Lodi News-Sentinel

California home constructi­on hits 13-year high, but it’s not enough to slow soaring prices

- Tony Bizjak and Phillip Reese

Housing constructi­on in California jumped last year to the highest level since the Great Recession, topping 100,000 new units despite the COVID-19 pandemic and a historic state population decline.

But economists and housing analysts say the Golden State remains mired in a housing crisis, still unable to produce enough homes and apartments to adequately house working families and to break the cycle of escalating real estate costs.

Some 103,000 new housing units were built in 2020, an 8% jump from the previous year, according to data from the state Department of Finance demographi­cs unit. Slightly more than half were single-family homes, slightly less than half were apartments.

The total is far more than the recent low of 36,000 units in 2010, at the end of the state's last major recession. It's also far off the peak of 200,000 the state saw in the hyper-aggressive and speculativ­e housing constructi­on market of 2005.

"We very much still have a housing crisis," said economist Jeffrey Michael, director of the Center for Business and Policy Research at the University of the Pacific. "One year of housing production exceeding population growth does not reverse the effect of many years, if not decades, of home building lagging far behind population growth."

Despite a one-year drop in California's population in 2020, housing demand is still strong and has pushed housing prices to record levels this spring. At the same time, people are moving out of state, leading to an uncertaint­y about where the state's housing market may be headed in the post-pandemic era.

"It's a very odd pattern," said Hans Johnson, a senior fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California.

Economist Adam Fowler of Beacon Economics in Los Angeles blamed local jurisdicti­ons for failing to take strong steps to implement zoning and other changes that would allow for more housing and more housing types that would make the state more affordable for working class people.

"This is not a test," he said. "This is the crisis."

Los Angeles, by far the largest city in the state, saw the most housing growth in 2020, nearly 17% of all new housing in the state, followed by San Francisco and San Diego.

In per capita terms, the state's housing constructi­on center shifted to the Central Valley and foothills during 2019 and 2020, led by San Benito, Yuba, Placer, Butte, Merced, San Joaquin and Tulare counties.

Those numbers reflect a flow of people moving from the coast to the state's lower-cost interior and hill country in search of affordable housing, some of them freed up by the ability during the pandemic to telework while living farther from the office.

As coastal California migrated to the valley, developers in the four-county Sacramento region built 16,427 new housing units in 2019 and 2020, according to state figures. Those are some of the strongest regional numbers in the state.

That Sacramento-area boom continued into April amid high demand, when the region saw nearly 800 houses constructe­d, most of them in Folsom's sprawling new area south of Highway 50 as well as in south Placer County, according to the North State Building Industry Associatio­n.

That's the most in April in 16 years, a sign that the capital region continues to be a magnet in 2021 for new arrivals with money to buy homes.

But Sacramento area builders warned this week that the local housing boom is running into higher and higher constructi­on costs, saying "forces outside of builders' control ... are forcing costs upward."

"In just the past year, lumber prices nationwide have skyrockete­d by nearly 250%, causing the price of a new singlefami­ly home to increase by some $36,000," BIA local head Michael Strech said in a press statement.

Local government fees can add $100,000 to the cost of building a home, he said, as well as costs to meet state climate change energy efficiency goals. Those fees pay for various infrastruc­ture costs that make the new housing possible, such as highway expansions. Energy requiremen­ts include solar paneling on the roofs of most new homes.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Constructi­on crews work on the completion of Father Joe's Villages 82-unit affordable housing project called Benson Place on June 23 in San Diego.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Constructi­on crews work on the completion of Father Joe's Villages 82-unit affordable housing project called Benson Place on June 23 in San Diego.

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