Marysville Appeal-Democrat

More Housing? YIMBY, Please

- Bloomberg News (TNS)

The YIMBY movement is definitely on to something: In many parts of the world it is too difficult to build new housing. The result is that lower-income individual­s are priced out of some of the world’s most productive cities, such as San Francisco and London, because of exorbitant rents.

That’s true as far as it goes. Still, there is the question: What can be done to bring about more housing? Homeowners, who may fear additional constructi­on will damage their quality of life, aren’t always on board with the YIMBY movement (it stands for “Yes In My Back Yard,” in contrast to the more common anti-developmen­t “Not In My Back Yard” movement). The primary strategy of YIMBY forces to date has been to try to take regulatory authority for constructi­on away from the local level, as California’s proposed bill SB 50 would by allowing the state to pre-empt some local restrictio­ns. Japan has a good record for allowing new constructi­on, backed by a strong national and weaker local system of land-use planning.

There is, however, a new and very different approach to constructi­on and zoning regulation, and it deserves further attention. I call this idea “street by street zoning,” and it has been outlined in a recent paper by John Myers, co-founder of London YIMBY. The basic idea is simple: Let each street decide on its own how it wants to zone commercial activity, including constructi­on. Of course, in some contexts the deciding entity won’t be a street but rather a block or some other very small neighborho­od area.

That might sound a little crazy, like a 1960s hippie commune dream. Yet the idea has hidden potential. If streets chose their own zoning, citylevel zoning rules could be quite general and open-ended, opening up the possibilit­ies for more constructi­on and also for more mixed-use neighborho­ods. With that liberalizi­ng backdrop, residents on any given street always have the option of more restrictiv­e zoning.

The upside is that street-bystreet zoning would allow so much room for experiment­ation. Some zoning reforms might increase home values; a street might decide to allow for multiple dwellings on a lot (an in-law apartment in a backyard barn?), or make it easier to “upzone” by making it easier to rebuild. And what about allowing, say, a small Sichuan restaurant on each residentia­l street – would that boost home values? Maybe not, but at least there’d be a way to find out.

It is easy to think of zoning and regulatory decisions that should vary by neighborho­od or even by street. Should it matter if new constructi­on blocks the sunlight or views of current owners? How much should new building be limited to check traffic congestion? How important are aesthetics relative to other considerat­ions, such as the ease of adding extensions? And how much should gentrifica­tion be encouraged or limited? Street-by-street zoning would allow for greater flexibilit­y than decisions made at the municipal or county level.

There is no commonly known example of street-bystreet zoning, but some partial instantiat­ions of the idea can be found. In New Zealand, individual homeowners can waive some rules governing neighborin­g properties, and the English system of neighborho­od planning allows for some use of local developmen­t plans, backed by local referenda.

To be sure, there are problems with street-bystreet zoning. For instance, homeowners on most streets might be more restrictio­nist than the status quo. Still, the status quo seems so broken in so many places that perhaps it is worth taking that chance – new constructi­on is already basically at the zero lower bound. At least there would be a direct incentive for homeowners to involve themselves in the decisions and support value-enhancing changes to the rules.

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