CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“AFFORDABLE HOUSING: NEEDED, BUT IN WHAT FORM?”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“AFFORDABLE HOUSING: NEEDED, BUT IN WHAT FORM?”
Everyone in California is at least
peripherally aware of the state’s ever-worsening housing crisis: It’s hard to
miss when prices have jumped by as much as 75 percent over the last five years
in large parts of metropolitan areas like Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego
and their suburbs, especially on the San Francisco Peninsula, where $3 million
three-bedrooms are not unheard-of.
One response has been a state mandate
for ever-increasing numbers of affordable units in most cities and many
unincorporated areas. It’s common in many places for new apartment and condominium
structures to contain as up to 35 percent affordable units, available to
families who qualify under various income standards based on whatever the
federal poverty standard is at the moment.
One problem is that having to build so
many affordable units into their new projects forces developers to raise the
price of market-rate housing. Another is that affordable units sometimes lack
commonplace amenities like air conditioning. And when those units are built
near light rail lines like the expanding Metro system in and around Los
Angeles, required numbers of parking spaces are sometimes cut. The presumption
– often false – is that residents of those buildings will not need to drive as
much as others because public transit is readily available.
None of this has yet alleviated the
housing crunch, which at this year’s annual mid-winter counts found record
numbers of homeless persons in some locales.
Now the housing crisis has become a
lawmaking priority, with Gov. Jerry Brown and Democratic legislative leaders
proclaiming a “shared commitment” to making a problem-solving deal.
The devil, as always, will be in the
details, and it’s anyone’s guess whether a compromise can be reached before the
state Senate and Assembly go home in mid-September.
Among major proposals so far are a
bill to levy a fee of between $75 and $225 on all real estate sales, which
could raise about $225 million a year for affordable housing. Passing this
would take a two-thirds vote of both legislative houses, which won’t happen as
easily on this as it did on Brown’s pet issue of extending cap-and-trade
tactics to fight climate changes.
Another is a $4 billion-dollar general obligation
bond to provide even more money. That one would need popular-vote
approval next year, but might face tough sledding because it would raise the
state’s debt and its annual interest payments for decades to come.
Seeming more likely to pass is a third
measure forcing cities and counties to streamline their building permit and
other approval processes for new construction that includes affordable housing.
This one could have positive effects
on thousands of homeless persons, while damaging the lifestyles of millions of
other Californians affected by ugly architecture, increased traffic and more
crowding in their neighborhoods.
In a statement, Ray Pearl, executive
director of the California Housing Consortium, lauded all these potential laws,
saying “California cannot afford to let the housing crisis go on, for the sake
of families, seniors and hard-working individuals.”
He’s right about that. But even if money
for solving this longstanding problem arrives via either new taxes or a bond,
there will still have to be a solution to the ongoing problems created by the
fact that new housing creates a need for new transport to accommodate its
occupants.
So far, many cities are approving new housing
without demanding more or wider roads, transit systems that cover entire
metropolitan areas or additional parks and other amenities that might keep the
new housing from damaging the lifestyles of residents already present. Many of
them neither need nor qualify for affordable units, nor even want them around.
With two-thirds votes or popular
majorities forming needed elements of most solutions offered so far,
legislators will have to come up with better measures than they have yet
devised. Otherwise they may find these barriers far harder to surmount than
they believe now, while they’re bask in the glowing aftermath of the
cap-and-trade vote.
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Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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