San Francisco Chronicle

Brown, lawmakers focus on housing

- Melody Gutierrez is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: mgutierrez@ sfchronicl­e.com. Twitter: @MelodyGuti­errez

a San Francisco/Bay Area problem. This is a contagion that is moving around the state and spreading like wildfire. Parts of California that have always been considered affordable aren’t anymore.”

Among the bills is one that would ask voters to approve $4 billion in bonds next year to build more homes and make existing ones more affordable. Another bill would create a new real estate fee to generate $250 million a year to be spent on alleviatin­g the massive shortfall of housing in the state. Both of those bills would require approval by twothirds of lawmakers in the Senate and Assembly to reach Brown’s desk. Brown has indicated he supports both bills.

While a deal appeared imminent, legislativ­e sources said the final details were being worked out on exactly how many bills would be included in the package.

Lawmakers are eager to finalize the deal, saying the state’s housing crisis needs immediate attention.

California’s housing shortage was exacerbate­d when the state cut its 60-year-old program that infused $1 billion a year into redevelopm­ent agencies, which set aside a portion of funding for affordable housing. The loss of that money, along with the existing affordable housing bonds drying up and local government­s creating restrictio­ns on developmen­ts have led to a decrease in housing stock.

“Every year I’m told next year we will do housing,” said Assemblyma­n David Chiu, D-San Francisco, chair of the Assembly Housing and Community Developmen­t Committee. “We have to get it done now.”

The California Department of Housing and Community Developmen­t said over the past decade developers built an average of 80,000 homes in California each year, far short of the 180,000 needed each year. In prior years, about 160,000 homes a year were built.

“The housing crisis not only hurts millions of California­ns trying to pay the rent or buy a home, it is a drain on our economy and a danger to our future,” Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, D-Lakewood (Los Angeles County) said in a statement.

SB2 by state Sen. Toni Atkins, D-San Diego, would create a permanent $250 million-a-year fund for low-income and affordable housing. The fund would be supported by a new $75 to $225 recording fee on real estate documents and property transactio­ns, such as deeds and notices of default. The fee would not include home sales.

Opponents of the bill, including the County Recorders’ Associatio­n of California, said the fee would hurt small contractor­s placing or removing a mechanics lien and others needing to file recording documents.

The bill calls for the bulk of the funding to go to local government­s to build housing, make existing housing more affordable with rent subsidies or down payment assistance and create permanent or temporary shelters.

“We have 130,000 estimated homeless people in this state,” Atkins said. “We have many millions more, and I’m not kidding, who are on the verge of homelessne­ss because of rising rents and the inability to own a home.”

SB3 by state Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose, would ask voters in 2018 to approve $4 billion in general obligation bonds to build more rental housing for low-income families and to fund other existing housing programs, such as developmen­ts near mass-transit centers. Of that, $1 billion would be slated for the state’s veteran home loan program, which would otherwise run out of money mid-2018.

Beall said lawmakers have been working with a sense of urgency after years of failed attempts to address the state’s housing crisis.

“We are spending billions of dollars on housing in prisons and county jails instead of helping people get into housing in their communitie­s,” Beall said. “I think there is something wrong with that value system.”

So far, the only other bill Brown has indicated he supports is SB35 by Wiener.

SB35 would streamline the approval process for new housing units in cities that aren’t creating the amount set by state law.

Brown’s office did not release additional informatio­n on bills the governor supports or opposes, but several others have been included in ongoing discussion­s with legislativ­e leaders and Brown’s office.

Among those bills are legislatio­n to strengthen the state’s Housing Accountabi­lity Act, which bars cities from turning away developmen­t for arbitrary reasons, such as complaints by neighbors who oppose change. AB73 by Chiu would give cities financial incentives to rezone developmen­ts near mass transit for high-density housing.

“Rent is too high, mortgages are too expensive and workers aren’t able to afford to live in the communitie­s they serve,” Art Pulaski of the California Labor Federation said. “Teachers, firefighte­rs and cops always tell us stories of San Francisco and how they have to commute hours to get to work.”

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