CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CAN LAWMAKING REALLY FIX THE HOUSING
PROBLEM?”
There were smiles all around and a lot of back-slapping
the other day, when Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a package of bills he firmly
believes will work quickly toward ending California’s undeniable housing
problems of high prices and low availability.
The package imposes rent controls
statewide, despite last year’s vote on Proposition 10 which saw the majority in
56 of 58 California counties oppose similar controls for fear they would
discourage building of enough new apartments to seriously dent the availability
shortage. There are also new limits on single-family zoning, designed to
encourage building of backyard “grandma” units, and provisions that may
encourage some companies to buy up existing homes, then install new partitions
to create a dozen or more rental units in one house.
The new laws will also lower fees on
low-income housing projects and forbid local moratoria on new housing.
But one underlying question remains
unanswered: Can California legislate its way out of the housing crisis? It’s a
query similar to what was asked during the 1960s, an era when the federal
government passed myriad laws banning racial discrimination in voting, housing,
employment, education and other parts of life. “You can’t legislate morality,”
critics said then. But it’s turned out differently. America is far from free of
discrimination, but official racial discrimination has been largely turned
around, to the point where some cities and states now face lawsuits over
alleged “reverse discrimination,” which claim minorities get hiring preference
over whites who are equally or more qualified.
California realtors don’t phrase it the
same way opponents of civil rights laws once did, but their argument is
essentially the same: The state can create conditions it thinks should increase
or enhance the building of new homes, be they apartments or condominiums or
individual houses, but it can’t make anyone build or buy them.
Before developers turn their first shovel
of dirt, they must be convinced they’ll make a profit. These days, they
apparently don’t feel that way. As of early fall, just over 111,000 permits had
been issued statewide for new houses this year, 12 percent less than a year
ago, according to the California Association of Realtors. Apartment
development, the realtors said, was down 52 percent.
At the same time every developer in the
state knew the housing law package was sure to pass the Legislature and get
Newsom’s signature. Which means the new laws may not spur even nearly the
500,000 new housing units the governor has said are needed each year for the
next seven in order to solve the state’s problems.
And
yet…officials charged with fighting the parallel problem of homelessness report
that for every 33 persons they can place in the transition quarters now going
up in various parts of the state, 150 more persons will become homeless,
largely because of high rent and other affordability problems.
This
poses an enormous conundrum: High rents have driven thousands to live in the
streets, either in tents or vehicles, but without high rents, who’s going to
build enough new apartments to resolve the shortage?
If
there’s a solution to this problem, it may be geographic. Why not build much of
the new housing where land is cheap rather than forcing cities in the state’s
most expensive, affluent ZIP codes to allow more construction? For in many
areas, especially along the coast and in the Silicon Valley, land prices are
the single largest expense in homebuilding and – along with demand – the
foremost driver of high prices.
Newsom
has tried to be completely egalitarian about enforcing his policies, which
dictate that all cities approve new housing permits in amounts proportional to
their existing population. That has not worked. The inventory of unsold homes
did not shrink in the last year, stymying new development that could resolve at
least part of the problem.
The
new laws, wrote CAR president Jared Martin the other day, will “make it more
difficult for hard-working Californians to find an affordable place to live.”
So
why not earmark some of the state’s current $21 billion budget surplus for
building new housing where land is cheap, fees low and regulations minimal?
That would be the Central Valley and some desert areas of Southern California.
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 towww.californiafocus.net
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