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History of the Commission |
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After the end of World War II and throughout the 1950’s, California experienced a tremendous population increase, which resulted in a number of illogical and "special interest" incorporations of new cities and formations of new special districts. In addition, a number of cities engaged in "annexation wars" with one another, resulting in haphazard, illogical, and inefficient service boundaries. This development boom not only resulted in the proliferation of inefficient service agencies, but it also led to premature conversion of prime agricultural land to urban/suburban uses, premature and unplanned development, and urban sprawl. Governor Edmund G. Brown, Sr. responded to this problem in 1959 by appointing the "Commission on Metropolitan Area Problems." The Commission’s charge was to study and make recommendations on the "misuse of land resources" and the growing complexity of overlapping governmental jurisdictions. The Commission’s recommendations on local governmental reorganization were introduced in the Legislature in 1963, resulting in the creation of Local Agency Formation Commissions (or "LAFCO’s) in every county in the state, with the exception of the city-county of San Francisco. |
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| State Laws Governing the Local Agency Formation Commission | |
To understand the functions and
operations of the Local Agency Formation Commission, one must first
understand a series of state laws that govern this Commission. From time
to time, any number of state laws must be considered by the Commission
(For example, the Commission would need to be familiar with water district
law in reviewing a proposal to form a water district.). In general terms,
however, the following state laws are almost always relevant to the work
of this Commission:
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