CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“HOUSING BILL PROBLEM: IT LOOKS LIKE ONE SIZE FITS ALL”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“HOUSING BILL PROBLEM: IT LOOKS LIKE ONE SIZE FITS ALL”
As they
consider Senate Bill 50, many who are aware of the latest attempt by San
Francisco’s Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener to solve California’s housing
shortage believe the plan treats this state as if it were monochromatic.
Wiener
offers the same basic solution for everyplace in this vast state of 58 counties
and 482 cities, many of which are quite unique. Will the same tactics create
significant amounts of new housing in Corona and Chico, Torrance and Trinity
County?
Yes,
the bill’s author says many things would still be under local discretion, like
building setbacks and design. But not density. The entire premise is that
making housing dense will make it more affordable.
Wiener
would force cities to permit three- and four-story housing within a
quarter-mile of all rapid transit stops in the state. Never mind that BART
stops along the 580 freeway east of San Francisco don’t look or function like
Gold Line stops between Pasadena and downtown Los Angeles.
The
senator’s bill also demands that cities OK dense housing along all major bus
routes, regardless of objections from present residents with their life savings
invested in their homes. It eases requirements now in place for adequate
parking in new construction.
Aside
from its housing goals, this is part of a move to force Californians out of
their cars, never a popular idea. The measure assumes large numbers will be
attracted to the new housing even if it features tiny apartments – and seems to
assume that almost everyplace with rapid transit stops and significant bus
lines has a comprehensive public transportation system to go with them.
Wiener
says that view of his bill is incorrect. “This treats various geographies very
differently,” he said in an interview. “But it does change density.”
Some
SB50 assumptions are simply incorrect, even if sustainability purists believe
in them. New rail lines opened in recent years by the Los Angeles area’s
Metropolitan Transportation Authority, for example, have not significantly
increased overall regional transit ridership. There is also no evidence that
the mentally ill, a significant portion of California’s homeless populace, are
either interested in or financially able to move into small new apartments.
SB50
essentially glosses over these and other realities. But a new white paper from
the South Bay Cities Council of Governments, made up of 16 cities in
southwestern Los Angeles County, offers a different perspective.
The
report from the multi-city group including Manhattan Beach, Torrance, Inglewood
and Los Angeles, notes that SB 50 does not assure residents of new housing will
have adequate sewers, parks and other public services.
The
paper recommends “infill” housing that uses vacant land within built-up areas
rather than razing existing low-rise development, saying that would produce more
homes if combined with development in outlying areas. By contrast, SB 50
condemns developing the far suburbs.
Some
advocates of SB 50 see this potential mix as contributing further to the urban
sprawl they despise, but which helped attract many Californians to the state.
Wiener
and some major groups backing his bill are based in locales like San Francisco,
Santa Monica and downtown Los Angeles, which already have plenty of dense
housing, comprehensive streetcar or bus systems and both light and heavy rail.
But most of the state, including the regions surrounding those locales, doesn’t
have much of those things. And yet, some SB50 co-sponsors come from less dense
areas like Orange County and the Central Valley.
Says
Wiener, “You can never guarantee how people will get around, but if you allow a
lot of housing near transit, you at least offer people the opportunity to use
it.”
Wiener
also insists SB 50 is not a manifesto by big city residents telling everyone
else how to live.
But so
long as that remains a common perception of the bill, it will cause resentment
and resistance by those affected to new rules imposed upon them.
The question: Can SB50 be
altered enough to defuse the sense that it’s monolithic and dictatorial? If
not, count on resistance to this major proposal if it passes, along with a
ballot referendum, and possible repeal. Which would leave California’s very
serious housing problems back at Square 1.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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