CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WORST HOUSING BILLS FAIL; SOLUTION VIA MARKET FORCES NOW POSSIBLE”
Evidence keeps mounting that California’s longtime housing
shortage can be solved by market forces set loose by the lifestyle and
workplace changes created by the coronavirus pandemic.
Now the failure of the worst parts of a sweeping housing
package in the state Legislature leaves the path clear for those market forces
to work themselves out. Had the most wide-ranging of the bills passed, there
could have been far less motivation for developers and local governments to
heed the accelerating non-political forces.
Potential housing effects of the viral crisis became
noticeable almost immediately after “shelter-at-home” orders first came from
county governments in the San Francisco Bay area, quickly followed by similar
statewide decrees by Gov. Gavin Newsom.
White collar workers for companies large and small were suddenly
ordered to work from home, as companies from Internet giants like Twitter and
Facebook to law firms, insurance companies, stock brokerages and many more
provided technology for workers to work wherever they like.
Soon, television broadcasters were shown in living rooms
and backyards viewers had never before seen.
Vacancy signs proliferated in the densest of business
districts from San Francisco to Santa Monica to Fresno, San Diego, Orange
County and beyond. Said a stock brokerage vice president in Pasadena, “We spent
$2 million over the last two years refurbishing our offices to accommodate more
than 100 workers. Now we get five people a day working there. We don’t need all
that space. Our people are as productive as ever; they’re just not in the
office very often.”
Realtors report record levels of vacancies, but a building
boom propelled by previous state demands for more and more mixed-use office and
commercial buildings has continued.
As empty space appeared within existing buildings, spurred
strictly by non-political events, state lawmakers kept pushing the most
ambitious housing construction plan the Legislature ever saw.
Pushed by Democrats like San Francisco state Sen. Scott
Wiener, Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins of San Diego and Santa Monica
Assemblyman Richard Bloom, this package included SB 902, allowing up to 10
units on any lot zoned for a single home; two other bills allowing developers
to build more high-end units on one site if they constructed enough affordable
ones on others; a fourth letting city councils overturn without a new popular
vote all height-limit laws passed by local voters – and much more.
But the 10-unit bill died in a committee, along with the
prospect of developers trolling established low-rise neighborhoods with fat
bankrolls to tempt homeowners sitting on large amounts of equity. So did
several other major proposals in the package.
If the lawmakers behind these measures paid any heed to
what’s going on in their own districts, they might not have proposed these things,
despite the strong support they quite predictably got from developers and
building trade unions.
For Twitter’s building in Wiener’s district now stands mostly empty. Office towers in
Atkins’ San Diego district are nowhere near filled and “for-lease” signs abound
in downtown Santa Monica, barely a mile from Bloom’s home.
These empty spaces and many more like them will likely
produce more than 1 billion vacant square feet that can be turned into
apartments and condominiums in all price ranges with far less work, in far less
time and with far fewer lawsuits to fight them than pushing for new
construction. Building trades workers will be kept busy doing the electric,
plumbing, elevator, carpentry and drywall work needed to convert commercial
space into residences. Established neighborhoods will remain intact.
Yes, it will take some rezoning to accomplish this. But those
changes are inevitable: cities and counties would otherwise stand to lose large
amounts of property tax money as massive vacancies reduce the value of
commercial buildings.
If legislators are really interested in solving the housing
problem, and not merely in self-aggrandizement or feathering the nests of their
campaign donors, they will leave well enough alone, allowing the market forces to
play out over the next two to three years. That way, California will see the millions
of new housing units it needs far faster than it could have under any of the
failed new laws.
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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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