Real Estate
Land Use Planning, Development and Litigation
Public Agencies
Appellate Advocacy
Brett Jolley represents and advises clients on land use, zoning, and environmental matters. He assists developers, property owners, public agencies, community groups, and nonprofit corporations with issues involving the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), the Subdivision Map Act, State Planning and Zoning Law, the Mitigation Fee Act, and the State Elections Code. Brett regularly appears before city councils, county boards of supervisors, planning commissions, and LAFCOs, and litigates related matters in superior courts and courts of appeal around the State.
Growing up in the historic Sierra foothills of Amador County, Brett became interested in the connection between property rights, land use issues, and the environment at an early age. Brett joined Herum Crabtree in 2000 after graduating from University of Pacific, McGeorge School of Law in Sacramento and promptly focused his practice toward land use and governmental matters. Since that time Brett has made countless appearances before administrative land use bodies and courts of law, tackling issues such as conflicts between cell towers and agricultural spraying, defending an agricultural rendering plant operator against a home developer’s “anti-SLAPP” litigation, and obtaining development entitlements for uses such as a private bass fishing club and a food processing plant. He also drafts ordinances and resolutions for municipal and public agency and clients, has experience processing trademark applications, and represents parties in writs and appeals for non-land use matters, including issues arising under the Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Act.
Brett has extensive knowledge of planning and environmental issues affecting large-scale commercial and “big box” development. In 2004 Brett played a substantial role in challenging the approval of two large “Supercenter”-anchored shopping centers in Bakersfield, leading to the first in a recent line of published decisions addressing the environmental impact of “urban decay.” The following year, Brett served as lead trial and appellate counsel representing a community group challenging approval of a “Supercenter” in lieu of a previously approved multi-use shopping center in American Canyon. This decision resulted in several injunctions against the project as well as the first reported decision concluding a public agency violated CEQA’s “Section 21166” subsequent environmental review provisions. Brett also has experience in land use issues involving recreational, residential, mining, and governmental uses. In 2005 Brett represented motocross champion Jeremy McGrath in defeating injunctions to prohibit recreational off-highway vehicle use on private property in Riverside County. In 2006, Brett represented developers in successfully defeating school district litigation attacking both a subdivision map approval and the 1998 Leroy F. Greene School Facilities Act. In 2007 Brett acted as lead appellate counsel for a mining company defending environmental challenges to surface mine expansion permits and also represented the Building Industry Association of the Delta in planning commission and City Council proceedings on the Stockton 2035 General Plan Update. Recently, Brett represented a Colorado corporation in public bidding, negotiating a lease, and securing governmental approvals to operate parolee rehabilitation “day reporting center” at the San Joaquin County Jail under contract with the California Department of Corrections.
During law school, Brett interned with various State regulatory agencies. In 1998, Brett worked as a law clerk in the cabinet-level California Resources Agency and, “played an integral part in revising the Guidelines to the California Environmental Quality Act,” according to former Secretary for Resources Douglas Wheeler. Brett also co-authored two interactive environmental law resources on the Resources Agency's CERES website (www.ceres.ca.gov): The Interactive CEQA Process Flowchart and California Water Law and Policy. The following year, Brett interned with the California Integrated Waste Management Board, Office of the Chief Counsel addressing issues involving environmental, administrative, and public agency law and assisting in successfully prosecuting a waste tire hauler for California Integrated Waste Management Act violations.
Brett holds a degree in English from the University of California, Santa Barbara where he raced for the Alpine Ski Team and earned Dean's Honors – but not without first realizing that his academic skill set lay in humanities rather than calculus and chemistry. While at UCSB, noted legal historian, professor, and author Laura Kalman candidly said of Brett: "If [he] had been the right age in the 1930's Frank Capra might well have chosen him over Jimmy Stewart to play Jefferson Smith in ‘Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.’" After college, Brett did venture into a political environment, interning for Stockton Senator Patrick Johnston in the State Capitol – which bolstered his interest in public policy, the legislative process, and issues affecting the Central Valley, Delta, and Sierras.
Brett is involved in the State and local bars, serving as past president of the San Joaquin County Bar Association Barrister’s Section and former member of the San Joaquin County Bar Association Board of Governors. Brett currently represents central California on the State Bar’s California Young Lawyer’s Association and, as Vice President, chairs the organization’s Pro Bono Committee. He also sits on the Governmental Relations Committee and Stockton Task Force of the Building Industry Association of the Delta and received that organization’s 2007 Commitment to Excellence award.
In his free time, Brett enjoys downhill skiing, motocross, golf, tackling a never-ending list of home improvement projects, and spending time with his family.
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Presentations/Publications:
Reported Decisions:
In the Press:
Going Green Can Be a Sound Legal Investment By Brett Jolley As published in Delta Breeze,
Business Briefs
Wal-Mart Work Still on Hold, Judge Says: Latest Skirmish Over Am Can Supercenter Favors Big Fox Foes
Lodi Council Keeps Wal-mart Project Alive
Wal-mart Supercenter Debate
Wal-mart Heading to Planning Commission After Months of Delay
Thinking Outside the Box: Will Wal-Mart's Troubles Bring Am Can Budget to a Halt?
Lodi council to consider Wal-mart supercenter
Leader of Lawyer's Group Chosen
Group Trying to Join Suit Over Stockton Growth Plan
Getting Ahead - Brett S. Jolley
Fees Squeeze
District 5 Rep Revs Up
Appeals Court Hears Am Can Wal-Mart Case
California News