CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
'
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BIG HOUSING ACTION IMMINENT DESPITE PAST VOTES”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
'
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BIG HOUSING ACTION IMMINENT DESPITE PAST VOTES”
California
voters have often made it clear they don’t much care for efforts by the state
to interfere with free markets in housing. Despite some public polls showing
support for denser housing and rent controls, these ideas don’t do well at the
ballot box, the latest example last year’s resounding defeat of the pro-rent
control Proposition 10 by a 59-41 percent margin.
But
state legislators and Gov. Gavin Newsom apparently prefer to heed unofficial
surveys over what actual voters have done.
And
so, while the most radical of this year’s housing proposals has been delayed at
least until next spring, the strong likelihood is that when proposed laws from
the present legislative session reach Newsom’s desk, he will sign into law a
large medley of seemingly pro-consumer housing bills.
No,
none individually would have the strong impact of the stalled SB 50, the effort
by San Francisco’s Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener to densify housing in
most California cities. But what remains would still make major changes.
Take
rent control, an idea that has strong local support in the 12 California cities
where it is now law in some form. One bill by Democratic Assemblyman David
Chiu, Wiener’s fellow San Franciscan, would prohibit rent gouging by limiting
what it calls “extreme or unreasonable rent increases.” This one, moving
steadily toward passage, would limit rent increases to the level of rises in
the local Consumer Price Index, plus 5 percent, with the total annual increase
capped at 10 percent regardless of what the CPI might do.
That
measure flies completely in the face of the whopping defeat suffered by
Proposition 10, but neither Chiu nor Newsom, if he signs it, expects any
political ill effects.
Another
major bill would suspend for years local laws that legislators believe inhibit
housing production, covering everything from zoning changes, building
standards, fees on low-income housing and local moratoria on new housing. The
measure, by Berkeley’s Democratic state Sen. Nancy Skinner, would set what it
calls “reasonable” time periods for processing housing permits. Cities and
counties that don’t comply could be sued or fined.
Another
key bill would open vacant state-owned lands to building affordable homes, the
definition of affordability varying by locale. “This will free up thousands of
acres up and down the state on which affordable housing can be sited,” said its
sponsor, Democratic Assemblyman Phil Ting, another San Franciscan.
“We
need to unlock surplus land for this purpose and the public good,” he added.
Unlike
Wiener’s SB 50, this one most likely would not alter the entire character of
whole neighborhoods and even some full cities. Instead, it would make something
useful of vacant lots and unused former state buildings. By contrast, SB 50
would mandate high rise housing near all light rail transit stations and along
frequently used bus routes, defined as those where buses run four or more times
per hour.
That
could turn much of California into a slightly newer replica of San Francisco’s
Castro District, where Wiener has lived more than 20 years among its plethora
of four- and five-story walkups.
While
all these housing plans come from representatives of San Francisco and
Berkeley, along with Santa Monica arguably the most left-leaning places in
California, it pays not to view them all through the lens of urban, left-wing
politicians trying to impose their world-view on the rest of the state.
It’s
more helpful, rather, to examine each proposal separately without rushing to
judgment. Using vacant state-owned land to solve the state’s most visible
social problems – homelessness and housing affordability – makes good economic
and social justice sense. It would cost far less than building on land that
must be purchased.
But
taking away the authority of local governments – both counties and charter
cities – to control their own zoning decisions is another matter, one that
could have serious consequences for almost every property owner or renter in
those places.
The
bottom line: Legislators should carefully pick and choose from among the
proposals now before them, taking the ones that have a proven possibility of
working and discarding the rest. But it’s almost certain there will be serious
change in housing policy, no matter which of the current bills become law.
-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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