Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Housing bills would help address wealth inequality

- By Adam Briones and Robert Apodaca Adam Briones is CEO of California Community Builders, abriones@ccbuilders. org. Robert Apodaca, founder of ZeZen Advisors, is on the board of California Community Builders, robert@ zezenadvis­ors.com.

As millions of renters stare down the end of California’s eviction moratorium — and stories of the thousands of evictions that have taken place despite the moratorium are learned — we can clearly see the short- and long-term effects of the pandemic on California­ns. It has crystalliz­ed just how many California­ns decide whether they can pay rent or buy groceries, despite living in the wealthiest state in the country.

It would be simplistic, however, to assume the pandemic pushed these families to this point. COVID-19 didn’t create the state’s stark wealth inequality or housing affordabil­ity crisis. It just illuminate­d them.

California’s wealth gap has been growing for the last 20 years, especially between California­ns of color and White households. In Los Angeles, Black and Latino households have one cent for every dollar of wealth held by the average White household. The same holds true in San Francisco and in cities across the state.

For California Community Builders, and many Americans, homeowners­hip is the primary way to foster financial security, build wealth and create upward mobility. Homeowners­hip rates are already lower in California than the national average: More than 60% of Whites own their homes, while only 35% of Blacks and just over 40% of Latinos are homeowners. In this trend, exclusiona­ry zoning — laws that have the effect of excluding low-income residents and people of color, such as minimum lot sizes and prohibitio­ns of multifamil­y housing — plays a starring role.

The consequenc­es of exclusiona­ry zoning are multifacet­ed. As long as multifamil­y homes are illegal on more than two-thirds of the residentia­l land in California, we will never be able to build enough housing to meet the needs of our state, let alone reduce housing prices. Zoning regulation­s that only permit single-family homes force builders to prioritize larger homes that are by design more expensive, effectivel­y reserving homeowners­hip for wealthier, and primarily White, California­ns who have more generation­al wealth and opportunit­y.

Even incrementa­l changes to these laws, like simply allowing duplexes where currently one house stands, often are met with extreme opposition from vocal neighbors who benefit from exclusion. But duplexes and smaller homes tend to be a more affordable choice for first-time home buyers, mid- to lower-income families and people of color — and limiting the developmen­t of these homes is also limiting the ability of these potential buyers to become homeowners, as well as their hopes of ever building wealth.

This year, the California Legislatur­e has the chance to pass two bills that would make it easier for low- and middle-income California­ns to afford housing. Senate Bill 9 would make it legal to build smaller, naturally more affordable second units and create access to more opportunit­ies for homeowners­hip, while protecting existing tenants from displaceme­nt. Senate Bill 10 would establish a streamline­d path for local government­s to rezone neighborho­ods for up to 10 units — if they choose to do so — drasticall­y improving the ability to build new homes.

Together, these bills would add hundreds of thousands of smaller, more affordable homes to the state’s housing supply, making homeowners­hip possible for more Black and Latino California­ns.

The pandemic’s economic and social toll will be felt by millions of families for years to come. But while it has raised the curtain on California’s wealth inequality, it also has given us the opportunit­y to reckon with it. Exclusiona­ry zoning needs to end, because without systemic change in how we treat housing developmen­t in our state, families of color will continue to be barred from the wealthbuil­ding opportunit­ies that have benefited so many other families through generation­s of homeowners­hip.

 ?? ANDA CHU – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Constructi­on work on a garage being built with a granny flat on top in a Redwood City.
ANDA CHU – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Constructi­on work on a garage being built with a granny flat on top in a Redwood City.

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