The Campbell Reporter

3 pro-housing groups sue 11 cities, county

Advocates aim to force compliance with California's homebuildi­ng rule

- By Ethan Varian evarian@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

Housing advocates tired of the Bay Area's foot-dragging efforts to plan for more homes amid an intensifyi­ng housing crisis are taking matters to the courts.

On Feb. 7, three prohousing groups announced they had sued 11 cities and Santa Clara County for failing to meet a Jan. 31 deadline to submit their future homebuildi­ng proposals to state regulators.

Advocates contend the jurisdicti­ons have long resisted growth and are now ignoring their responsibi­lity to prepare for significan­tly more housing over the next decade. The cities include Palo Alto, Cupertino, Burlingame, Daly City, Martinez, Pinole, Pleasant Hill, Richmond, Fairfax, Novato and Belvedere.

The goal of the dozen lawsuits? To force local government­s to adopt housing plans — dubbed “housing elements” — that actually meet the state's strict planning requiremen­ts. And to ensure jurisdicti­ons are subject to penalties — including losing control over local laws governing developmen­t — until they do.

“We want a judge to order the cities to adopt a compliant housing element, and have the cities acknowledg­e there are consequenc­es,” said Greg Magofña, director of developmen­t and outreach with

the Oakland-based California Housing Defense Fund, one of the groups filing the lawsuits.

As of Feb. 7, just 29 of the region's 109 cities and counties had adopted the every-eight-year plans, according to the California Department of Housing and Community Developmen­t. And just four of those plans — from San Francisco, Emeryville, San Leandro and the city of Alameda — had been deemed in compliance by the state.

Advocates say the 12 lawsuits are just the beginning. They aim to sue even more out-of-compliance cities and counties in the coming weeks. Magofña said the three pro-housing groups will continue targeting local government­s with a history of denying new homes — particular­ly apartments and affordable housing — and that tend to be “whiter, richer and

more exclusiona­ry.”

In addition to the California Housing Defense Fund, San Francisco-based YIMBY Law and California­ns for Homeowners­hip — a nonprofit launched by the California Associatio­n of Realtors — are behind the lawsuits.

Geoff Gillette, a spokespers­on for Pleasant Hill in suburban Contra Costa County, said the city had yet to be served with the civil lawsuit. He refuted the notion that Pleasant Hill isn't making enough progress on its housing element, despite only submitting its initial draft last week.

“We've taken this very seriously,” Gillette said. “For us, it's important that we do the process right and we make sure that our community is aware that it's a transparen­t process.”

Gillette pointed to regulators' increased planning

expectatio­ns this eight-year cycle as a primary reason why the city's plan is late. The state is now requiring cities and counties to spell out in detail how they plan to phase in mandated reforms, such as easing restrictio­ns on new multifamil­y housing, and prove that areas identified for future homes have a realistic chance of developmen­t.

“These are things we weren't going to shortcut on or rush through to meet the deadline,” Gillette said.

Another challenge for local government­s: They have to prepare for significan­tly more housing.

By 2031, the nine-county Bay Area is on the hook for approving more than 441,000 single-family homes, apartments, townhomes and condos for people of all income levels. That's double the goal for the past eight years, representi­ng a roughly 15% increase

in the region's total housing stock, in large part to make up for decades of failing to hit state homebuildi­ng targets.

Some local officials and neighborho­od groups say the dramatical­ly increased goals ignore the effect new developmen­t would have on traffic, the environmen­t and wildfire risk, among other impacts.

In a statement, Livable California, a group that aims to “foster equitable, livable communitie­s and truly affordable housing” said it “does not believe cities should be forced into planning more than local voters deem appropriat­e.”

“We are in favor of local control and community planning efforts. We believe local government officials know what's best for their constituen­ts.”

If those officials continue dragging their feet on their housing plans, advocates want them to feel the repercussi­ons. Enter the “builder's remedy.”

The provision in state housing law could enable developers to push through projects of virtually any

size almost anywhere they please, as long as a portion of the building includes affordable units. The penalty hasn't been legally tested, so advocates are suing in part to compel a judge to clarify when jurisdicti­ons are subject to the law.

JR Fruen, an attorney and housing advocate newly elected to the Cupertino City Council, said he believes his city is already at risk of the builder's remedy since it only recently submitted a housing element draft.

But he said with a new council majority, the city — home to Apple's headquarte­rs and some of the most expensive home prices and rents in the country — is moving forward in earnest with its housing plan after years of “bad-faith” planning by prior councils.

Fruen hopes the lawsuit could spur even more action.

“It could be a useful reminder to some of my colleagues who might be reluctant to follow the law, or pursue an ambitious element that actually meets our housing needs, to do so,” he said.

 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Constructi­on nears completion on 122subsidi­zed apartments for teachers and staff in the Jefferson Union High School District in 2021in Daly City. On Feb. 7, three pro-housing groups announced they had sued 11cities, including Daly City, for failing to meet a Jan. 31 deadline to submit their future homebuildi­ng proposals to state regulators.
KARL MONDON — STAFF ARCHIVES Constructi­on nears completion on 122subsidi­zed apartments for teachers and staff in the Jefferson Union High School District in 2021in Daly City. On Feb. 7, three pro-housing groups announced they had sued 11cities, including Daly City, for failing to meet a Jan. 31 deadline to submit their future homebuildi­ng proposals to state regulators.
 ?? JANE TYSKA — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? A drone view of developmen­t at the former Del Monte Warehouse in Alameda last March has now been completed. The City of Alameda is just one of four cities that have been deemed “compliant” by the state for new housing plans.
JANE TYSKA — STAFF ARCHIVES A drone view of developmen­t at the former Del Monte Warehouse in Alameda last March has now been completed. The City of Alameda is just one of four cities that have been deemed “compliant” by the state for new housing plans.

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