Los Angeles Times

Little consensus over a shortage of homes

Experts and public disagree over housing crisis’ roots, poll finds

- By Liam Dillon

SACRAMENTO — Academic researcher­s, state analysts and California’s gubernator­ial candidates agree that the fundamenta­l issue underlying the state’s housing crisis is that there are not enough homes for everyone who wants to live here.

The problem, a new poll says, is that the public doesn’t believe it.

A USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times survey found that just 13% of eligible California voters believe that too little home building is a primary contributo­r to the state’s affordabil­ity issues. The answer ranked sixth among eight options offered in the poll, when first and second responses were combined. (Poll results reflect the percentage of people who chose a particular reason as their first or second option.) Lack of rent control topped the list with 28%.

Since 2011, California’s median home value has increased by almost 80% to $544,900 — nearly 2 1⁄2 times the national median — according to real estate website Zillow. And 9.5 million renters in the state, more than half the tenant population, spend more than 30% of their income on rent, according to a recent analysis of U.S. census data by UC Berkeley’s Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society.

Residents are grappling with the effects of these high housing costs every day, but the poll results show that the public hasn’t rallied around a cause, said Bob Shrum, codirector of USC’s Center for

the Political Future and a longtime Democratic strategist.

“There hasn’t been the kind of discussion that would actually form a consensus on what the nature of the problem is,” Shrum said.

Although the public is divided, state policymake­rs and researcher­s are less so. Experts and legislator­s continue to debate the role that factors such as public funding for low-income housing, environmen­tal and other state regulation­s, the tech industry’s rise, and foreign and Wall Street investment play in the state’s overall affordabil­ity crisis.

But there’s general agreement that a lack of supply is at the root the problem. Reports from the state Department of Housing and Community Developmen­t, the nonpartisa­n Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office and a host of academics contend that California has a chronic shortage of home building that has failed to keep pace with the state’s population growth — especially during the recent economic expansion — which has forced prices up.

The state’s gubernator­ial candidates have embraced this perspectiv­e. Democratic Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom and Republican businessma­n John Cox have said they would set housing production goals that call on developers in California to at least triple the current rate of building, and keep up that pace for many years to come. The result would be new housing growth at levels never seen since the building industry began keeping statistics more than six decades ago.

The Legislatur­e already is trying to push for more housing by taking aim at some restrictio­ns that cities and counties place on approving developmen­t. For decades, the state has set goals for housing growth for each city and county. In 2017, lawmakers passed a bill that requires local government­s that have fallen behind on those goals to relax planning requiremen­ts for individual projects. Currently, just 4% of California’s 539 cities and counties are on track to meet their supply goals.

This year, a bid to boost home building by loosening local zoning rules around transit stops to allow for new apartments and condominiu­ms attracted national attention but failed to pass.

The poll, however, shows that residents don’t blame cities and counties for housing problems. Just 9% of those surveyed identified overly restrictiv­e zoning rules as a primary cause of the state’s affordabil­ity problem, ranking it last out of the eight options offered. And nearly 7 out of 10 of those polled believe that local government­s should retain their power over individual projects, even when they’re behind on their housing goals.

Carolyn Coleman, executive director of the League of California Cities, said she wasn’t surprised by the results.

“This affirms what has been true for many years,” Coleman said. “Residents put most of their trust and faith in local leaders to address these issues.”

She said state officials should consider mayors and city councils as essential partners in fixing California’s housing problems instead of trying to take power away from them.

Others say poll respondent­s’ strong preference for keeping housing decisions local reveals why it’s been so politicall­y difficult to address rising costs.

“Part of the reason we aren’t adding supply as fast as we need to or as densely as we need to is because of local resistance and the relationsh­ip between the local elected officials and their constituen­cies,” said Carol Galante, faculty director for the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at UC Berkeley. “Nobody has the motivation to make these hard choices.”

State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), who authored both the successful 2017 housing approval bill and this year’s failed zoning bill, said developmen­t, particular­ly in establishe­d neighborho­ods, stirs conflictin­g emotions that touch on people’s willingnes­s to embrace change for them and their children.

Wiener said he sees the poll results as a sign that state officials and activists need to convince California­ns of the depth of the housing shortage and how it’s contributi­ng to rising costs.

“It’ll take time for public opinion to move, but I think we’ll get there,” Wiener said.

But even if an idea has more popular support, it wouldn’t necessaril­y result in policy changes.

Lack of rent control was the poll’s top finisher for why housing is unaffordab­le in the state. Currently, California law sets strict limits on cities and counties’ ability to expand rent control in their communitie­s. Legislatio­n to repeal that law quickly died in an Assembly committee this year. Now, Propositio­n 10, a November ballot initiative that also would do away with the rent control prohibitio­ns, is trailing in the polls.

The USC Dornsife/L.A. Times poll, which was conducted from Sept. 17 to Oct. 14, surveyed 1,180 adult residents of California; the margin of sampling error was 3 percentage points in either direction. More informatio­n about the poll is available at bit.ly/USCpolldat­a.

 ?? Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? A NEW HOME is built in Victorvill­e. Policymake­rs and researcher­s largely agree that California has a shortage of home building that has failed to keep pace with the state’s population growth, forcing up prices.
Christina House Los Angeles Times A NEW HOME is built in Victorvill­e. Policymake­rs and researcher­s largely agree that California has a shortage of home building that has failed to keep pace with the state’s population growth, forcing up prices.
 ?? Glenn Koenig Los Angeles Times ?? JUST 13% of eligible voters think too little home building is the main contributo­r to the state’s affordabil­ity issues, a survey found. Above, constructi­on in Murrieta.
Glenn Koenig Los Angeles Times JUST 13% of eligible voters think too little home building is the main contributo­r to the state’s affordabil­ity issues, a survey found. Above, constructi­on in Murrieta.
 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? STATE SEN. Scott Wiener says the poll results are a sign that state officials and activists need to convince California­ns of the depth of the housing crunch.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times STATE SEN. Scott Wiener says the poll results are a sign that state officials and activists need to convince California­ns of the depth of the housing crunch.

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