The Mercury News Weekend

What California can do to address affordable housing crisis

- By Pedro Nava, Cathy Schwamberg­er and Dion Aroner Pedro Nava, Cathy Schwamberg­er and Dion Aroner are members of the Little Hoover Commission. They wrote this commentary for CalMatters.

California's housing crisis can seem insurmount­able. The median home price is more than $800,000, the state needs millions of additional homes to give everyone a place to live and homelessne­ss is on the rise.

Progress is abysmal. The state called for the constructi­on of 180,000 new units annually between 2015 and 2025 to close the gap. We are building fewer than half as many, only about 80,000 new units per year.

This is unacceptab­le, but there are solutions. As members of the Little Hoover Commission, the state's independen­t government watchdog, we spent months examining this problem, and we know there are ways to move forward: Get more data, use better metrics, organize government more efficientl­y and — most of all — build more houses.

The problem is not new. The issues are all too familiar. The opportunit­ies to make a longterm impact are often deemed too controvers­ial and squandered by a lack of political will. Sometimes they're blocked by existing homeowners who already have what others seek.

In our new report, California Housing: Building a More Affordable Future, we offer targeted actions state leaders can take immediatel­y to address this crisis:

First, California must expand its affordable housing strategy — in both policy and funding — to include a greater emphasis on affordable home ownership. This policy expansion must also include an emphasis on increasing supply.

The state can jumpstart affordable housing production by treating California's housing shortage with the same urgency as the state's wildfire crisis. This includes creating targeted working groups charged with tackling logistical and policy challenges within a set period of time and building in CEQA flexibilit­y to expedite projects.

We can also use “shared equity” models. In effect, the government helps homeowners buy at a lower price on the condition that they sell at a limited price later, helping to ensure that the home stays affordable for future generation­s.

Second, the state must consolidat­e housing functions. The state's housing department­s are spread across four agencies and divided among the purviews of the governor and the state treasurer. This organizati­on is inefficien­t. By consolidat­ing housing functions, through reorganiza­tion or formalizin­g a strategic working relationsh­ip, the state can craft a better affordable housing strategy and improve operations.

Third, the state should reconsider how it measures local government­s' progress toward housing goals. Local jurisdicti­ons are responsibl­e for developing and executing a strategy to meet the housing needs of their communitie­s. While this process considers how much housing needs to be built and where, it fails to account for how much housing is actually built. This must change.

The state also should boost enforcemen­t of local government­s' housing plans. When a locality fails to adequately plan for its housing needs, the state can decertify its housing plan. As a consequenc­e of decertific­ation, certain affordable housing projects can “automatica­lly” receive permits.

What's the catch? Developers typically must get a court order requiring the locality to issue the permit. However, in the face of overwhelme­d courts and developers who are incentiviz­ed to keep the peace, this enforcemen­t method falls short.

To improve its enforcemen­t capabiliti­es, the state should appoint an ombudsman in every county with the authority to approve affordable housing projects when a local jurisdicti­on is noncomplia­nt with its housing element.

Finally, the state must fill data and analysis gaps. California is missing key pieces of informatio­n that would help policymake­rs better understand the state's housing crisis. Using the best technology and methodolog­ies available, the state should fill these gaps. Informatio­n found should be used to guide policymaki­ng, and tools should be shared with local government­s either at cost or, preferably, for free.

The cost of housing may be the biggest issue facing the state. But action-by-action, state leaders can chip away at the problem.

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