CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2022, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEWSOM BUDGET AT LAST RECOGNIZES ONE
HOUSING REALITY”
It’s
anyone’s guess whether the developer campaign donors who greatly influence
California’s huge Democratic legislative majorities will follow suit, but Gov.
Gavin Newsom’s proposed budget at long last recognizes one reality that has
been plain since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic:
With hundreds
of thousands of white collar office workers switching permanently to home
offices where they are often more productive than before, billions of square
feet in office towers and other buildings now sit vacant, earning their owners
nothing.
Meanwhile,
despite a state audit showing its figures are unreliable, the demand of the
state Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) for more than 1.8 million new housing
units by 2030 remains the mantra for so-called “progressive” politicians. And state
Attorney General Rob Bonta persists in threatening lawsuits against local
governments which don’t knuckle under and approve thousands of new units right
away.
The
trouble is that at the current pace of construction (less than 100,000 new
units per year since Newsom took office in late 2018), there is no chance for
creating anywhere near that many newly constructed apartments, condominiums and
individual houses.
Not even
the 2021 passage of densifying measures like SB 9 and SB 10, which all but eliminate
single-family zoning, could change that.
So Newsom
has had to recognize the reality of office vacancies and their inevitable
conversion to housing. It’s already happening in some places, with more than
5,000 converted units either created or approved so far in all parts of
California.
This
trend would be accelerated considerably by the proposed Newsom budget, which is
better known for its effort to place billions of dollars in the pockets of car
owners to help them cope with inflationary gasoline prices created by oil
company price gouging.
But
squirreled away in the more than $300 billion spending plan – which must be
approved by June 15 in either its submitted form or a revised version, on pain
of financial penalties for legislators – is $600 million to help convert office
space to housing, particularly in dense urban areas.
The need
for these conversions has been obvious since March 2020, when Newsom ordered
lockouts to help slow the spread of Covid. That edict suddenly emptied not only
freeways, but also office towers. There has been only a partial return to
offices since anti-pandemic measures were largely relaxed.
Without
conversions, local governments stand to lose many millions of tax dollars annually,
as property values and assessments drop in amounts parallel to lost rental
revenues. So the real estate investment trusts that own many of those buildings
will feel ever more pressure from shareholders as many dividends remain well
below pre-pandemic levels.
But will
legislators respond? They say they’re committed to creating new housing for the
benefit of would-be homeowners now priced out of the market, where median
single-family home prices statewide top $810,000. But the lawmakers are tied closely
to developers, who stand to make far less from conversions than from new
construction.
They are
also beholden to building trade unions, which would get plenty of work from
conversions, but still much less than from new developments.
Because
those interests are among the top financiers of Democratic legislative
campaigns, the Democrats who rule in Sacramento have resisted office
conversions. They allowed a 2021 measure that would have made local approval of
such conversions automatic die without floor votes.
The
questions now is whether they will try to knock the $600 million one-time
enabling contribution out of Newsom’s budget proposal.
If they
do, it will prove they are committed far more to their campaign donors than to
the prospective homeowners they nominally support.
Right
now, the fate of this boost to housing supplies remains uncertain regardless of
all the evidence that it would help property owners, new buyers and local
governments, each an interest to which the Democrats pay lip service.
Now is
the time for anyone who wants to see housing at all price levels created
quickly to speak up and pressure legislators to leave that appropriation alone.
But it’s unclear what will happen.
-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
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