Annexation Decisions in Long Beach
How annexation requests are decided across Long Beach, CA council meetings, the vote and the conditions on the record
Annexation is one of the most actively tracked zoning topics in Long Beach, CA. ZoneWire has analyzed 0 council meetings and detected 0 instances of annexation activity. Below are the most recent discussions.
What is Annexation?
The process of incorporating unincorporated land into a municipality, bringing it under city zoning and services.
Annexation is the process by which a municipality extends its corporate boundaries to include previously unincorporated land. Once annexed, the land becomes subject to the municipality's zoning authority, building codes, tax jurisdiction, and public services (water, sewer, police, fire).
Read full definitionAnnexation in Long Beach, CA
The process of incorporating unincorporated land into a municipality, bringing it under city zoning and services. In Long Beach, CA, local government bodies regularly discuss annexation as part of zoning and land use decisions.
ZoneWire has analyzed 0 meetings in Long Beach and detected 0 mentions of annexation.
Recent Annexation meetings in Long Beach
No meetings with annexation activity found yet. Check back soon. We're monitoring every session.
Why Track Annexation?
Annexation can be initiated by:
Annexation Regulations in California
California sets the regulatory framework that governs how annexation decisions are made at the county and municipal level. State statutes define zoning authority, hearing requirements, and appeal processes that directly affect annexation outcomes in Long Beach.
View all California zoning activityEvery Annexation decision in Long Beach
See how every annexation request in Long Beach was decided: the vote, the conditions attached, and how it moved through its hearings.
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Annexation in Other Counties
Frequently Asked Questions
Annexation is the process by which a municipality extends its corporate boundaries to include previously unincorporated land. Once annexed, the land becomes subject to the municipality's zoning authority, building codes, tax jurisdiction, and public services (water, sewer, police, fire). ZoneWire tracks annexation activity across Long Beach, CA public meetings.
ZoneWire monitors Long Beach, CA planning and council meetings, transcribes them, and flags annexation activity. As of the latest update we have analyzed 0 meetings and detected 0 annexation mentions.
Tracking annexation in Long Beach surfaces zoning and development signals early, so developers, investors, and brokers can evaluate parcels and approvals before they reach the broader market.
Long Beach is a city with its own planning authority. The Long Beach Planning Commission, a seven-member body appointed by the Mayor and confirmed by the City Council, advises on land use and General Plan matters and serves as the public hearing authority for many development applications. It reviews requests such as conditional and administrative use permits, standards variances, local coastal development permits, site plan reviews, and subdivision requests. Zoning is administered by the Community Development Department's Planning Bureau.
The Planning Commission meets on the first and third Thursday of each month at 5 p.m. at the Long Beach City Hall Civic Chambers, 411 W. Ocean Blvd. Meetings are held in person, and members of the public may participate in person or virtually via Zoom.
The city's zoning rules are set out in Title 21 (Zoning) of the Long Beach Municipal Code, which defines each zoning district's permitted activities, facilities, and development standards. Title 21 includes residential, commercial, and industrial districts, along with Specific Plan Districts (SP) and Planned Development Districts (PD) that provide tailored regulations for particular neighborhoods. Title 22, the Transitional Zoning Code, adds newer zone types such as RMU, MU, MFR, and NI.
The city's Planning Bureau directs property owners to the Zoning and Land Use GIS Map, which shows zoning districts, General Plan land use categories, historic districts, and coastal zone boundaries. Owners with specific zoning questions can also submit an inquiry to the Planning Bureau or schedule a meeting with a planner.
Yes. All development in the coastal zone must obtain either a Local Coastal Development Permit under Long Beach Municipal Code Section 21.25.904 or a Coastal Permit Categorical Exclusion under Section 21.25.906. Some areas fall within the City of Long Beach's permit jurisdiction (with certain areas appealable to the California Coastal Commission), while others fall directly within the Coastal Commission's permit jurisdiction, as shown on the city's coastal zone map.
Yes. ZoneWire Free sends New Meeting Alerts for Long Beach at no cost, with the agenda for each meeting. ZoneWire Pro adds full transcripts, zoning and development analysis, and keyword alerts for $129 per market per month.
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Know how annexation requests get decided in Long Beach, CA
Get the vote, the conditions, and how each annexation request was decided, the day it lands.
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What gets approved in Long Beach
In Long Beach, 95% of land-use board decisions were approved over the last 24 months. Commercial / office / retail clear 100%, Land use / comp-plan amendment 91%. ZoneWire analyzed 46 land-use board decisions in Long Beach over the last 24 months. Here are the most active project types and how often each one clears.
| Project type | Decisions | Approval rate |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial / office / retail | 12 | 100% |
| Land use / comp-plan amendment | 11 | 91% |
| Special exception / conditional use | 10 | 100% |
1 decisions that went against the odds
These are the denials and deferrals in categories that usually sail through, the deals worth understanding before you commit capital.
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