Home>Articles>Sacramento City Council Rejects Neighbors’ Appeal, Violating CEQA, Sidestepping Zoning Laws, Ignoring Community Input

Architectural rendering of proposed apartment complex, Casa Loma Terrace, East Sacramento. (Provided by Save East Sac!)

Sacramento City Council Rejects Neighbors’ Appeal, Violating CEQA, Sidestepping Zoning Laws, Ignoring Community Input

‘The Council has given a green light to this project despite clear conflicts with adopted zoning laws, unresolved public safety and infrastructure concerns, and extensive community opposition’

By Katy Grimes, May 15, 2026 3:39 pm

The behemoth project currently proposed for the Sacramento square block of Alhambra to 30th, to C Street to D Street, and opposed by the quaint neighborhood’s residents, will be going forward. The City of Sacramento thumbed their noses at the residents in a vote to deny their appeal April 29th.

The project is happening because of Sen. Scott Weiner’s SB 79, signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom in October 2025, which will force single-family neighborhoods to accept high-rise apartment buildings. And it’s already happening.

With Wiener’s latest effort to transform residential neighborhoods into big, dense cities, the caveat justifying building apartment housing on single-family streets is if a bus stop is within half a mile of the proposed apartment building.

It is a death knell for conventional family-oriented residential living.

“CPGP and the Casa Loma Terrace Neighborhood Association appealed this project because of the project’s significant health and safety risks, its egregious size and scale, as well as the impact to the historic Casa Loma Terrace district,” Citizens for Positive Growth & Preservation said in a press statement. “Last night’s decision by the City Council to deny both appeals is deeply disappointing. The Council has given a green light to this project despite clear conflicts with adopted zoning laws, unresolved public safety and infrastructure concerns, and extensive community opposition.”

Citizens for Positive Growth & Preservation is not opposed to responsible development. In fact, our appeal would not have halted development at the site. Our effort has always been about accountability — holding the City accountable to the laws it adopted to protect public health, neighborhood livability, and long-term infrastructure capacity.”

The Globe reported on the project in February. It is in the City of Sacramento’s records, and will occupy the former Maryann’s Bakery site, which has been abandoned and left decrepit for years, and required major remediation for soil contamination caused by leaking underground tanks, Sacramento resident Carl Seymour told the Globe in February.

“These are all apartments, market rate, with nothing for seniors, or affordable housing. And this requires the use of cars,” Seymour said describing the redevelopment project, as it isn’t near a light rail station.

“The Alhambra Corridor Special Planning District exists for a reason: to ensure that new development transitions appropriately near established residential neighborhoods and does not overwhelm historic single-story homes. When those protections are set aside, and major impacts are deferred or dismissed rather than fully evaluated, it undermines public trust, neglects community input, and sets a precedent that planning rules are optional rather than enforceable.”

Here is what the Casa Loma Terrace neighborhood in East Sacramento looks like:

Casa Loma Terrace, East Sacramento. (Photo: Carl Seymour for California Globe)

The Casa Loma Terrace neighborhood is set in an historic post WWI bungalow homes, primarily one- and two-story residential neighborhood, where average density is probably 50 people per square block, Mr. Seymour said. Covered by the Alhambra Corridor Special Planning District which was created following the destruction of the historic landmark The Alhambra Theater in 1973, the area is zoned for a maximum height of 35 feet, and zoning specifies that any construction should echo architectural styles of the surrounding neighborhood.

The project applicant, the Demas family, has been seeking exceptions to be able to build a 68 foot tall, six story, high-rise, high-density apartment building, with ground floor retail space.

Proposed apartment complex, Casa Loma Terrace, East Sacramento.

“The City Planning Department’s initial study states that the building will house up to 870 residents in one square block, and that the project will generate over 19,000 vehicle trips per week into this otherwise reasonably quiet East Sacramento neighborhood,” Seymour said. “The Planning Department has issued a Mitigated Negative Declaration, and tentatively recommended approval, though their final study is yet to be released. The initial study contained numerous errors and flaws, and generated significant controversy.”

“Residents repeatedly asked for a lawful, community‑benefiting process — one which evaluates the project’s impacts upon the city’s failing combined sewer system, addresses the freeway-volume traffic on narrow residential streets, and consults the surrounding neighborhood before approvals are granted. The City ignored our requests,” Citizens for Positive Growth & Preservation said.

The 6-story Alhambra Redevelopment Project. (Photo: SaveEastSac!)

“While the Council’s vote closes this chapter of the appeal, it does not resolve the broader concerns raised by this project or the growing pattern of approving developments that circumvent the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and existing local protections.

“CPGP will continue to advocate for responsible, lawful growth and development which benefits the entire community, respects historic neighborhoods, and is guided by transparency, accountability, and good governance. Sacramento can and should grow, but it must do so by following the law and working with, not around, the people who call these long-established neighborhoods home.”

Mr. Seymour noted that with 870 people projected to live in the apartment building with only 302 parking spaces, they are short 500+ spaces.

This is forced density, not smart growth, and turns the very idea of property rights upside down.

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7 thoughts on “Sacramento City Council Rejects Neighbors’ Appeal, Violating CEQA, Sidestepping Zoning Laws, Ignoring Community Input

  1. What a great job Carl is doing in fighting this OUTRAGEOUS proposal. My guess is that the city wants it mainly for MONEY it’d get from property taxes and building fees to cover their incompetence with managing the money they’ve received.

  2. As someone who grew up in Sacramento, I’m very familiar with the Casa Loma Terrace neighborhood in East Sacramento. There are a lot of Democrats, government workers and leftist types who live there. You’re likely to see yards sign and bumper stickers with leftist slogans like “ICE OUT”, “Resist” ,”No kings”, “Coexist”, etc. During elections you’ll only see campaign signs for Democrats. They elected a radical far left Democrat councilperson named Katie Valenzuela who was replaced in the 2024 election with a somewhat less radical Democrat Councilperson named Phil Pluckebaum who served as an appointee to the Sacramento Planning and Design Commission.

    Democrat Councilperson Phil Pluckebaum voted in favor of the project officially known as the Alhambra Redevelopment Project (P24-007). On April 29, 2026, the Sacramento City Council held a vote on appeals filed by two neighborhood groups—Citizens for Positive Growth & Preservation and the Casa Loma Terrace–East Sacramento Neighborhood Association—challenging the Planning and Design Commission’s earlier approval.

    The city council, all of whom are Democrats, unanimously denied the appeals, allowing the project to move forward. Pluckebaum and the other Democrat councilmembers argued that the project aligns with the city’s 2040 General Plan by promoting dense, transit-adjacent infill development. Pluckebaum was a very vocal supporter during the meeting, stating: “The reason why we are in the housing crisis we are in today, because for decades, well intentioned people across the state and frankly, across the west coast have have taken opportunities like this, to oppose that looked exactly like this.”

    Maybe some of the residents in Casa Loma Terrace neighborhood will wake up and stop voting for Democrats, but don’t count on it.

    1. It’s hard to feel sorry for people who vote for Democrats. The get what they voted for.

      If you voted for Democrats and are a victim of crime, you got what you voted for.

      If you voted for Democrats and electricity, gas, and other necessities are too expensive, you got what you voted for.

      If you voted for Democrats and an illegal immigrant rams into your car and has no insurance or hit and runs, you got what you voted for.

      If a multi-story building goes up next door to your house, you got what you voted for.

  3. The project does sound like forced density and the lack of parking is problematic. However, not sure that it turns the very idea of property rights upside down? One of the components of property rights is the authority to use the property as desired, subject to legal constraints like zoning laws or homeowners association rules. If the Demas family owns the property, then they should be able to develop it within reason?

  4. I agree that it is hard to feel sorry for Democrats that voted for Democrats to ruin their neighborhood. However this doesn’t just affect the people living there now. This affects everybody in the future that wants to live in this neighborhood…this is a monstrous development that doesnt fit the neighborhood that its being built in and it will destroy this neighborhood sadly. I understand that the owners of the property want to get maximum amount of profit out of their property but this is really quite ridiculous. I am so shocked that.. actually no I’m not shocked that the city council or whoever approved this. Money Talks.

  5. This is tyranny. Vote them all out of office. Democrats do not care about people. They care about their own power, control and money. They are the totalitarians.

  6. File a CEAQ lawsuit and keep the project in limbo for decades until the developer gives up. That’s how you stop development in California.

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