The Mercury News

Housing shortage will bite state’s economy

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CALmatters columnist.

The most obvious and most important victims of California’s chronic and still-growing housing shortage are the countless thousands of families that struggle to put affordable roofs over their heads.

The shortage has driven prices skyward in a classic example of a supply-demand mismatch and housing costs are the largest single factor in California’s shameful status of having the nation’s highest level of poverty.

There is, however, another economic dimension to the housing crisis. It’s hurting the state’s overall economy as employers face increasing shortages of skilled workers, especially in coastal areas where the housing squeeze is the tightest and local resistance to housing constructi­on is the most implacable.

Ventura County, outwardly a collection of prosperous suburbs surrounded by bucolic agricultur­al fields and orchards just north of Los Angeles, is a poster child for the syndrome.

This month, economists at California Lutheran University delivered some very negative news about Ventura County’s economy.

“The dominant economic story in Ventura County is a continued decline in total economic activity,” Matthew Fienup, who heads Cal Lutheran’s economic forecastin­g operation, told a gathering of local officials and business leaders. “We hesitate to the use the word recession, but we don’t know what else to call two consecutiv­e years of economic contractio­n.”

“Average economic growth over the past four years rounds to 0.0 percent, the worst four-year period for which we have data. While job growth Incoming Gov. Gavin Newsom talks of ramping up housing constructi­on. But the real question is whether he and the Legislatur­e will confront NIMBYism.

remains positive in Ventura County, sectoral data give little support for optimism. Whether you look to jobs or GDP, the state of the Ventura County economy is weak.”

Fienup attributed the malaise to “a growing housing affordabil­ity crisis and the inability of businesses to attract and retain

talent” and declared that “Ventura County’s chronic lack of new constructi­on is driven by a set of urban growth policies … which rank as the most stringent growth restrictio­ns of any county in the United States.”

Ventura is one of several California counties and cities that have adopted Save Open Space and Agricultur­al Resources restrictio­ns that make it virtually impossible to build housing on agricultur­al land.

SOAR is the most virulent form of local notin-my-backyard policies that are the major impediment­s to expanding housing constructi­on needed to keep up with population growth, replace housing lost to fires and begin closing a shortage that now is several million units.

State officials say California needs to be building 180,000 new units of housing a year — a level it achieved prior to the Great Recession, which drove new constructi­on down to as low as 30,000 units.

Housing has topped 100,000 in recent years, but that’s still short of the demand and the wildfires that devastated communitie­s in Ventura County and other regions are adding to the squeeze.

As the new report on Ventura’s stagnant economy indicates, California will pay a steep economic price if it fails to resolve its housing crisis. Job-creating investment will decline and California will become even more economical­ly polarized with a vanishing middle class.

Incoming Gov. Gavin Newsom talks of ramping up housing constructi­on. But talk is cheap. The real question is whether he and the Legislatur­e will confront NIMBYism by intervenin­g in local land use policy and compelling Ventura and other localities that resist new constructi­on to meet the state’s housing quotas.

It would require courage because NIMBYism is most evident in coastal communitie­s that strongly support Newsom and other Democrats at the polls.

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STAFF FILE PHOTO

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