CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 2023 OR
THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CITY-STATE
RELATIONS AT AN ALL-TIME LOW”
In
California’s 172 years as an American state, relations between its government
and the more than 400 cities within state boundaries have never been as
contested and hostile and litigated as now.
Dozens of
cities in most parts of the state are out of compliance today with a 1960s-era
law signed by then-Gov. Ronald Reagan requiring them to file housing plans
every eight years with the state’s Department of Housing and Community
Development (HCD), which can reject any blueprint it does not like.
Meanwhile,
the state is trying to use the longstanding law to force construction of dense
new housing everywhere, no matter how it might change the nature of any
community.
In places
that have either filed no plans or had them disapproved and missed deadlines
for revisions, developers can use a previously obscure and unused provision of
the old law known as the “builders’ remedy” to build even where cities have
previously stopped them, so long as they include enough low-income or
affordable units.
What’s
affordable or low-income varies by location.
All this
appears to some to conflict with the concept of a charter city – and more than
one-fourth of California’s cities have charters. State law gives charter cities
“the power to make and enforce all laws and regulations in respect to municipal
affairs, subject only to such restrictions and limitations as may be provided
in…the (state) Constitution…”
But both
Gov. Gavin Newsom and his hand-picked state attorney general Rob Bonta say
statewide law overrides city charters, letting legislators mandate whatever
they wish wherever they wish.
Today’s
focal points in this classic conflict are two very dissimilar cities, one in
coastal Orange County and the other on the San Francisco Peninsula – Huntington
Beach (sometimes known as “Surf City”) and Atherton, usually listed as the wealthiest
city in America.
It would
be hard to fine places more different in many ways than these two. Huntington
Beach, besides its surfing orientation, hosted some of the first and largest
anti-masking and anti-vaccine rallies of the coronavirus pandemic period.
Atherton features stately
residences, most on lots of one acre or more, and has been home to the likes of
athletes from Y.A. Tittle to Stephen Curry, financiers like venture capitalist Tim
Draper (an early investor in outfits from Skype to Hotmail and Tesla) and
politicians like former gubernatorial candidates Meg Whitman, a Republican, and
Steve Westly, a Democrat.
With just
over 7,000 residents, Atherton has been told by the state to allow almost 350
new housing units by the end of this decade. Curry objected to one proposed new
development, and city officials at one point suggested the city could meet its
quotas if every property owner added an additional dwelling unit (sometimes known
as ADUs or granny flats).
Local
residents at one town council meeting told elected officials they want their
officials to be more aggressive in fighting off the state. “If you’re not
comfortable fighting for us, then you should step down,” said one.
Huntington
Beach residents and officials take a similar attitude, despite being Bonta’s
first and best-publicized target, with millions of dollars in state grants at
risk in their defiance.
“We have
no problem doing our fair share, but with fair numbers,” Mayor Pro Tem Gracey
Van Der Mark said during a public meeting. “I do not believe the benefits of
building outweigh the consequences of destroying our city.”
It’s not
actual destruction of any city that’s in prospect, merely destruction of the
ambiance in some places.
Numbers
are key here. The state uses quotas generated by HCD, whose estimates of the
state’s housing need have never accounted for homes vacated by the hundreds of
thousands of Californians who moved elsewhere in the last six years, costing
this state one seat in Congress. Housing need estimates have varied widely since
2017, from 3.5 million in 2018 to 1.8 million more recently.
Nor,
according to a 2022 state auditor’s report, has HCD properly vetted documents
on which it bases its estimates.
Both
Bonta and Newsom ignore the varying estimates and the city charter issue.
Which
leaves the entire matter far from decided, no matter what state officials may
claim at any given moment.
-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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