CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2023, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“THE FANTASY WORLD OF
CALIFORNIA HOUSING POLICY”
If you’re looking for sure things
among bills under consideration in the state Legislature, think of one word:
housing.
It's not
yet certain just which new housing measures will be proposed this year, but if
the recent past is prologue, almost anything that includes new housing –
permanent homes, tiny homes or temporary hotel and motel rooms for the homeless
and new construction for other folks – will pass easily.
Some of
that housing is needed, but there’s no hard evidence backing the state’s claims
that 1.8 million new units must be built by the end of 2030 both to avert a
disastrous rise in homelessness and fill the needs of first-time home buyers
looking for something they can afford.
In fact,
the state auditor last April reported that estimates of need from the state
Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) are unreliable because
they’re based on information inputted to state computers by workers who never
vetted it at all. Devastating as this report should have been, it was
completely ignored by both lawmakers and Gov. Gavin Newsom; no one in any
office that deals with housing said a single public word about it.
Instead,
they keep leaning on the unproven assumption that HCD estimates are correct.
Never mind that HCD’s current estimate of housing need is about 1.2 million
units lower than five years ago, but only a fraction that many units have
actually been built or converted from commercial space emptied by the COVID-19
pandemic.
So the
same legislators who in 2021 passed bills known as SB 9 and SB10, which
essentially ended single family zoning statewide and allow apartment building
in many currently spacious neighborhoods, in 2022 passed a couple more
densifying laws.
Newsom
signed all these measure into law with no hesitance. He shares all the
assumptions pushed by HCD’s so-called experts, despite their being found
derelict by the auditor.
One of
last year’s new bills is already useful. That’s a measure allowing conversion
of empty office or big box space and some parking lots into housing without
local approvals. It was high time folks in high places recognized the reality
that many white collar workers sent home to work at the pandemic’s outset will
only be back in their old offices once in awhile, if that often.
That’s why
companies that still believe workers accomplish more when they’re crowded
together are setting up gyms and private eateries to entice staffers to return.
Okay, one
of four major new housing laws makes sense.
But last
year’s other new law, allowing dense new housing to be built without parking spaces
so long as it’s near mass transit, does not.
This one
is based on the assumption that all residents of such new buildings will use
the available mass transit and not keep or use their own cars and pickups.
Said
Newsom while signing the measure, “Reducing housing costs (by omitting parking
spaces) for everyday Californians and eliminating emissions from cars: That’s
what we call a win-win.”
But this
assumption has never panned out. Because light rail and express buses don’t
reach every corner of California’s cities, folks without cars often are left to
hoof it for miles when they get as close to their destinations as mass transit
can take them.
Knowing
this, most still drive. That’s borne out by the reality that transit use has
not risen significantly even as thousands of new apartments and condominiums
went up in cities like Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento and
Fresno.
Eliminating
parking spaces in new buildings has already led to bidding wars for off-street
parking in some areas around new buildings. There will be more of this, in
addition to the ongoing frequent competition for on-street parking in and near
those places.
That’s
because everyone wants mobility. Newsom has not given up his, often riding in
chauffeured vehicles escorted by local police and highway patrol motorcycles.
In short,
this state’s housing policy operates in a kind of fantasy world first pushed by
Democratic state Sen. Scott Wiener of San Francisco, whose plans to densify the
state languished for years in legislative committees before Newsom began
supporting and signing them.
-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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