions. Our strategy avoided litigation risk and helped the client maintain lender confidence during the delay.</p><h2 data-start="2030" data-end="2070">How to Know Which Permit You Need</h2><p data-start="2072" data-end="2178">Understanding whether your project qualifies for ministerial or discretionary review isn’t always obvious.</p><p data-start="2180" data-end="2209">Here’s a simple way to begin:</p><h4 data-start="2211" data-end="2236">Ask These Questions:</h4><ul data-start="2238" data-end="2511"><li data-start="2238" data-end="2294"><p data-start="2240" data-end="2294">Is your project allowed “by right” in the zoning code?</p></li><li data-start="2295" data-end="2357"><p data-start="2297" data-end="2357">Are you requesting variances, adjustments, or a zone change?</p></li><li data-start="2358" data-end="2429"><p data-start="2360" data-end="2429">Will the project impact traffic, air quality, or historic structures?</p></li><li data-start="2430" data-end="2511"><p data-start="2432" data-end="2511">Is it located in a sensitive area like a hillside, coastal zone, or floodplain?</p></li></ul><h4 data-start="2513" data-end="2541">If You Answer “Yes” To:</h4><div class="_tableContainer_80l1q_1"><div class="_tableWrapper_80l1q_14 group flex w-fit flex-col-reverse" tabindex="-1"><table class="w-fit min-w-(--thread-content-width)" data-start="2543" data-end="2846"><thead data-start="2543" data-end="2593"><tr data-start="2543" data-end="2593"><th data-start="2543" data-end="2558" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2545" data-end="2557">Question</strong></th><th data-start="2558" data-end="2593" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2560" data-end="2591">Permit Type Likely Required</strong></th></tr></thead><tbody data-start="2642" data-end="2846"><tr data-start="2642" data-end="2688"><td data-start="2642" data-end="2669" data-col-size="sm">All zoning rules are met</td><td data-start="2669" data-end="2688" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2671" data-end="2686">Ministerial</strong></td></tr><tr data-start="2689" data-end="2748"><td data-start="2689" data-end="2727" data-col-size="sm">Project seeks an exception or bonus</td><td data-start="2727" data-end="2748" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2729" data-end="2746">Discretionary</strong></td></tr><tr data-start="2749" data-end="2794"><td data-start="2749" data-end="2773" data-col-size="sm">CEQA may be triggered</td><td data-start="2773" data-end="2794" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2775" data-end="2792">Discretionary</strong></td></tr><tr data-start="2795" data-end="2846"><td data-start="2795" data-end="2827" data-col-size="sm">No public hearing is required</td><td data-start="2827" data-end="2846" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2829" data-end="2844">Ministerial</strong></td></tr></tbody></table><div class="sticky end-(--thread-content-margin) h-0 self-end select-none"><div class="absolute end-0 flex items-end"> </div></div></div></div><p data-start="2848" data-end="3024">Still not sure? That’s where we come in. JDJ Consulting can assess your property, zoning, and local policies to give you a clear answer—before you spend time or money on plans.</p><h2 data-start="3031" data-end="3091">Why the Distinction Matters for Your Project Strategy</h2><p data-start="3093" data-end="3221">Many developers overlook the difference between these permit types—until it’s too late. Choosing the wrong strategy can lead to:</p><ul data-start="3223" data-end="3397"><li data-start="3223" data-end="3278"><p data-start="3225" data-end="3278">Costly delays from public hearings or CEQA lawsuits</p></li><li data-start="3279" data-end="3313"><p data-start="3281" data-end="3313">Missed grant or loan timelines</p></li><li data-start="3314" data-end="3353"><p data-start="3316" data-end="3353">Pushback from neighbors or agencies</p></li><li data-start="3354" data-end="3397"><p data-start="3356" data-end="3397">Rejected applications that need redesigns</p></li></ul><p data-start="3399" data-end="3451">Knowing your path early shapes every decision ahead:</p><ul data-start="3453" data-end="3776"><li data-start="3453" data-end="3572"><p data-start="3455" data-end="3572"><strong data-start="3455" data-end="3466">Budget:</strong> Ministerial projects need fewer consultants; discretionary ones require CEQA, legal, and outreach costs</p></li><li data-start="3573" data-end="3661"><p data-start="3575" data-end="3661"><strong data-start="3575" data-end="3588">Timeline:</strong> Ministerial reviews are quick; discretionary ones can take 6–18 months</p></li><li data-start="3662" data-end="3776"><p data-start="3664" data-end="3776"><strong data-start="3664" data-end="3673">Risk:</strong> Ministerial approvals are predictable; discretionary approvals depend on people, politics, and process</p></li></ul><p data-start="3778" data-end="3944">At JDJ Consulting Group, we work with developers, architects, and property owners to create <strong data-start="3870" data-end="3913">smart, compliant, and timely strategies</strong> that reduce risk from day one.</p><h2 data-start="177" data-end="245">Key Differences Between Ministerial and Discretionary Permits</h2><p data-start="247" data-end="434">Understanding the difference between ministerial and discretionary permits can help you better plan your project timeline, costs, and community outreach. Here’s a side-by-side comparison:</p><h4 data-start="436" data-end="485">Table: Ministerial vs. Discretionary Permits</h4><div class="_tableContainer_80l1q_1"><div class="_tableWrapper_80l1q_14 group flex w-fit flex-col-reverse" tabindex="-1"><table class="w-fit min-w-(--thread-content-width)" data-start="487" data-end="1928"><thead data-start="487" data-end="647"><tr data-start="487" data-end="647"><th data-start="487" data-end="519" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="489" data-end="499">Factor</strong></th><th data-start="519" data-end="581" data-col-size="md"><strong data-start="521" data-end="544">Ministerial Permits</strong></th><th data-start="581" data-end="647" data-col-size="md"><strong data-start="583" data-end="608">Discretionary Permits</strong></th></tr></thead><tbody data-start="808" data-end="1928"><tr data-start="808" data-end="968"><td data-start="808" data-end="839" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="810" data-end="830">Approval Process</strong></td><td data-col-size="md" data-start="839" data-end="901">Based strictly on written rules and standards</td><td data-col-size="md" data-start="901" data-end="968">Requires interpretation and judgment by planning staff or board</td></tr><tr data-start="969" data-end="1128"><td data-start="969" data-end="1000" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="971" data-end="983">Timeline</strong></td><td data-col-size="md" data-start="1000" data-end="1062">Often faster (days to weeks)</td><td data-col-size="md" data-start="1062" data-end="1128">Longer (months or more, depending on project size)</td></tr><tr data-start="1129" data-end="1288"><td data-start="1129" data-end="1160" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1131" data-end="1150">Public Hearings</strong></td><td data-col-size="md" data-start="1160" data-end="1222">Not required</td><td data-col-size="md" data-start="1222" data-end="1288">Often required</td></tr><tr data-start="1289" data-end="1448"><td data-start="1289" data-end="1320" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1291" data-end="1306">CEQA Review</strong></td><td data-start="1320" data-end="1382" data-col-size="md">Not triggered</td><td data-start="1382" data-end="1448" data-col-size="md">Frequently required</td></tr><tr data-start="1449" data-end="1608"><td data-start="1449" data-end="1480" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1451" data-end="1469">Risk of Denial</strong></td><td data-start="1480" data-end="1542" data-col-size="md">Low (if you meet all code standards)</td><td data-start="1542" data-end="1608" data-col-size="md">High (subject to community input and agency discretion)</td></tr><tr data-start="1609" data-end="1768"><td data-start="1609" data-end="1640" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1611" data-end="1623">Examples</strong></td><td data-start="1640" data-end="1702" data-col-size="md">Bathroom remodel, by-right ADU</td><td data-start="1702" data-end="1768" data-col-size="md">Zone change, subdivision, conditional use permit</td></tr><tr data-start="1769" data-end="1928"><td data-start="1769" data-end="1800" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="1771" data-end="1786">Flexibility</strong></td><td data-start="1800" data-end="1862" data-col-size="md">Limited — must follow exact code</td><td data-start="1862" data-end="1928" data-col-size="md">More flexible — allows negotiation or conditions</td></tr></tbody></table><div class="sticky end-(--thread-content-margin) h-0 self-end select-none"><div class="absolute end-0 flex items-end"> </div></div></div></div><p data-start="1930" data-end="2086">As you can see, <strong data-start="1946" data-end="2000">ministerial permits offer predictability and speed</strong>, while <strong data-start="2008" data-end="2085">discretionary permits open the door to negotiation but also more scrutiny</strong>.</p><p data-start="2088" data-end="2209">JDJ Consulting Group helps clients understand where their project falls and how to navigate each route with fewer delays.</p><h2 data-start="2216" data-end="2285">When Is CEQA Triggered—And Why Ministerial Projects Are Exempt</h2><p data-start="2287" data-end="2445">CEQA, the California Environmental Quality Act, applies to most public agency decisions that may impact the environment. But <strong data-start="2412" data-end="2444">not all permits trigger CEQA</strong>.</p><p data-start="2447" data-end="2561">If your project requires a <strong data-start="2474" data-end="2500">discretionary decision</strong>, it will likely need CEQA review. This could mean preparing:</p><ul data-start="2563" data-end="2703"><li data-start="2563" data-end="2586"><p data-start="2565" data-end="2586">An Initial Study (IS)</p></li><li data-start="2587" data-end="2616"><p data-start="2589" data-end="2616">A Negative Declaration (ND)</p></li><li data-start="2617" data-end="2657"><p data-start="2619" data-end="2657">A Mitigated Negative Declaration (MND)</p></li><li data-start="2658" data-end="2703"><p data-start="2660" data-end="2703">Or a full Environmental Impact Report (EIR)</p></li></ul><p data-start="2705" data-end="2836">In contrast, <strong data-start="2718" data-end="2778">ministerial approvals are automatically exempt from CEQA</strong>, even if the project has potential environmental impacts.</p><p data-start="2838" data-end="2967">Why? Because the agency has no discretion—it must approve the project if it meets the rules, regardless of the potential impacts.</p><p data-start="2969" data-end="3058">This exemption can be a major advantage for developers and homeowners alike. For example:</p><blockquote data-start="3060" data-end="3209"><p data-start="3062" data-end="3209">A by-right duplex on an R2-zoned lot that complies with all zoning standards and setback rules will be approved ministerially—and CEQA won’t apply.</p></blockquote><p data-start="3211" data-end="3337">But if you seek a <strong data-start="3229" data-end="3246">zone variance</strong> for extra height or density, the approval becomes discretionary, and CEQA review kicks in.</p><p data-start="3339" data-end="3464">At JDJ Consulting Group, we assess CEQA exposure early in the entitlement process so clients can prepare and avoid surprises.</p><h2 data-start="149" data-end="227">How JDJ Consulting Group Helps You Navigate Permits and Approvals in LA</h2><p data-start="229" data-end="386">Whether your project qualifies for a ministerial permit or requires a full discretionary review, the steps you take early on can make or break your timeline.</p><p data-start="229" data-end="386"><img decoding="async" class=" wp-image-5683 aligncenter" src="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2113076698-612x612-1.jpg" alt="Real estate agent showing a couple a new house. The house is contemporary. All are happy and smiling and shaking hands. The couple are casually dressed and the agent is in a suit. The house has a front lawn and a brick facade" width="678" height="452" srcset="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2113076698-612x612-1.jpg 612w, https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2113076698-612x612-1-300x200.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 678px) 100vw, 678px" /></p><p data-start="388" data-end="583">At JDJ Consulting Group, we specialize in <strong data-start="430" data-end="505">entitlements, permitting strategy, feasibility, and agency coordination</strong>—so you don’t waste time or money navigating the City’s complex process alone.</p><p data-start="585" data-end="604">Here’s how we help:</p><h4 data-start="606" data-end="647">Our Support for Ministerial Projects</h4><p data-start="649" data-end="707">If your project qualifies for by-right approval, our team:</p><ul data-start="709" data-end="931"><li data-start="709" data-end="763"><p data-start="711" data-end="763">Confirms zoning, height, FAR, and setback compliance</p></li><li data-start="764" data-end="818"><p data-start="766" data-end="818">Coordinates with LADBS or other relevant departments</p></li><li data-start="819" data-end="864"><p data-start="821" data-end="864">Expedites permit submittals and corrections</p></li><li data-start="865" data-end="931"><p data-start="867" data-end="931">Avoids delays by preparing complete, code-compliant applications</p></li></ul><h4 data-start="933" data-end="976">Our Support for Discretionary Projects</h4><p data-start="978" data-end="1030">Discretionary projects are more complex. We help by:</p><ul data-start="1032" data-end="1344"><li data-start="1032" data-end="1085"><p data-start="1034" data-end="1085">Crafting the right land use strategy from the start</p></li><li data-start="1086" data-end="1151"><p data-start="1088" data-end="1151">Preparing planning narratives, findings, and submittal packages</p></li><li data-start="1152" data-end="1225"><p data-start="1154" data-end="1225">Liaising with city planners, neighborhood councils, and decision-makers</p></li><li data-start="1226" data-end="1273"><p data-start="1228" data-end="1273">Managing CEQA and environmental documentation</p></li><li data-start="1274" data-end="1344"><p data-start="1276" data-end="1344">Supporting you through hearings, appeals, and conditions of approval</p></li></ul>								</div>
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  <h3 style="text-align:center;color:#2c3e50;">Permit Type Distribution (Example City)</h3>
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    <path d="M16 16 L16 0 A16 16 0 0 1 28.8 25.6 Z" fill="#3498db" />
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  <ul style="list-style:none;padding:10px 0 0 0;font-size:14px;color:#555;">
    <li><span style="color:#3498db;">●</span> Ministerial: 35%</li>
    <li><span style="color:#e67e22;">●</span> Discretionary: 40%</li>
    <li><span style="color:#2ecc71;">●</span> Hybrid/Mixed: 25%</li>
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									<h2>FAQs About Ministerial vs Discretionary Permits</h2><h3 data-start="312" data-end="390">What is the main difference between ministerial and discretionary permits?</h3><p data-start="392" data-end="559">Ministerial permits are approved automatically if a project complies with existing rules, while discretionary permits require a case-by-case review by a public agency.</p><ul data-start="561" data-end="814"><li data-start="561" data-end="620"><p data-start="563" data-end="620"><strong data-start="563" data-end="599">Ministerial = automatic approval</strong> based on zoning/code</p></li><li data-start="621" data-end="709"><p data-start="623" data-end="709"><strong data-start="623" data-end="660">Discretionary = requires approval</strong> by a planning authority, often with public input</p></li><li data-start="710" data-end="814"><p data-start="712" data-end="814">Discretionary reviews allow decision-makers to <strong data-start="759" data-end="802">deny, approve, or conditionally approve</strong> the project</p></li></ul><hr data-start="816" data-end="819" /><h3 data-start="821" data-end="872">Which permit type takes longer to get approved?</h3><p data-start="874" data-end="1006">Discretionary permits typically take significantly longer due to the complexity of review, public notice requirements, and hearings.</p><ul data-start="1008" data-end="1208"><li data-start="1008" data-end="1062"><p data-start="1010" data-end="1062">Ministerial permits: often approved within <strong data-start="1053" data-end="1062">weeks</strong></p></li><li data-start="1063" data-end="1120"><p data-start="1065" data-end="1120">Discretionary permits: may take <strong data-start="1097" data-end="1120">6–18 months or more</strong></p></li><li data-start="1121" data-end="1208"><p data-start="1123" data-end="1208">Timelines depend on the <strong data-start="1147" data-end="1163">project type</strong>, <strong data-start="1165" data-end="1181">jurisdiction</strong>, and <strong data-start="1187" data-end="1208">CEQA requirements</strong></p></li></ul><hr data-start="1210" data-end="1213" /><h3 data-start="1215" data-end="1282">How do I know if my project qualifies for a ministerial permit?</h3><p data-start="1284" data-end="1438">Your project may qualify if it fully complies with zoning codes, development standards, and general plan policies without needing exceptions or variances.</p><p data-start="1440" data-end="1450">Check for:</p><ul data-start="1452" data-end="1584"><li data-start="1452" data-end="1479"><p data-start="1454" data-end="1479">Zoning and use compliance</p></li><li data-start="1480" data-end="1525"><p data-start="1482" data-end="1525">Height, FAR, and lot coverage within limits</p></li><li data-start="1526" data-end="1584"><p data-start="1528" data-end="1584">No need for zone change, conditional use, or CEQA review</p></li></ul><hr data-start="1586" data-end="1589" /><h3 data-start="1591" data-end="1632">Does CEQA apply to both permit types?</h3><p data-start="1634" data-end="1774">Generally, <strong data-start="1645" data-end="1692">CEQA (California Environmental Quality Act)</strong> applies only to discretionary projects. Ministerial approvals are usually exempt.</p><ul data-start="1776" data-end="1996"><li data-start="1776" data-end="1849"><p data-start="1778" data-end="1849"><strong data-start="1778" data-end="1793">Ministerial</strong> projects are typically <strong data-start="1817" data-end="1839">statutorily exempt</strong> from CEQA</p></li><li data-start="1850" data-end="1996"><p data-start="1852" data-end="1891"><strong data-start="1852" data-end="1869">Discretionary</strong> projects may require:</p><ul data-start="1894" data-end="1996"><li data-start="1894" data-end="1930"><p data-start="1896" data-end="1930">Environmental Impact Reports (EIR)</p></li><li data-start="1933" data-end="1972"><p data-start="1935" data-end="1972">Mitigated Negative Declarations (MND)</p></li><li data-start="1975" data-end="1996"><p data-start="1977" data-end="1996">Other documentation</p></li></ul></li></ul><hr data-start="1998" data-end="2001" /><h3 data-start="2003" data-end="2068">Can I convert a discretionary project into a ministerial one?</h3><p data-start="2070" data-end="2197">Sometimes. With the right planning, a project can be redesigned to meet by-right standards and avoid the discretionary process.</p><p data-start="2199" data-end="2208">Consider:</p><ul data-start="2210" data-end="2359"><li data-start="2210" data-end="2254"><p data-start="2212" data-end="2254">Reducing density or height to match zoning</p></li><li data-start="2255" data-end="2292"><p data-start="2257" data-end="2292">Eliminating variances or exceptions</p></li><li data-start="2293" data-end="2359"><p data-start="2295" data-end="2359">Using CEQA-exempt pathways like SB 35 or AB 2011 (if applicable)</p></li></ul><hr data-start="2361" data-end="2364" /><h3 data-start="2366" data-end="2437">What agencies are involved in discretionary permits in Los Angeles?</h3><p data-start="2439" data-end="2513">Discretionary permits in LA often involve multiple departments, including:</p><ul data-start="2515" data-end="2685"><li data-start="2515" data-end="2553"><p data-start="2517" data-end="2553">Los Angeles City Planning Department</p></li><li data-start="2554" data-end="2597"><p data-start="2556" data-end="2597">Department of Building and Safety (LADBS)</p></li><li data-start="2598" data-end="2636"><p data-start="2600" data-end="2636">Department of Transportation (LADOT)</p></li><li data-start="2637" data-end="2685"><p data-start="2639" data-end="2685">Neighborhood Councils and Planning Commissions</p></li></ul><p data-start="2687" data-end="2764">Each agency may have a role in review or approval, depending on your project.</p><hr data-start="2766" data-end="2769" /><h3 data-start="2771" data-end="2828">Are public hearings required for ministerial permits?</h3><p data-start="2830" data-end="2955">No. Ministerial permits are processed administratively by staff and do not require any public hearings or neighborhood input.</p><ul data-start="2957" data-end="3119"><li data-start="2957" data-end="3007"><p data-start="2959" data-end="3007">Discretionary permits <strong data-start="2981" data-end="3007">often require hearings</strong></p></li><li data-start="3008" data-end="3068"><p data-start="3010" data-end="3068">Ministerial approvals are <strong data-start="3036" data-end="3068">based on objective standards</strong></p></li><li data-start="3069" data-end="3119"><p data-start="3071" data-end="3119">This speeds up the process and limits opposition</p></li></ul><hr data-start="3121" data-end="3124" /><h3 data-start="3126" data-end="3194">What types of projects typically require discretionary approval?</h3><p data-start="3196" data-end="3313">Projects that seek to go beyond what zoning allows—or that affect the community—usually require discretionary review.</p><p data-start="3315" data-end="3332">Examples include:</p><ul data-start="3334" data-end="3506"><li data-start="3334" data-end="3375"><p data-start="3336" data-end="3375">Zone changes or general plan amendments</p></li><li data-start="3376" data-end="3412"><p data-start="3378" data-end="3412">Variances from height/FAR/setbacks</p></li><li data-start="3413" data-end="3438"><p data-start="3415" data-end="3438">Conditional use permits</p></li><li data-start="3439" data-end="3465"><p data-start="3441" data-end="3465">Large-scale developments</p></li><li data-start="3466" data-end="3506"><p data-start="3468" data-end="3506">Projects in sensitive or coastal areas</p></li></ul><hr data-start="3508" data-end="3511" /><h3 data-start="3513" data-end="3569">Can a project be both ministerial and discretionary?</h3><p data-start="3571" data-end="3640">Yes. Some projects may involve <strong data-start="3602" data-end="3616">both types</strong> depending on the scope.</p><p data-start="3642" data-end="3654">For example:</p><ul data-start="3656" data-end="3782"><li data-start="3656" data-end="3701"><p data-start="3658" data-end="3701">A by-right apartment building (ministerial)</p></li><li data-start="3702" data-end="3782"><p data-start="3704" data-end="3782">But requesting alcohol sales onsite (discretionary via Conditional Use Permit)</p></li></ul><p data-start="3784" data-end="3866">In these cases, the discretionary component can trigger CEQA and extend timelines.</p><hr data-start="3868" data-end="3871" /><h3 data-start="3873" data-end="3929">Do SB 35 or AB 2011 projects qualify as ministerial?</h3><p data-start="3931" data-end="4046">Yes, both laws create <strong data-start="3953" data-end="3986">ministerial approval pathways</strong> for qualifying affordable or mixed-income housing projects.</p><p data-start="4048" data-end="4061">Key benefits:</p><ul data-start="4063" data-end="4192"><li data-start="4063" data-end="4113"><p data-start="4065" data-end="4113">Streamlined approvals under specific state rules</p></li><li data-start="4114" data-end="4130"><p data-start="4116" data-end="4130">CEQA exemption</p></li><li data-start="4131" data-end="4160"><p data-start="4133" data-end="4160">No public hearings required</p></li><li data-start="4161" data-end="4192"><p data-start="4163" data-end="4192">Time limits on city responses</p></li></ul><hr data-start="4194" data-end="4197" /><h3 data-start="4199" data-end="4258">How can JDJ Consulting Group help with permit strategy?</h3><p data-start="4260" data-end="4367">We help developers and property owners identify the fastest, most viable permitting path for their project.</p><p data-start="4369" data-end="4390">Our services include:</p><ul data-start="4392" data-end="4583"><li data-start="4392" data-end="4439"><p data-start="4394" data-end="4439">Pre-submittal zoning and feasibility analysis</p></li><li data-start="4440" data-end="4489"><p data-start="4442" data-end="4489">Ministerial vs. discretionary strategy planning</p></li><li data-start="4490" data-end="4534"><p data-start="4492" data-end="4534">CEQA coordination and exemption evaluation</p></li><li data-start="4535" data-end="4583"><p data-start="4537" data-end="4583">Liaison with city departments and stakeholders</p></li></ul><hr data-start="4585" data-end="4588" /><h3 data-start="4590" data-end="4652">What’s the best way to avoid delays in the permit process?</h3><p data-start="4654" data-end="4745">Planning ahead and working with an experienced consulting team can prevent costly setbacks.</p><p data-start="4747" data-end="4770">Best practices include:</p><ul data-start="4772" data-end="5021"><li data-start="4772" data-end="4818"><p data-start="4774" data-end="4818">Conducting a feasibility study before design</p></li><li data-start="4819" data-end="4879"><p data-start="4821" data-end="4879">Confirming if project qualifies for ministerial processing</p></li><li data-start="4880" data-end="4936"><p data-start="4882" data-end="4936">Avoiding variance requests unless absolutely necessary</p></li><li data-start="4937" data-end="5021"><p data-start="4939" data-end="5021">Partnering with a consultant to navigate agencies and submit complete applications</p></li></ul><p><span style="font-weight: 400;">[contact-form-7]</span></p>								</div>
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		<p>The post <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/ministerial-vs-discretionary-permits-understanding-the-difference/">Ministerial vs Discretionary Permits – Understanding the Difference</a> appeared first on <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com">JDJ Consulting Group</a>.</p>
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		<title>AB 2011 vs SB 6: Which Housing Law Works Best for Your Property?</title>
		<link>https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/ab-2011-vs-sb-6-which-housing-law-works-best-for-your-property/</link>
					<comments>https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/ab-2011-vs-sb-6-which-housing-law-works-best-for-your-property/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[JDJ Admin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2025 17:41:57 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Urban planning and development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[AB 2011]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[affordable housing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[California zoning]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CEQA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[housing laws California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[JDJ Consulting Group]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[permit expediting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[real estate entitlements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SB 6]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[streamlining housing approvals]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/?p=5558</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>AB 2011 vs SB 6 were both designed to unlock more housing in California, especially in underused commercial corridors. But they take very different approaches. This guide breaks down how each law works, compares timelines, approvals, and site eligibility, and helps developers, property owners, and consultants decide which path may work best for their project.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/ab-2011-vs-sb-6-which-housing-law-works-best-for-your-property/">AB 2011 vs SB 6: Which Housing Law Works Best for Your Property?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com">JDJ Consulting Group</a>.</p>
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									<h1 data-start="374" data-end="453">AB 2011 vs SB 6: Which Housing Law Works Best for Your Property?</h1><p data-start="536" data-end="934">If you&#8217;re a developer, property owner, or investor in California, you’ve likely heard of <a href="https://cayimby.org/legislation/ab-2011/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><strong data-start="625" data-end="636">AB 2011</strong></a> and <a href="https://www.sandiegocounty.gov/content/dam/sdc/pds/zoning/SB%206%20Housing%20in%20Commercial%20Zones,%202024-07-02.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><strong data-start="641" data-end="649">SB 6</strong></a>. These two housing streamlining laws, effective as of <strong data-start="704" data-end="720">July 1, 2023</strong>, were created to unlock housing potential on commercial sites. But they work differently—and picking the right one could save you <strong data-start="851" data-end="869">months of time</strong>, <strong data-start="871" data-end="893">thousands in costs</strong>, and avoid <strong data-start="905" data-end="933">unwanted public hearings</strong>.</p><p data-start="936" data-end="1237">At <strong data-start="939" data-end="963">JDJ Consulting Group</strong>, we help clients evaluate which path fits their property best. Whether you’re looking to <strong data-start="1053" data-end="1090">convert a strip mall into housing</strong> or unlock value from an underused office lot, understanding how each law works is your first step toward faster approvals and smarter investments.</p><p data-start="1239" data-end="1352">Let’s dive into what makes <strong data-start="1266" data-end="1277">AB 2011</strong> vs <strong data-start="1282" data-end="1290">SB 6</strong> different—and how to know which one works best for your site.</p>								</div>
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    <h3 style="color: #005a87;">AB 2011 – Affordable Housing Streamlining</h3>
    <ul style="line-height: 1.6;">
      <li>Applies to commercial corridors</li>
      <li>Labor standard: Prevailing wage + healthcare</li>
      <li>Requires 100% affordability (in most cases)</li>
      <li>By-right approvals with CEQA exemption</li>
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    <h3 style="color: #0077cc;">SB 6 – Neighborhood Homes Act</h3>
    <ul style="line-height: 1.6;">
      <li>Targets underutilized commercial zones</li>
      <li>Strong labor rules: Skilled & trained workforce</li>
      <li>Does not require affordability</li>
      <li>Does not exempt CEQA review</li>
    </ul>
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									<h2 data-start="1359" data-end="1417">AB 2011 and SB 6 at a Glance: What’s the Difference?</h2><p data-start="1419" data-end="1562">Both <strong data-start="1424" data-end="1435">AB 2011</strong> and <strong data-start="1440" data-end="1448">SB 6</strong> aim to encourage residential development on commercially zoned properties. But they do it in very different ways:</p><ul data-start="1564" data-end="1852"><li data-start="1564" data-end="1689"><p data-start="1566" data-end="1689"><strong data-start="1566" data-end="1577">AB 2011</strong> offers <strong data-start="1585" data-end="1597">by-right</strong>, <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/common-ceqa-exemptions-in-los-angeles-a-developers-guide-to-faster-project-approvals/"><strong data-start="1599" data-end="1614">CEQA-exempt</strong></a> approval if you meet strict requirements, especially around affordability.</p></li><li data-start="1690" data-end="1852"><p data-start="1692" data-end="1852"><strong data-start="1692" data-end="1700">SB 6</strong> gives you flexibility—no affordability mandate—but it still requires <strong data-start="1770" data-end="1797">discretionary approvals</strong> and compliance with <strong data-start="1818" data-end="1826">CEQA</strong> unless paired with SB 35.</p></li></ul><p data-start="1854" data-end="1880">Here’s a quick comparison:</p><h3 data-start="1882" data-end="1935">Table 1: Key Differences Between AB 2011 and SB 6</h3><div class="_tableContainer_80l1q_1"><div class="_tableWrapper_80l1q_14 group flex w-fit flex-col-reverse" tabindex="-1"><table class="w-fit min-w-(--thread-content-width)" data-start="1937" data-end="3029"><thead data-start="1937" data-end="2073"><tr data-start="1937" data-end="2073"><th data-start="1937" data-end="1972" data-col-size="sm">Feature</th><th data-start="1972" data-end="2019" data-col-size="md">AB 2011</th><th data-start="2019" data-end="2073" data-col-size="md">SB 6</th></tr></thead><tbody data-start="2212" data-end="3029"><tr data-start="2212" data-end="2349"><td data-start="2212" data-end="2247" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2214" data-end="2234">Type of Approval</strong></td><td data-start="2247" data-end="2295" data-col-size="md">Ministerial (By-Right)</td><td data-start="2295" data-end="2349" data-col-size="md">Discretionary (Subject to CEQA unless streamlined)</td></tr><tr data-start="2350" data-end="2486"><td data-start="2350" data-end="2385" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2352" data-end="2367">CEQA Review</strong></td><td data-start="2385" data-end="2433" data-col-size="md">Exempt</td><td data-start="2433" data-end="2486" data-col-size="md">Required (unless SB 35 is used)</td></tr><tr data-start="2487" data-end="2623"><td data-start="2487" data-end="2522" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2489" data-end="2518">Affordability Requirement</strong></td><td data-start="2522" data-end="2570" data-col-size="md">Yes (15% minimum or 100% affordable)</td><td data-start="2570" data-end="2623" data-col-size="md">No state mandate (local rules apply)</td></tr><tr data-start="2624" data-end="2758"><td data-start="2624" data-end="2658" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2626" data-end="2645">Labor Standards</strong></td><td data-start="2658" data-end="2705" data-col-size="md">Prevailing wage + apprenticeship (≥50 units)</td><td data-start="2705" data-end="2758" data-col-size="md">Skilled &amp; trained workforce required</td></tr><tr data-start="2759" data-end="2894"><td data-start="2759" data-end="2793" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2761" data-end="2779">Eligible Zones</strong></td><td data-start="2793" data-end="2841" data-col-size="md">Commercial corridors, office, parking</td><td data-start="2841" data-end="2894" data-col-size="md">Commercial/office/retail sites, flexible zoning</td></tr><tr data-start="2895" data-end="3029"><td data-start="2895" data-end="2929" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2897" data-end="2919">Approval Timelines</strong></td><td data-start="2929" data-end="2976" data-col-size="md">90–180 days max</td><td data-start="2976" data-end="3029" data-col-size="md">Varies by jurisdiction</td></tr></tbody></table><div class="sticky end-(--thread-content-margin) h-0 self-end select-none"><div class="absolute end-0 flex items-end"> </div></div></div></div><p data-start="3031" data-end="3049"><strong data-start="3031" data-end="3047">Bottom line:</strong></p><ul data-start="3050" data-end="3228"><li data-start="3050" data-end="3131"><p data-start="3052" data-end="3131">If you want speed and can meet affordability rules, <strong data-start="3104" data-end="3115">AB 2011</strong> may be ideal.</p></li><li data-start="3132" data-end="3228"><p data-start="3134" data-end="3228">If your project is market-rate and flexibility matters more, <strong data-start="3195" data-end="3203">SB 6</strong> might be a better match.</p></li></ul><h2 data-start="3235" data-end="3293">AB 2011 Explained: What It Is and When It Works Best</h2><h3 data-start="3295" data-end="3365">A Path for Affordable and Mixed-Income Housing on Commercial Sites</h3><p data-start="3367" data-end="3584"><strong data-start="3367" data-end="3378">AB 2011</strong>, also known as the <a href="https://law.justia.com/codes/california/code-gov/title-7/division-1/chapter-4-1/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><strong data-start="3398" data-end="3451">Affordable Housing and High-Road Jobs Act of 2022</strong></a>, allows developers to build housing by-right on sites that are currently zoned for commercial use—<strong data-start="3550" data-end="3583">without needing a zone change</strong>.</p><p data-start="3586" data-end="3753">This law is especially powerful because it <strong data-start="3629" data-end="3670">exempts qualifying projects from CEQA</strong>, removing one of the biggest hurdles in California’s approval process. That means:</p><ul data-start="3755" data-end="3862"><li data-start="3755" data-end="3789"><p data-start="3757" data-end="3789">No environmental review delays</p></li><li data-start="3790" data-end="3826"><p data-start="3792" data-end="3826">No discretionary public hearings</p></li><li data-start="3827" data-end="3862"><p data-start="3829" data-end="3862">Faster path to building permits</p></li></ul><p data-start="3864" data-end="3915">But to qualify, you need to meet specific criteria.</p><p data-start="3864" data-end="3915"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class=" wp-image-5560 aligncenter" src="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2161204802-612x612-1.jpg" alt="AB 2011 vs SB 6 - " width="690" height="388" srcset="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2161204802-612x612-1.jpg 612w, https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2161204802-612x612-1-300x169.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 690px) 100vw, 690px" /></p><h3 data-start="3917" data-end="3963">Eligibility Checklist for AB 2011 Projects</h3><p data-start="3965" data-end="3997">Here are the basic requirements:</p><ul data-start="3999" data-end="4285"><li data-start="3999" data-end="4064"><p data-start="4001" data-end="4064">Site must be <strong data-start="4014" data-end="4062">zoned for commercial, office, or parking use</strong></p></li><li data-start="4065" data-end="4141"><p data-start="4067" data-end="4141">Frontage must face a <strong data-start="4088" data-end="4117">major commercial corridor</strong> (at least 70 feet wide)</p></li><li data-start="4142" data-end="4285"><p data-start="4144" data-end="4164">Must include either:</p><ul data-start="4167" data-end="4285"><li data-start="4167" data-end="4202"><p data-start="4169" data-end="4202"><strong data-start="4169" data-end="4196">100% affordable housing</strong>, or</p></li><li data-start="4205" data-end="4285"><p data-start="4207" data-end="4285"><strong data-start="4207" data-end="4231">Mixed-income housing</strong> with 15% of units set aside for low-income households</p></li></ul></li></ul><p data-start="4287" data-end="4336"><strong data-start="4287" data-end="4318">Additional site limitations</strong> include avoiding:</p><ul data-start="4338" data-end="4484"><li data-start="4338" data-end="4375"><p data-start="4340" data-end="4375">Sites with active industrial uses</p></li><li data-start="4376" data-end="4409"><p data-start="4378" data-end="4409">Hazardous waste cleanup sites</p></li><li data-start="4410" data-end="4438"><p data-start="4412" data-end="4438">Prime agricultural lands</p></li><li data-start="4439" data-end="4484"><p data-start="4441" data-end="4484">Sensitive environmental or historic areas</p></li></ul><h3 data-start="4486" data-end="4545">Table 2: AB 2011 Project Requirements – Quick Reference</h3><div class="_tableContainer_80l1q_1"><div class="_tableWrapper_80l1q_14 group flex w-fit flex-col-reverse" tabindex="-1"><table class="w-fit min-w-(--thread-content-width)" data-start="4547" data-end="5596"><thead data-start="4547" data-end="4679"><tr data-start="4547" data-end="4679"><th data-start="4547" data-end="4585" data-col-size="sm">Requirement</th><th data-start="4585" data-end="4629" data-col-size="sm">AB 2011 – 100% Affordable Projects</th><th data-start="4629" data-end="4679" data-col-size="md">AB 2011 – Mixed-Income Projects</th></tr></thead><tbody data-start="4811" data-end="5596"><tr data-start="4811" data-end="4941"><td data-start="4811" data-end="4848" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="4813" data-end="4830">Affordability</strong></td><td data-start="4848" data-end="4891" data-col-size="sm">100% units affordable</td><td data-start="4891" data-end="4941" data-col-size="md">At least 15% units affordable (low-income)</td></tr><tr data-start="4942" data-end="5072"><td data-start="4942" data-end="4979" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="4944" data-end="4956">Lot Size</strong></td><td data-start="4979" data-end="5022" data-col-size="sm">No minimum</td><td data-start="5022" data-end="5072" data-col-size="md">Typically ≥0.5 acres</td></tr><tr data-start="5073" data-end="5203"><td data-start="5073" data-end="5110" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="5075" data-end="5094">Street Frontage</strong></td><td data-start="5110" data-end="5153" data-col-size="sm">Any commercial street</td><td data-start="5153" data-end="5203" data-col-size="md">Must be on commercial corridor (70 ft wide)</td></tr><tr data-start="5204" data-end="5334"><td data-start="5204" data-end="5241" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="5206" data-end="5226">Labor Compliance</strong></td><td data-start="5241" data-end="5284" data-col-size="sm">Prevailing wage required</td><td data-start="5284" data-end="5334" data-col-size="md">Prevailing wage + apprenticeship</td></tr><tr data-start="5335" data-end="5465"><td data-start="5335" data-end="5372" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="5337" data-end="5357">Height &amp; Density</strong></td><td data-start="5372" data-end="5415" data-col-size="sm">Local limits apply unless overridden</td><td data-start="5415" data-end="5465" data-col-size="md">Can qualify for density bonuses</td></tr><tr data-start="5466" data-end="5596"><td data-start="5466" data-end="5503" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="5468" data-end="5489">Approval Timeline</strong></td><td data-start="5503" data-end="5546" data-col-size="sm">90 days (≤150 units); 180 days (&gt;150)</td><td data-start="5546" data-end="5596" data-col-size="md">Same</td></tr></tbody></table><div class="sticky end-(--thread-content-margin) h-0 self-end select-none"><div class="absolute end-0 flex items-end"> </div></div></div></div><h3 data-start="5598" data-end="5621">Why Choose AB 2011?</h3><p data-start="5623" data-end="5662"><strong data-start="5623" data-end="5662">AB 2011 is best for developers who:</strong></p><ul data-start="5664" data-end="5857"><li data-start="5664" data-end="5717"><p data-start="5666" data-end="5717">Are building <strong data-start="5679" data-end="5717">affordable or mixed-income housing</strong></p></li><li data-start="5718" data-end="5768"><p data-start="5720" data-end="5768">Want to <strong data-start="5728" data-end="5768">avoid CEQA and discretionary reviews</strong></p></li><li data-start="5769" data-end="5820"><p data-start="5771" data-end="5820">Have sites on qualifying <strong data-start="5796" data-end="5820">commercial corridors</strong></p></li><li data-start="5821" data-end="5857"><p data-start="5823" data-end="5857">Can meet <strong data-start="5832" data-end="5857">state labor standards</strong></p></li></ul><p data-start="5859" data-end="5985">In the next section, we’ll look at <strong data-start="5894" data-end="5902">SB 6</strong>, its benefits, and where it may offer more flexibility for market-driven projects.</p><p><iframe title="AB2011 and SB6 could turn empty commercial space into housing in California" width="900" height="506" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/1nNN4llDllE?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen></iframe></p><h2 data-start="176" data-end="238">SB 6 Explained: When Flexibility Matters More Than Speed</h2><h3 data-start="240" data-end="304">A Path to Market-Rate Housing Without Affordability Mandates</h3><p data-start="306" data-end="671"><strong data-start="306" data-end="314">SB 6</strong>, or the <strong data-start="323" data-end="351">Middle-Class Housing Act</strong>, also opens up commercially zoned land for residential development. But unlike AB 2011, this law does <strong data-start="454" data-end="499">not require affordable housing set-asides</strong>. That makes it especially attractive to developers pursuing <strong data-start="560" data-end="584">market-rate projects</strong>—so long as they’re willing to go through the typical <strong data-start="638" data-end="670">discretionary review process</strong>.</p><p data-start="673" data-end="868">Think of SB 6 as a “permission slip” that says: <strong data-start="721" data-end="793">you can build housing where only retail or office was allowed before</strong>, as long as you follow local rules and meet certain state labor standards.</p><p data-start="870" data-end="964">But here’s the catch: <strong data-start="892" data-end="964">you still need to go through CEQA unless you also qualify for SB 35.</strong></p><h3 data-start="966" data-end="1012">What Kinds of Properties Qualify for SB 6?</h3><ul data-start="1014" data-end="1251"><li data-start="1014" data-end="1057"><p data-start="1016" data-end="1057">Zoned for <strong data-start="1026" data-end="1050">commercial or office</strong> uses</p></li><li data-start="1058" data-end="1118"><p data-start="1060" data-end="1118">Located in <strong data-start="1071" data-end="1090">urbanized areas</strong> (not rural or greenfield)</p></li><li data-start="1119" data-end="1187"><p data-start="1121" data-end="1187">Must use <strong data-start="1130" data-end="1185">at least 50% of total building area for residential</strong></p></li><li data-start="1188" data-end="1251"><p data-start="1190" data-end="1251">Not located in environmentally sensitive or protected zones</p></li></ul><p data-start="1253" data-end="1347">Unlike AB 2011, <strong data-start="1269" data-end="1312">SB 6 does not require corridor frontage</strong>, giving you more site flexibility.</p><h3 data-start="1349" data-end="1384">What Developers Like About SB 6</h3><ul data-start="1386" data-end="1662"><li data-start="1386" data-end="1469"><p data-start="1388" data-end="1469"><strong data-start="1388" data-end="1416">No affordability mandate</strong> – makes proformas easier for market-rate investors</p></li><li data-start="1470" data-end="1537"><p data-start="1472" data-end="1537"><strong data-start="1472" data-end="1500">Wider zoning flexibility</strong> – not limited to corridor frontage</p></li><li data-start="1538" data-end="1662"><p data-start="1540" data-end="1662"><strong data-start="1540" data-end="1563">Option to use SB 35</strong> – get ministerial approval and CEQA exemption <em data-start="1610" data-end="1614">if</em> project meets affordability &amp; labor standards</p></li></ul><h3 data-start="1664" data-end="1692">But There Are Trade-Offs</h3><ul data-start="1694" data-end="1969"><li data-start="1694" data-end="1747"><p data-start="1696" data-end="1747"><strong data-start="1696" data-end="1712">CEQA applies</strong> (unless streamlined under SB 35)</p></li><li data-start="1748" data-end="1842"><p data-start="1750" data-end="1842"><strong data-start="1750" data-end="1785">Discretionary approval required</strong> – more room for delay, community opposition, or denial</p></li><li data-start="1843" data-end="1928"><p data-start="1845" data-end="1928"><strong data-start="1845" data-end="1880">Labor compliance still required</strong> – “skilled and trained workforce” rules apply</p></li><li data-start="1929" data-end="1969"><p data-start="1931" data-end="1969"><strong data-start="1931" data-end="1969">No guarantee of ministerial review</strong></p></li></ul><h2 data-start="1976" data-end="2048">Which Law Is Right for Your Property? A Developer’s Decision Guide</h2><h3 data-start="2050" data-end="2102">Compare Your Goals, Site Features, and Timelines</h3><p data-start="2104" data-end="2270">Choosing between AB 2011 and SB 6 comes down to <strong data-start="2152" data-end="2192">what kind of project you’re building</strong>, <strong data-start="2194" data-end="2216">where it’s located</strong>, and <strong data-start="2222" data-end="2269">how much control you want over the timeline</strong>.</p><p data-start="2104" data-end="2270"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class=" wp-image-5561 aligncenter" src="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-1254541892-612x612-1.jpg" alt="House, Home Finances, Auction, Home Ownership, Law" width="643" height="430" srcset="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-1254541892-612x612-1.jpg 612w, https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-1254541892-612x612-1-300x200.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 643px) 100vw, 643px" /></p><p data-start="2272" data-end="2316">Here’s a simple matrix to help visualize it:</p><h3 data-start="2318" data-end="2379">Table 3: AB 2011 vs SB 6 – Decision Matrix for Developers</h3><div class="_tableContainer_80l1q_1"><div class="_tableWrapper_80l1q_14 group flex w-fit flex-col-reverse" tabindex="-1"><table class="w-fit min-w-(--thread-content-width)" data-start="2381" data-end="3489"><thead data-start="2381" data-end="2504"><tr data-start="2381" data-end="2504"><th data-start="2381" data-end="2414" data-col-size="sm">Decision Factor</th><th data-start="2414" data-end="2456" data-col-size="sm">AB 2011</th><th data-start="2456" data-end="2504" data-col-size="md">SB 6</th></tr></thead><tbody data-start="2629" data-end="3489"><tr data-start="2629" data-end="2751"><td data-start="2629" data-end="2661" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2631" data-end="2652">Speed of Approval</strong></td><td data-start="2661" data-end="2703" data-col-size="sm">Faster (90–180 days)</td><td data-start="2703" data-end="2751" data-col-size="md">Slower (discretionary CEQA process)</td></tr><tr data-start="2752" data-end="2874"><td data-start="2752" data-end="2784" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2754" data-end="2774">CEQA Requirement</strong></td><td data-start="2784" data-end="2826" data-col-size="sm">No (ministerial, exempt)</td><td data-start="2826" data-end="2874" data-col-size="md">Yes (unless SB 35 applies)</td></tr><tr data-start="2875" data-end="2997"><td data-start="2875" data-end="2907" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="2877" data-end="2899">Affordable Housing</strong></td><td data-start="2907" data-end="2949" data-col-size="sm">Required (15% or 100%)</td><td data-start="2949" data-end="2997" data-col-size="md">Not required by state</td></tr><tr data-start="2998" data-end="3120"><td data-start="2998" data-end="3030" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="3000" data-end="3016">Project Type</strong></td><td data-start="3030" data-end="3072" data-col-size="sm">Best for affordable/mixed-income</td><td data-start="3072" data-end="3120" data-col-size="md">Good for market-rate or mixed-use flexibility</td></tr><tr data-start="3121" data-end="3243"><td data-start="3121" data-end="3153" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="3123" data-end="3147">Location Flexibility</strong></td><td data-start="3153" data-end="3195" data-col-size="sm">Corridor-fronting commercial zones</td><td data-start="3195" data-end="3243" data-col-size="md">Any commercial or office zones in urban area</td></tr><tr data-start="3244" data-end="3366"><td data-start="3244" data-end="3276" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="3246" data-end="3272">Discretionary Hearings</strong></td><td data-start="3276" data-end="3318" data-col-size="sm">No</td><td data-start="3318" data-end="3366" data-col-size="md">Yes</td></tr><tr data-start="3367" data-end="3489"><td data-start="3367" data-end="3399" data-col-size="sm"><strong data-start="3369" data-end="3388">Labor Standards</strong></td><td data-start="3399" data-end="3441" data-col-size="sm">Prevailing wage + apprenticeship</td><td data-start="3441" data-end="3489" data-col-size="md">Skilled/trained workforce (union rules)</td></tr></tbody></table><div class="sticky end-(--thread-content-margin) h-0 self-end select-none"><div class="absolute end-0 flex items-end"> </div></div></div></div><h3 data-start="3496" data-end="3544">Ask Yourself These Questions Before Choosing</h3><ul data-start="3546" data-end="3862"><li data-start="3546" data-end="3599"><p data-start="3548" data-end="3599">Do you want <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/affordable-housing/"><strong data-start="3560" data-end="3580">affordable units</strong></a> in your project?</p></li><li data-start="3600" data-end="3665"><p data-start="3602" data-end="3665">Is your site on a <strong data-start="3620" data-end="3643">commercial corridor</strong> with public access?</p></li><li data-start="3666" data-end="3730"><p data-start="3668" data-end="3730">Do you want to <strong data-start="3683" data-end="3697">avoid CEQA</strong> and get ministerial approvals?</p></li><li data-start="3731" data-end="3790"><p data-start="3733" data-end="3790">Are you ready to <strong data-start="3750" data-end="3787">meet union-level labor compliance</strong>?</p></li><li data-start="3791" data-end="3862"><p data-start="3793" data-end="3862">Does your project need<a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/zoning-rules-los-angeles-understanding-the-new-code-and-its-impact-on-your-property/"> <strong data-start="3816" data-end="3838">zoning flexibility</strong></a> not offered by AB 2011?</p></li></ul><p data-start="3864" data-end="4007">If you&#8217;re unsure how your property stacks up, our team at JDJ can run a <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/how-to-conduct-a-pre%e2%80%91construction-feasibility-study-a-step-by-step-guide/"><strong data-start="3936" data-end="3964">quick feasibility review</strong></a> to compare both paths based on your goals.</p><h2 data-start="200" data-end="273">How JDJ Consulting Group Helps Developers Understand AB 2011 and SB 6</h2><p data-start="275" data-end="361">Understanding the law is one thing—<strong data-start="310" data-end="349">applying it to your real-world site</strong> is another.</p><p data-start="363" data-end="610">At <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/about-us/"><strong data-start="366" data-end="390">JDJ Consulting Group</strong></a>, we bridge the gap between legislation and land use. Our role is to help you figure out which pathway—AB 2011 or SB 6—can unlock the <strong data-start="524" data-end="548">highest and best use</strong> for your site, while staying compliant and minimizing delays.</p><p data-start="612" data-end="631">Here’s how we help:</p><h3 data-start="638" data-end="686">Feasibility Studies That Go Beyond Zoning</h3><p data-start="688" data-end="752">We don’t just check your zoning and move on. Our team evaluates:</p><ul data-start="754" data-end="1064"><li data-start="754" data-end="796"><p data-start="756" data-end="796"><strong data-start="756" data-end="794">Eligibility under AB 2011 and SB 6</strong></p></li><li data-start="797" data-end="854"><p data-start="799" data-end="854">Corridor widths, frontage, and commercial use history</p></li><li data-start="855" data-end="905"><p data-start="857" data-end="905">Affordable housing overlays and density limits</p></li><li data-start="906" data-end="962"><p data-start="908" data-end="962">Whether your site can qualify for <strong data-start="942" data-end="960">CEQA exemption</strong></p></li><li data-start="963" data-end="1020"><p data-start="965" data-end="1020">Physical constraints: slopes, setbacks, access issues</p></li><li data-start="1021" data-end="1064"><p data-start="1023" data-end="1064">SB 35 applicability, if pairing with SB 6</p></li></ul><p data-start="1066" data-end="1195">Our reports include maps, density calculations, and a <strong data-start="1120" data-end="1160">side-by-side legal pathway breakdown</strong>, so you can make informed choices.</p><h3 data-start="1202" data-end="1258">Affordable Housing Modeling That Fits Your Budget</h3><p data-start="1260" data-end="1339">For developers exploring AB 2011, we help model how affordable housing affects:</p><ul data-start="1341" data-end="1523"><li data-start="1341" data-end="1370"><p data-start="1343" data-end="1370"><strong data-start="1343" data-end="1368">Unit yield and layout</strong></p></li><li data-start="1371" data-end="1416"><p data-start="1373" data-end="1416"><strong data-start="1373" data-end="1414">Revenue projections and equity ratios</strong></p></li><li data-start="1417" data-end="1476"><p data-start="1419" data-end="1476">Compatibility with <strong data-start="1438" data-end="1474">local inclusionary housing rules</strong></p></li><li data-start="1477" data-end="1523"><p data-start="1479" data-end="1523">Whether density bonuses or fee waivers apply</p></li></ul><p data-start="1525" data-end="1641">We can help you fine-tune your unit mix to <strong data-start="1568" data-end="1603">meet the 15% affordability rule</strong> while preserving financial viability.</p><h3 data-start="1648" data-end="1698">Labor Standards &amp; Union Compliance Guidance</h3><p data-start="1700" data-end="1771">Both laws require strict labor compliance—but they’re <strong data-start="1754" data-end="1770">not the same</strong>.</p><p data-start="1773" data-end="1793">We walk you through:</p><ul data-start="1795" data-end="2083"><li data-start="1795" data-end="1861"><p data-start="1797" data-end="1861"><strong data-start="1797" data-end="1845">Prevailing wage and apprenticeship standards</strong> under AB 2011</p></li><li data-start="1862" data-end="1925"><p data-start="1864" data-end="1925"><strong data-start="1864" data-end="1903">Skilled and trained workforce rules</strong> required under SB 6</p></li><li data-start="1926" data-end="2008"><p data-start="1928" data-end="2008">Coordination with licensed general contractors familiar with public labor laws</p></li><li data-start="2009" data-end="2083"><p data-start="2011" data-end="2083">How to structure <strong data-start="2028" data-end="2050">phased development</strong> if union compliance is a concern</p></li></ul><p data-start="2085" data-end="2195">Our network includes labor attorneys and cost consultants who understand how these laws affect your pro forma.</p><h3 data-start="2202" data-end="2248">Permit Strategy and Agency Coordination</h3><p data-start="2250" data-end="2319">Once your path is clear, we help you <strong data-start="2287" data-end="2318">build a roadmap to approval</strong>:</p><ul data-start="2321" data-end="2592"><li data-start="2321" data-end="2385"><p data-start="2323" data-end="2385">Entitlement timeline planning (ministerial vs discretionary)</p></li><li data-start="2386" data-end="2441"><p data-start="2388" data-end="2441">Navigating LADBS, Planning, and Housing departments</p></li><li data-start="2442" data-end="2490"><p data-start="2444" data-end="2490">Coordinating SB 35 applications where needed</p></li><li data-start="2491" data-end="2537"><p data-start="2493" data-end="2537">Pre-submittal meetings and agency outreach</p></li><li data-start="2538" data-end="2592"><p data-start="2540" data-end="2592">Managing <strong data-start="2549" data-end="2573">Ready-to-Issue (RTI)</strong> status proactively</p></li></ul><p data-start="2594" data-end="2669">In other words, we don’t just advise—we <strong data-start="2634" data-end="2645">execute</strong> your approval strategy.</p><h2 data-start="2676" data-end="2750">Case Studies: How Developers Are Using AB 2011 and SB 6 Successfully</h2><p data-start="2752" data-end="2862">Let’s look at how real-world developers are using these two pathways—and how JDJ guided their decision-making:</p><p data-start="2752" data-end="2862"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" class=" wp-image-5562 aligncenter" src="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2202030259-612x612-1.jpg" alt="Aerial view of regional Australian urban housing development and infrastructure project, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia" width="661" height="496" srcset="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2202030259-612x612-1.jpg 612w, https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/istockphoto-2202030259-612x612-1-300x225.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 661px) 100vw, 661px" /></p><h3 data-start="2869" data-end="2953">Case Study 1: Converting a Retail Strip into 120 Units of Mixed-Income Housing</h3><p data-start="2954" data-end="3056"><strong data-start="2954" data-end="2967">Location:</strong> Van Nuys, CA<br data-start="2980" data-end="2983" /><strong data-start="2983" data-end="2992">Goal:</strong> Deliver fast, CEQA-exempt approvals with moderate affordability</p><ul data-start="3058" data-end="3345"><li data-start="3058" data-end="3127"><p data-start="3060" data-end="3127"><strong data-start="3060" data-end="3074">Challenge:</strong> Narrow site, commercial frontage but heavy traffic</p></li><li data-start="3128" data-end="3219"><p data-start="3130" data-end="3219"><strong data-start="3130" data-end="3143">Solution:</strong> JDJ confirmed the 70-foot corridor width and 15% affordability compliance</p></li><li data-start="3220" data-end="3345"><p data-start="3222" data-end="3345"><strong data-start="3222" data-end="3234">Outcome:</strong> AB 2011 pathway allowed by-right approval in 90 days, no CEQA, and use of density bonus for parking reductions</p></li></ul><h3 data-start="3352" data-end="3417">Case Study 2: Market-Rate Multifamily Project on Office Lot</h3><p data-start="3418" data-end="3517"><strong data-start="3418" data-end="3431">Location:</strong> Glendale, CA<br data-start="3444" data-end="3447" /><strong data-start="3447" data-end="3456">Goal:</strong> Maximize market-rate units without affordability requirement</p><ul data-start="3519" data-end="3736"><li data-start="3519" data-end="3569"><p data-start="3521" data-end="3569"><strong data-start="3521" data-end="3535">Challenge:</strong> Site not on qualifying corridor</p></li><li data-start="3570" data-end="3644"><p data-start="3572" data-end="3644"><strong data-start="3572" data-end="3585">Solution:</strong> JDJ recommended SB 6 with SB 35 overlay for streamlining</p></li><li data-start="3645" data-end="3736"><p data-start="3647" data-end="3736"><strong data-start="3647" data-end="3659">Outcome:</strong> Developer retained full market-rate flexibility and used SB 35 to avoid CEQA</p></li></ul><h3 data-start="3743" data-end="3817">Case Study 3: Exploring Both Options for a Vacant Mall Redevelopment</h3><p data-start="3818" data-end="3905"><strong data-start="3818" data-end="3831">Location:</strong> Torrance, CA<br data-start="3844" data-end="3847" /><strong data-start="3847" data-end="3856">Goal:</strong> Test feasibility of both laws before acquisition</p><ul data-start="3907" data-end="4199"><li data-start="3907" data-end="3985"><p data-start="3909" data-end="3985"><strong data-start="3909" data-end="3923">Challenge:</strong> 7-acre site with freeway adjacency and mixed retail tenancy</p></li><li data-start="3986" data-end="4074"><p data-start="3988" data-end="4074"><strong data-start="3988" data-end="4001">Solution:</strong> JDJ conducted parallel AB 2011/SB 6 scenario modeling and phasing plan</p></li><li data-start="4075" data-end="4199"><p data-start="4077" data-end="4199"><strong data-start="4077" data-end="4089">Outcome:</strong> Developer opted for AB 2011 Phase 1 (100% affordable), SB 6 Phase 2 (market-rate) with long-term entitlements</p></li></ul><h2 data-start="233" data-end="294">Key Takeaways for Developers Comparing AB 2011 and SB 6</h2><p data-start="296" data-end="475">Choosing the right housing streamlining law isn’t just about what looks best on paper—it’s about what works best <strong data-start="409" data-end="426">for your site</strong>, <strong data-start="428" data-end="445">your timeline</strong>, and <strong data-start="451" data-end="474">your business model</strong>.</p><p data-start="477" data-end="521">Here’s a recap of what you need to consider:</p><h3 data-start="523" data-end="569">AB 2011 – Best for Speed and Affordability</h3><ul data-start="570" data-end="849"><li data-start="570" data-end="618"><p data-start="572" data-end="618"><strong data-start="572" data-end="596">Ministerial approval</strong> with no CEQA review</p></li><li data-start="619" data-end="666"><p data-start="621" data-end="666">Requires <strong data-start="630" data-end="664">15% or 100% affordable housing</strong></p></li><li data-start="667" data-end="723"><p data-start="669" data-end="723">Sites must be on <strong data-start="686" data-end="721">qualifying commercial corridors</strong></p></li><li data-start="724" data-end="786"><p data-start="726" data-end="786">Strong option for <strong data-start="744" data-end="784">nonprofit or mixed-income developers</strong></p></li><li data-start="787" data-end="849"><p data-start="789" data-end="849">Must meet <strong data-start="799" data-end="837">prevailing wage and apprenticeship</strong> labor rules</p></li></ul><h3 data-start="851" data-end="907">SB 6 – Best for Flexibility and Market-Rate Projects</h3><ul data-start="908" data-end="1235"><li data-start="908" data-end="986"><p data-start="910" data-end="986"><strong data-start="910" data-end="944">Discretionary approval process</strong>, CEQA still applies (unless SB 35 used)</p></li><li data-start="987" data-end="1036"><p data-start="989" data-end="1036">No <strong data-start="992" data-end="1034">state-level affordability requirements</strong></p></li><li data-start="1037" data-end="1110"><p data-start="1039" data-end="1110">Sites can be <strong data-start="1052" data-end="1093">any commercial or office-zoned parcel</strong> in urban areas</p></li><li data-start="1111" data-end="1168"><p data-start="1113" data-end="1168">Labor rules require <strong data-start="1133" data-end="1166">skilled and trained workforce</strong></p></li><li data-start="1169" data-end="1235"><p data-start="1171" data-end="1235">Often works well for <strong data-start="1192" data-end="1235">mid-size infill or phased redevelopment</strong></p></li></ul><h3 data-start="1242" data-end="1270">Summary Comparison Table</h3><div class="_tableContainer_80l1q_1"><div class="_tableWrapper_80l1q_14 group flex w-fit flex-col-reverse" tabindex="-1"><table class="w-fit min-w-(--thread-content-width)" data-start="1272" data-end="2167"><thead data-start="1272" data-end="1384"><tr data-start="1272" data-end="1384"><th data-start="1272" data-end="1305" data-col-size="sm">Feature</th><th data-start="1305" data-end="1344" data-col-size="sm">AB 2011</th><th data-start="1344" data-end="1384" data-col-size="sm">SB 6</th></tr></thead><tbody data-start="1497" data-end="2167"><tr data-start="1497" data-end="1608"><td data-start="1497" data-end="1529" data-col-size="sm">Approval Type</td><td data-start="1529" data-end="1568" data-col-size="sm">Ministerial (By-Right)</td><td data-start="1568" data-end="1608" data-col-size="sm">Discretionary (CEQA applies)</td></tr><tr data-start="1609" data-end="1720"><td data-start="1609" data-end="1641" data-col-size="sm">CEQA Requirement</td><td data-start="1641" data-end="1680" data-col-size="sm">No</td><td data-start="1680" data-end="1720" data-col-size="sm">Yes (unless SB 35 eligible)</td></tr><tr data-start="1721" data-end="1832"><td data-start="1721" data-end="1753" data-col-size="sm">Affordable Housing Mandate</td><td data-start="1753" data-end="1792" data-col-size="sm">Yes (15%–100%)</td><td data-start="1792" data-end="1832" data-col-size="sm">No</td></tr><tr data-start="1833" data-end="1944"><td data-start="1833" data-end="1865" data-col-size="sm">Eligible Sites</td><td data-start="1865" data-end="1904" data-col-size="sm">Commercial corridors only</td><td data-start="1904" data-end="1944" data-col-size="sm">Any commercial/office zone (urban)</td></tr><tr data-start="1945" data-end="2056"><td data-start="1945" data-end="1977" data-col-size="sm">Labor Standards</td><td data-start="1977" data-end="2016" data-col-size="sm">Prevailing wage + apprenticeship</td><td data-start="2016" data-end="2056" data-col-size="sm">Skilled &amp; trained workforce</td></tr><tr data-start="2057" data-end="2167"><td data-start="2057" data-end="2089" data-col-size="sm">Best Fit For…</td><td data-start="2089" data-end="2127" data-col-size="sm">Fast-track affordable/mixed-income</td><td data-start="2127" data-end="2167" data-col-size="sm">Market-rate and flexible projects</td></tr></tbody></table></div><div> </div></div><h2 data-start="2270" data-end="2381">Conclusion – Get Strategic Help with Housing Streamlining Laws from JDJ Consulting Group</h2><p data-start="2270" data-end="2381">At the end of the day, <strong data-start="2293" data-end="2337">AB 2011 and SB 6 are both powerful tools</strong>—but only if you know how to use them right.</p><p data-start="2383" data-end="2580">Your site might seem like a strong candidate for AB 2011, but a corridor-width issue or labor requirement could make SB 6 the better route. Or maybe you’re not even sure where your property stands.</p><p data-start="2582" data-end="2606">That’s where we come in.</p><p data-start="2608" data-end="2784"><strong data-start="2608" data-end="2632">JDJ Consulting Group</strong> works with developers, landowners, and real estate investors across California to unlock the <strong data-start="2726" data-end="2764">highest and best use of their land</strong>. Our team provides:</p><ul data-start="2786" data-end="3124"><li data-start="2786" data-end="2851"><p data-start="2788" data-end="2851"><a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/land-use-consulting/"><strong data-start="2788" data-end="2819">Custom entitlement strategy</strong></a> based on your project’s needs</p></li><li data-start="2852" data-end="2921"><p data-start="2854" data-end="2921"><a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/feasibility-studies-services/"><strong data-start="2854" data-end="2886">Detailed feasibility studies</strong></a> comparing AB 2011 and SB 6 paths</p></li><li data-start="2922" data-end="2992"><p data-start="2924" data-end="2992"><a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/permit-expediting-services/"><strong data-start="2924" data-end="2969">Permit expediting and agency coordination</strong></a> for faster timelines</p></li><li data-start="2993" data-end="3056"><p data-start="2995" data-end="3056"><strong data-start="2995" data-end="3023">Labor compliance support</strong> to avoid violations and delays</p></li><li data-start="3057" data-end="3124"><p data-start="3059" data-end="3124"><a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/affordable-housing/"><strong data-start="3059" data-end="3090">Affordable housing modeling</strong></a> to balance compliance and profits</p></li></ul><p data-start="3126" data-end="3248">We’ll help you clear red tape, reduce risk, and move confidently toward approvals—whether you’re planning 20 units or 200.</p><p data-start="3255" data-end="3461"><strong data-start="3255" data-end="3289">Ready to explore your options?</strong></p><p data-start="3255" data-end="3461">Our consultants are here to guide you through California’s evolving housing laws. Let’s talk about your property, your goals, and how we can streamline the path forward.</p><blockquote><p data-start="3255" data-end="3461"><strong>Call JDJ Consulting Group at <a href="tel: (818) 233-0750">(818) 233-0750</a> or <a class="cursor-pointer" href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/contact-us/" target="_new" rel="noopener" data-start="3517" data-end="3576">contact us online</a> to schedule your strategy session.</strong></p></blockquote>								</div>
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  <h3 style="text-align:center; color: #005a87;">Is Your Property Eligible for AB 2011 or SB 6?</h3>
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    <li><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/16.0.1/72x72/1f4cd.png" alt="📍" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" /> <strong>Is your site in a commercial zone?</strong> <em>→ If yes, go to #2</em></li>
    <li><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/16.0.1/72x72/1f3d8.png" alt="🏘" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" /> <strong>Is housing an allowable use by-right?</strong> <em>→ If not, you may need rezoning</em></li>
    <li><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/16.0.1/72x72/1f4bc.png" alt="💼" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" /> <strong>Can you meet labor requirements?</strong> <em>→ Prevailing wage (AB 2011) or Skilled & Trained (SB 6)</em></li>
    <li><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/16.0.1/72x72/1f4b0.png" alt="💰" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" /> <strong>Will your project include affordable units?</strong> <em>→ Required for AB 2011, not SB 6</em></li>
    <li><img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/16.0.1/72x72/2705.png" alt="✅" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" /> <strong>If all above = YES</strong> → You likely qualify for streamlined development</li>
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									<h2 data-start="3255" data-end="3461">FAQs Regarding AB 2011 vs SB 6</h2><h3 data-start="1205" data-end="1262">What is the main difference between AB 2011 and SB 6?</h3><p data-start="1264" data-end="1438">AB 2011 offers <strong data-start="1279" data-end="1303">ministerial approval</strong> with no CEQA review, while SB 6 uses a <strong data-start="1343" data-end="1368">discretionary process</strong> that typically requires CEQA compliance.<br data-start="1409" data-end="1412" />Here’s a quick comparison:</p><ul data-start="1440" data-end="1769"><li data-start="1440" data-end="1512"><p data-start="1442" data-end="1512"><strong data-start="1442" data-end="1453">AB 2011</strong>: Fast-track by-right process, affordability requirements</p></li><li data-start="1513" data-end="1598"><p data-start="1515" data-end="1598"><strong data-start="1515" data-end="1523">SB 6</strong>: Greater site flexibility, no state-mandated affordability, CEQA applies</p></li><li data-start="1599" data-end="1700"><p data-start="1601" data-end="1700">AB 2011 works best on <a class="" href="https://www.hcd.ca.gov/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-start="1623" data-end="1670">commercial corridors</a> with high housing potential</p></li><li data-start="1701" data-end="1769"><p data-start="1703" data-end="1769">SB 6 allows residential use on any urban commercial or office zone</p></li></ul><h3 data-start="1776" data-end="1835">Can I use AB 2011 or SB 6 if my site has zoning issues?</h3><p data-start="1837" data-end="1929">Yes, but it depends on your parcel’s zoning and location.<br data-start="1894" data-end="1897" />Here’s how to check eligibility:</p><ul data-start="1931" data-end="2305"><li data-start="1931" data-end="2089"><p data-start="1933" data-end="2089">AB 2011 only works if the parcel is in a <strong data-start="1974" data-end="2002">commercial corridor zone</strong> with 70–85 ft ROW, and meets <a class="" href="https://www.hcd.ca.gov/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-start="2032" data-end="2087">HCD’s technical requirements</a></p></li><li data-start="2090" data-end="2162"><p data-start="2092" data-end="2162">SB 6 can apply to <strong data-start="2110" data-end="2143">any office or commercial zone</strong> in an urban area</p></li><li data-start="2163" data-end="2305"><p data-start="2165" data-end="2305">A custom <a class="cursor-pointer" target="_new" rel="noopener" data-start="2174" data-end="2231">feasibility study</a> from JDJ Consulting can confirm your site&#8217;s eligibility and best strategy</p></li></ul><h3 data-start="2312" data-end="2357">Does AB 2011 exempt my project from CEQA?</h3><p data-start="2359" data-end="2474">Yes—<strong data-start="2363" data-end="2399">AB 2011 is a CEQA-exempt pathway</strong> if all eligibility conditions are met.<br data-start="2438" data-end="2441" />Projects that qualify can bypass:</p><ul data-start="2476" data-end="2571"><li data-start="2476" data-end="2508"><p data-start="2478" data-end="2508">Environmental impact reports</p></li><li data-start="2509" data-end="2543"><p data-start="2511" data-end="2543">Lengthy discretionary hearings</p></li><li data-start="2544" data-end="2571"><p data-start="2546" data-end="2571">Third-party CEQA lawsuits</p></li></ul><p data-start="2573" data-end="2645">This can significantly cut down approval time and risk compared to SB 6.</p><h3 data-start="2652" data-end="2704">Are there affordability requirements under SB 6?</h3><p data-start="2706" data-end="2859">No, SB 6 does <strong data-start="2720" data-end="2764">not require any affordable housing units</strong> at the state level.<br data-start="2784" data-end="2787" />However, local inclusionary ordinances may still apply. Compare that to:</p><ul data-start="2861" data-end="3025"><li data-start="2861" data-end="2940"><p data-start="2863" data-end="2940">AB 2011’s mandatory <strong data-start="2883" data-end="2912">15% minimum affordability</strong>, or 100% in certain zones</p></li><li data-start="2941" data-end="3025"><p data-start="2943" data-end="3025">SB 6’s focus is more on <strong data-start="2967" data-end="2999">repurposing commercial sites</strong> without limiting unit mix</p></li></ul><p data-start="3027" data-end="3113">This makes SB 6 attractive for <strong data-start="3058" data-end="3084">market-rate developers</strong> working within urban zoning.</p><h3 data-start="3120" data-end="3170">What kind of labor rules apply under each law?</h3><p data-start="3172" data-end="3225">Both AB 2011 and SB 6 include strict labor standards:</p><ul data-start="3227" data-end="3403"><li data-start="3227" data-end="3327"><p data-start="3229" data-end="3327"><strong data-start="3229" data-end="3240">AB 2011</strong>: Requires <em data-start="3251" data-end="3268">prevailing wage</em> <strong data-start="3269" data-end="3276">and</strong> use of a <em data-start="3286" data-end="3325">state-approved apprenticeship program</em></p></li><li data-start="3328" data-end="3403"><p data-start="3330" data-end="3403"><strong data-start="3330" data-end="3338">SB 6</strong>: Requires a <em data-start="3351" data-end="3382">skilled and trained workforce</em> under California law</p></li></ul><p data-start="3405" data-end="3547">These conditions affect project costs and contractor options. JDJ helps developers <strong data-start="3488" data-end="3517">navigate compliance early</strong> to avoid construction delays.</p><h3 data-start="3554" data-end="3604">How can I know which law fits my project best?</h3><p data-start="3606" data-end="3627">That depends on your:</p><ul data-start="3629" data-end="3759"><li data-start="3629" data-end="3661"><p data-start="3631" data-end="3661"><strong data-start="3631" data-end="3659">Site zoning and location</strong></p></li><li data-start="3662" data-end="3706"><p data-start="3664" data-end="3706"><strong data-start="3664" data-end="3704">Housing type and affordability goals</strong></p></li><li data-start="3707" data-end="3759"><p data-start="3709" data-end="3759"><strong data-start="3709" data-end="3759">Timeline, CEQA exposure, and political context</strong></p></li></ul><p data-start="3761" data-end="3985">A professional <a class="cursor-pointer" href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/development-feasibility" target="_new" rel="noopener" data-start="3776" data-end="3846">entitlement strategy session</a> with JDJ Consulting Group can help clarify which path—AB 2011, SB 6, or an alternate CEQA exemption—is the right fit for your development.</p>								</div>
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    <summary style="font-weight: bold; cursor: pointer;">Use AB 2011 if…</summary>
    <ul style="margin-top: 10px; line-height: 1.6;">
      <li>You want CEQA streamlining</li>
      <li>Your project includes affordable housing</li>
      <li>The site is on a commercial corridor</li>
      <li>You can meet prevailing wage + healthcare labor standards</li>
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  </details>

  <details style="padding: 15px; background: #fff9f3; border-left: 5px solid #ff9933; border-radius: 8px;">
    <summary style="font-weight: bold; cursor: pointer;">Use SB 6 if…</summary>
    <ul style="margin-top: 10px; line-height: 1.6;">
      <li>You don't plan to build affordable units</li>
      <li>You have access to CEQA consultants or mitigation strategies</li>
      <li>You prefer flexibility in unit types and design</li>
      <li>You meet skilled and trained labor requirements</li>
    </ul>
  </details>
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		<p>The post <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com/ab-2011-vs-sb-6-which-housing-law-works-best-for-your-property/">AB 2011 vs SB 6: Which Housing Law Works Best for Your Property?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://staging.jdj-consulting.com">JDJ Consulting Group</a>.</p>
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