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A Local Agency Formation Commission (or LAFCo) is one of several decision making government entities in California with the responsibility to decide boundary issues pertaining to city and county (non-incorporated) lands, including spheres of influence, and issues about the annexation of county lands into a city or special district. HistoryLocal Agency Formation Commissions were established in each California county except San Francisco by the California State Legislature in 1963. LAFCos' current legal authority and mandate are defined by the Cortese-Knox-Hertzberg Local Government Act of 2000 (Government Code Section 56000 et seq.) (Note: In 2001, San Francisco formed a LAFCo. There are now LAFCos in all 58 of California's counties.) AuthorityLAFCOs have both regulatory and planning authority:
Under the agency, no community within an incorporated city has ever been granted cityship. This is partially due to the recently passed Cortese-Knox-Hertzberg Local Government Act of 2000, which makes it difficult for communities to break away from their original cities by forcing the community to gain approval from the city it is detaching from, and heightened requirements from an election (2/3 vote from entire community and affected city). The only community within a city ever to be brought before a vote by LAFCo was the San Fernando Valley in the early 2000's, which was denied. No detachments from a city have been successful in the state since 1947. External links |
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