CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“SB 50 REVIVAL SOUGHT, WITH BIG CHANGES”
Every
time Scott Wiener amends his SB 50 plan to force much higher housing density on
virtually all parts of California, it seems a little less onerous for
homeowners whose hard-earned life savings are invested in the kind of single
family homes and roomy lots that originally drew millions to this state.
But
make no mistake: Wiener, a Democratic state senator who views urban sprawl and
large lots containing only one home as abominations, still means to change the
face of California and the lifestyles of many Californians.
He’s
convinced this must happen in order to solve the concurrent problems of
homelessness and high housing prices that now confront state residents in many
cities and affect anyone who shops for a new or different home.
Wiener,
a resident of the extremely dense Castro District in central San Francisco, has
until Jan. 31 to get some version of his bill through the state Senate or it
will die for this legislative session – unless it’s resurrected via a new bill
number later this year.
Wiener
doesn’t want to bother with that because of the urgency in the housing picture,
where more than 140,000 Californians have no homes and must sleep in cars,
doorways or mass shelters in armories and other public buildings on cold winter
nights. More than half the state’s families also cannot afford to buy the
median California home, whose price now tops $500,000.
Wiener
sees more housing as the solution, which makes him a natural ally of Gov. Gavin
Newsom, who wants about half a million new units constructed in each of the
next seven years, but saw less than one-third that many built during his first
year in office.
Yet,
Newsom has not backed Wiener’s bill, perhaps because it offends too many
present homeowners, who represent a powerful voting bloc that could unseat him
in 2022 if he crosses them.
But the
newest version of SB 50 is neither as onerous nor quite as dictatorial as
previous ones, which mandated approvals for unlimited five-to-eight story
apartment or condominium buildings within half a mile of light rail stops and
four-floor structures along major bus routes, regardless of what neighbors and
local officials might want.
The
newest version gives cities and counties two years to develop their own plans
for more housing, letting them site higher buildings in some places and lower
ones in others, so long as they total enough new units to suit the state’s
housing department. It also would let cities encourage new “granny” units in
backyards. Meanwhile, the housing department has already forced some local
officials to okay adding enormously to their housing stock by suing them or
threatening them with loss of funds from the state.
Wiener’s
wide coalition of supporters includes the American Assn. of Retired People,
developers, construction unions, realtors, the Yes In My Backyard (YIMBY)
organization of urban liberals and a host of environmental groups, plus the
main Los Angeles area chamber of commerce and now even a few mayors.
“The
changes (in) SB 50 give cities a broader menu of options,” said Brian Hanlon,
CEO of California YIMBY.
Meanwhile,
it’s striking to see what an existing state mandate by itself – without SB 50 –
could do to just one city during this new decade. One analysis says the
existing law could force Santa Monica, a three-mile-square city of 92,000
facing the Pacific Ocean and surrounded on its other three sides by Los
Angeles, to allow building of more than 9,000 new housing units in that time,
likely adding at least 15 percent to its already crowded streets and neighborhoods.
Local
slow-growth advocates vigorously oppose this mandate, accepted as unavoidable
so far by city officials. Slow-growthers fear the inevitable impact of SB 50’s
added requirements.
So do a
lot of other cities and groups of local activists interested in preserving
California’s longtime lifestyles.
A
collision appears inevitable, but was averted last year when one lawmaker used
an obscure rule to stymie SB 50. No one is quite sure what might happen now,
with pressure to solve housing problems building every day.
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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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