CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NO TO SB50
NOT ENOUGH: THERE ARE OTHER SOLUTIONS”
Listening
to the pro-housing passion of Scott Wiener, the Democratic state senator from
San Francisco sponsoring what was arguably the most important bill before the
state Legislature this year, you become more convinced than ever of the reality
of California’s housing problem.
“One of
every 20 of our schoolchildren is homeless today because of high rents,” he
cries. “People are moving out of state because they can’t afford either to buy
or rent anywhere near their jobs. These are among the many human costs of our
lack of enough housing.”
He’s
right. There is a crisis when the average California family can’t come close to
affording to buy a house and vast numbers can’t afford to rent near their jobs.
Wiener
uses numbers to illustrate the problem: “When California had 15 million people
in the 1950s, we built 250,000 housing units every year. Now we are almost
three times as big, but last year we built just 77,000 new units.” That just
won’t cut it, he says.
One political consequence:
California will almost certainly lose at least one, maybe two congressional
seats and electoral votes after the 2020 Census, even if all undocumented
immigrants get counted. Housing costs and unavailability are keeping population
growth so low this is assured.
Sadly, though
Wiener clearly understands the problem well, the solution he offered via his
stalled SB 50 zoning nullification bill is the wrong answer. That’s partly
because as much as Wiener wants to solve the housing shortage, he wants to end
most single-family residential zoning just as badly.
SB50,
which cleared two state Senate committees with ease before its delay, would do
that. “We have to legalize apartment buildings, condominiums and affordable
housing everywhere, not have 80 percent of all our buildable land zoned for
only single family housing,” he said the other day.
SB 50
would do that if it returns in its latest form. It allows high-rise building
within half a mile of light rail stations and within a quarter mile of
frequently-used bus routes. That could make virtually all of Fresno, Clovis,
Los Angeles, Orange County and San Diego County look a lot like the Castro
District of San Francisco, where Wiener has lived more than 20 years, filled
with three-, four- and five-story walkups.
Trouble
is, many millions of Californians have invested their life savings in single
family homes, which lose much of their value when high rises overlook their
backyards, as Wiener’s bill would mandate. Even if an area is not now classed
as near a frequent bus route, political pressure on transit executives could
add one or two new busses per hour to unqualifying routes, enough to make them
eligible for unlimited dense development.
Virtually
all California cities outside counties with 600,000 or fewer residents (exempted
from SB50 because Wiener needed committee votes from some of their state
senators) opposed this measure. Meanwhile, it’s clear why building trades
unions, the state chamber of commerce and developers dearly love the proposal.
It’s all about the bucks for both sides of this issue, homeowners and cities
want to preserve their investments, the others seek to create thousands of
high-paying new jobs and high-rent apartments.
As
destructive as SB 50 would be to the sprawling single-family neighborhoods that
attracted vast numbers of today’s Californians to the state, something still
needs to be done about the housing shortage.
It
turns out other solutions would not be nearly as disruptive:
n Build out the high
speed rail project, thus reducing commute times from remote locations where
housing is much cheaper than in job centers along the coast.
n Infill building, where
dense housing could be permitted on empty land within urban areas.
n Compel developers of
currently-planned high rise buildings to include more below-market-rate
affordable units, both apartment rentals and condos.
n Offer incentives to
companies that move jobs now located in the hyper-expensive Silicon Valley and
other coastal counties inland, where land and homes are relatively cheap.
Other
creative ideas also exist. Wiener and SB 50 have no monopoly on ideas. Give the
measure credit for spurring needed movement and creativity, but making it law
would be a whole different, destructive thing.
-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, go to www.californiafocus.net
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, go to www.californiafocus.net
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