Savannah Morning News

Housing shortage tests Oregon’s land use law

- Claire Rush

PORTLAND, Ore. – A severe lack of affordable housing has prompted Oregon lawmakers to consider altering a 1970s law that made the state a national leader in leveraging land use policy to prevent suburban sprawl and conserve nature and agricultur­e.

The so-called urban growth boundary helped to cement the state’s green reputation and has been “extremely influentia­l” in its developmen­t, said Megan Horst, an urban planning professor at Portland State University.

“I can’t overstate it,” she said of the half-century-old law. “All that farmland would likely be a sea of strip malls and subdivisio­ns, as they are pretty much anywhere else in the country.”

But interconne­cted homelessne­ss and housing crises have forced exceptions to be considered by lawmakers, including Democrats who have historical­ly defended the landmark policy.

The sole bill introduced by Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek during this year’s short legislativ­e session is a sweeping housing package aiming to jump-start home constructi­on by tweaking the 1973 law, which essentiall­y drew a circle around cities to protect farmland, forests and nature from urban encroachme­nt.

Lawmakers have just two weeks to approve the bill before the session ends March 10.

As the longest serving speaker of the Oregon House, from 2013 to 2022, Kotek became known for her progressiv­e agenda. But as governor, she has sought to ease restrictio­ns for developers in a bid to advance her housing production goals.

Working to win support for the package has put her in the unusual position of having to lobby not Republican­s – who largely back it – but members of her own party, many of whom voted against a similar measure last year. Kotek said she spent the seven months between legislativ­e sessions speaking with lawmakers, housing developers and conservati­on groups to find a middle ground.

“We had some proposals last year that didn’t work for everyone, but we didn’t walk away. We sat down and worked on it,” she said while testifying in support of the bill, describing herself as its “chief architect” and “chief cheerleade­r.”

“I also know that the process means there might be amendments,” she added. “But what we can’t see happen is that this Legislatur­e leaves at the end of their session without this bill.”

On the ground, the anti-sprawl policy can look dramatic. At times, blocks of dense apartment complexes abruptly end and give way to thick forest or rolling fields. One side of a road can be lined with homes, while the other side features open space as far as the eye can see.

The 42-page package would, among many other things, grant a one-time exemption to the decades-old rule by allowing cities to acquire new land for the purpose of building housing. It would require 30% of new units in expansion areas to be affordable.

Currently, cities must forecast population growth over 20 years before requesting to change an urban growth boundary for new homes, businesses or industrial or public facilities. If they show the area inside their boundary won’t accommodat­e projected needs, and identify outside land meeting a complex set of criteria, they can apply to expand.

Cities of more than 2,500 residents seeking to add more than 50 acres must submit an applicatio­n to a state agency for approval.

Ninety-five percent of such adjustment­s were approved between 2016 and 2023, according to the Department of Land Conservati­on & Developmen­t, the agency tasked with approvals. But many cities and developers say the rigorous evaluation and analysis requiremen­ts can be long and difficult to navigate.

“While land supply is not a barrier for all cities, it is critical for some, and the current … process is timeconsum­ing, cost-prohibitiv­e, and litigious,” Ariel Nelson, a lobbyist for the League of Oregon Cities, which has a neutral stance on the bill, said in written testimony.

To speed up the process, the bill before lawmakers would ease certain regulation­s and waive the 20-year population forecast if conditions are met. But the proposal still includes a number of restrictio­ns largely stemming from Democrats’ requests.

In order to be eligible, cities must prove they lack land as well as affordable housing. They would need to outline the history of their growth boundary in the previous 20 years and assess how much land inside the current boundary has been developed. They would also have to show that a certain percentage of households are severely cost burdened, meaning they spend more than half of their income on housing.

In most cases, cities wouldn’t be able to add highvalue farm or forest land.

Additional­ly, cities would only be able to add relatively small areas of land: cities with population­s less than 25,000, for example, could only add a maximum of 50 “net residentia­l” acres, which is less than onetenth of a square mile. A net residentia­l acre refers to the amount of land used to build homes, excluding streets and utilities.

The one-time exemption to urban growth boundary rules would expire in 2033.

State Sen. Deb Patterson, a member of the Environmen­tal Caucus and the Senate’s housing committee, said these guardrails made her feel comfortabl­e supporting the bill. She was one of the Democratic lawmakers whose “no” vote killed last year’s proposal.

“While it’s not in any way shape or form a perfect bill, so much work has been done to make this a much better bill that I do believe I will be a ‘yes’ vote,” she said.

One of her Republican colleagues on the Senate’s housing committee, Sen. Dick Anderson, also supports the bill but said the boundary expansion rules were restrictiv­e “almost to the point of not being of use.”

“You should not be envisionin­g a Las Vegas or Phoenix style expansion, with houses galore and subdivisio­n after subdivisio­n,” he said.

Anderson thinks other parts of the bill would be more useful in his coastal district, specifical­ly a measure allowing cities to “swap” land currently within their boundaries, which is harder to be develop because of steep terrain or other topographi­cal issues, with an equivalent amount of land just outside that is more suitable for residentia­l use.

Other factors also have to be addressed in order to fully tackle the crisis, such as rising constructi­on supply costs, a labor shortage and increasing corporate ownership of housing, housing experts say.

Lawmakers have tackled the land use law in the past, including to spur industrial growth. Most recently, they approved a measure last year allowing the governor to designate up to eight sites for expansion to make room for semiconduc­tor factories.

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