Imperial Valley Press

Brown signs bills aiming to fix Calif. housing crunch

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Lawmakers and housing advocates cheered Gov. Jerry Brown’s signature Friday of a package of bills aimed at tackling the growing affordable housing crisis in California, which lacks an estimated 1.5 million affordable rentals compared to demand.

But with the skyline of one of the nation’s most expensive cities as the backdrop, they acknowledg­ed the state’s housing crunch is far from solved. “We cannot move past today and just check the box, say we’ve done housing and move onto something else,” said Sen. Scott Wiener, a San Francisco Democrat. “When you spend 50 years driving your car into a ditch that means it’s a really deep ditch.”

Brown signed 15 bills outside a San Francisco affordable housing complex. The bills include more money to build affordable housing and policies to speed up constructi­on stalled by regulation­s.

But it will be several years before affordable housing units start popping up across the state and, when they do, they won’t cover California’s full demand. A $4 billion housing bond still needs approval from voters at the ballot box in 2018. The $75 fee on real estate transactio­n documents created in another bill is expected to generate between $200 and $300 million a year — far less than the $1 billion handed out to communitie­s through redevelopm­ent funds Brown halted in 2012.

“That put the state’s production into this huge tailspin that we’ve been in ever since,” said Matt Schwartz, president of the California Housing Partnershi­p. The new legislatio­n, he said, “changes the dynamics and tells the developers they can count on state investment again.”

Still, the money combined in the bills is expected to create up to 90,000 affordable rental homes in the next seven to 10 years, a fraction of what’s needed.

Beyond the money, other bills aim to streamline regulation­s that can slow down constructi­on for a variety of reasons, including communitie­s needlessly delaying projects they don’t want.

Democratic Sen. Nancy Skinner of Berkeley said two of her bills aim to put a stop to “NIMBY,” or “not in my backyard,” culture that keeps some cities from building more housing that low-income people can afford. One bill gives cities legal cover to require “inclusiona­ry housing,” meaning developers must include low- and middle-income units alongside market-rate ones.

Lawmakers passed the bills during the final week of session in mid-September, with the real estate transactio­n fee nearly faltering in the Democratic-controlled Assembly. In previous years, Brown and legislativ­e leaders had been unable to reach agreement on a housing fix, with Brown arguing for regulatory reform and lawmakers pushing for more money.

 ??  ?? Gov. Jerry Brown holds up a number of bills he signed to help address housing needs as a group of elected officials and housing advocates applaud, Friday, in San Francisco. AP PHOTO/ERIC RISBERG
Gov. Jerry Brown holds up a number of bills he signed to help address housing needs as a group of elected officials and housing advocates applaud, Friday, in San Francisco. AP PHOTO/ERIC RISBERG

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