San Francisco Chronicle

Modest housing fixes sought after delay of key bill

- By Alexei Koseff

SACRAMENTO — Even as he blocked a major legislativ­e push to spur more apartment constructi­on around public transit and in wealthy suburbs, state Sen. Anthony Portantino acknowledg­ed the need to address a shortage of housing in California.

“It doesn’t mean we’re not going to focus on solving the housing crisis,” the Democrat from La Cañada Flintridge (Los Angeles County) said after the committee he chairs shelved San Francisco Democratic Sen. Scott Wiener’s contentiou­s bill, SB50, until next year. “It just means that this

isn’t the right fix at this time to do that.”

The right fix remains as elusive as ever. With Wiener’s bill on hold, advocates of ramping up housing production — including Gov. Gavin Newsom, who spoke on the campaign trail of building 3.5 million new homes over the next seven years — have lost their primary legislativ­e vehicle this session.

What’s left are more modest proposals, some of which overlap with aspects of SB50.

Perhaps most significan­t is SB330 by Sen. Nancy Skinner, D-Berkeley, which would prohibit cities with high rents and low vacancy rates from placing restrictio­ns on housing constructi­on for the next five years. It would bar those cities from capping the number of units that can receive permits, adopting new parking requiremen­ts and changing zoning laws to require less dense housing.

Newsom has also proposed $1.75 billion in his budget plan to increase grants and tax credits for housing constructi­on.

But with the all-consuming attention off Wiener’s SB50, other measures may run into the same headwinds that stopped that bill, such as the intense opposition of local government­s worried about losing control over how their communitie­s grow.

“One of the challenges that SB50 had was that it wasn’t nuanced enough for jurisdicti­ons that are already doing the right thing,” said Marina Wiant, vice president of government affairs for the California Housing Consortium, which promotes affordable housing developmen­t. “So much energy has been focused on SB50. Time will tell where the energy will then shift.”

A few bills focused on increasing the availabili­ty of homes for lower-income people are still alive. The Assembly recently passed AB1763 by Assemblyma­n David Chiu, D-San Francisco, which would remove density limits for developmen­ts that contain only affordable units and, within a half-mile of major transit stops, give them up to three extra stories of height.

AB1279 by Assemblyma­n Richard Bloom, D-Santa Monica, would make it easier to build apartment and condominiu­m complexes for lowand middle-income earners in wealthy communitie­s dominated by single-family housing. It is awaiting a vote on the Assembly floor.

Builders and affordable­housing developers are also lobbying to cut fees that local government­s can charge to offset the effects their projects have on public services. Developers argue that exorbitant fees, which vary wildly between cities, make constructi­on prohibitiv­ely expensive in California.

AB1484 by Assemblyma­n Tim Grayson, D-Concord, would require local government­s to post their fee structures online. After a state report on local fees is published next month, Grayson’s bill will probably be amended to create statewide guidelines for such charges, and possibly even a cap.

Dan Dunmoyer, president and CEO of the California Building Industry Associatio­n, said the measure would provide greater accountabi­lity for charges that he believes cities often use to cover budget shortfalls or to create a financial barrier to new developmen­t they don’t want.

“Are these fees really directly associated with the impact of building these homes?” Dunmoyer said. “It’s hard to follow a law that’s done in secret.”

Many advocates of building more housing have also been pushing to protect low-income tenants being displaced by rising rents. They worry that the demise of SB50 will give landlords and builders less incentive to strike a deal on preserving low-cost housing and protecting people who live there. Bills to cap annual rent increases and require a just cause for eviction are on the Assembly floor, but face long odds.

“If you don’t have production, the other two P’s don’t look as exciting to the business community,” said Matt Lewis, communicat­ions director for California YIMBY, which lobbies for more housing constructi­on.

The group was a sponsor of SB50 and is backing another bill, AB68 by Assemblyma­n Phil Ting, D-San Francisco, that would override local size and design limits for a secondary unit on a property. Lewis said it could lead to thousands of new cottages in people’s backyards, but “it’s a drop in the bucket compared to SB50.”

Wiener says he will try to bring back SB50 this session. But that longshot prospect was looking even more unlikely after state Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins, D-San Diego, said Friday that she would “not circumvent the decision” made by Portantino and his Senate Appropriat­ions Committee to delay the bill until 2020.

“Regardless of my own personal feelings about this critical issue, part of my job as the leader of the Senate is to uphold the authority and decisions of committee chairs,” Atkins said in a statement. “Short of significan­tly amending the bill and limiting its applicatio­ns in large swaths of the state, there was no path to move forward this year.”

 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle ?? An apartment building under constructi­on near the MacArthur BART Station in Oakland in April. A major legislativ­e push to build homes around public transit has been put on hold.
Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle An apartment building under constructi­on near the MacArthur BART Station in Oakland in April. A major legislativ­e push to build homes around public transit has been put on hold.

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