The Mercury News

Building a granny flat may get a bit easier

California lawmakers consider bills to smooth out the process

- By Louis Hansen lhansen@bayareanew­sgroup.com

State lawmakers believe too many California homeowners still struggle to build granny flats, with high fees, constructi­on costs and regulation­s stalling even the most careful plans.

A handful of proposals in Sacramento would expand the years-long efforts to clear hurdles for homeowners interested in building auxiliary dwelling units, or ADUs, on their property. The measures would close some loopholes and cut more red tape in laws adopted in the last three years to ease the constructi­on process for the units.

One key measure would ban the state’s 50,000 homeowners associatio­ns from restrictin­g new in-law units in their communitie­s. Another would speed up local approval processes.

Housing advocates see granny flats as a less expensive, quicker way to add housing in overcrowde­d regions. But some homeowner groups see increased traffic and crowding in their suburban havens.

David Garcia, policy director of the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at UC Berkeley, said the HOA proposal addresses newer suburban communitie­s that can be resistant to change. “It tackles one of the remaining legal barriers to ADUs,” he said.

State lawmakers have struggled to

address the state’s housing shortage in this legislativ­e session. Broad measures to overhaul housing policy have been sidetracke­d, but other incentives aimed at increasing housing have advanced, including $2.75 billion in the state budget to support new constructi­on and battle homelessne­ss.

Spreading in-law units or granny flats into suburban neighborho­ods already equipped with roads, schools, sewers and other infrastruc­ture could bring thousands more rentals to the Bay Area. Cities from Oakland to San Jose already have loosened their own restrictio­ns.

For example, Los Angeles has approved more than

10,500 in-law units since January 2017, when a state overhaul of ADU regulation­s went in place, according to the city.

One homeowner group in the Bay Area and another in Southern California have already raised concerns about the HOA proposal adding traffic and placing additional burdens on their planned communitie­s.

Assemblyme­mber Laura Friedman, D-Glendale, and co-author Sen. Bob Wieckowski, D-Fremont, introduced Assembly Bill 670 to curb HOA restrictio­ns on constructi­on of granny flats. The units offer a “low impact way” to address the housing crisis, and shouldn’t be banned outright by local associatio­ns, she said. The measure has passed through the Assembly and is now in the Senate for hearings.

State researcher­s estimate

nearly one-quarter of the state’s homes — about 5 million units — are governed by homeowners associatio­ns.

The measure allows HOAs to impose “reasonable restrictio­ns” on the units, including style and design, but prohibits them from enforcing rules that would make them difficult to build.

Near Lake Tahoe, the town of Truckee has struggled to find affordable homes for its middle class and year-round residents. The town’s largest developmen­t, the 6,000-unit Tahoe Donner, contains nearly half the town’s homes and apartments.

Its homeowners associatio­n bans the constructi­on of ADUs, said town manager Jeff Loux.

The resort town is a popular site for second homes, but faces a shortage of housing

for local police officers, teachers and resort workers, he said. Local businesses have complained they have hard time attracting employees to live in the expensive community.

“The goal is to try to create more rental opportunit­ies, presumably at a lower cost,” Loux said.

The San Lorenzo Village Homes Associatio­n in the East Bay is opposed to the measure.

Associatio­n president Kathie Ready said the 75-yearold community is struggling just to keep its existing homes, yards and roads in good shape.

The neighborho­od doesn’t have the parking or infrastruc­ture for more residents, she said. “I’m concerned about a million things,” Ready said. “Where are we supposed to park these cars?”

Several other measures in Sacramento are aimed at making ADUs easier to build.

Assemblyme­mber Phil Ting, D-San Francisco, has proposed streamlini­ng the local approval process. His bill, AB 68, would reduce the deadline for municipali­ties to review and approve auxiliary units from 120 to 60 days.

It also would prohibit towns and cities from enacting laws aimed at restrictin­g the units, such as parking and lot size requiremen­ts.

Another proposal from Wieckowski would bring wide-ranging changes to ADU law, including cutting municipal review periods, reducing impact fees and expanding the number of eligible properties.

It also would ban communitie­s from requiring owners to live on the property

where a unit is proposed. The measure, Senate Bill 13, was approved by the Senate but faces opposition from several cities and water and fire districts as it goes before an Assembly committee this month.

A proposal to fund housing initiative­s, Assembly Bill 101, also provides financial incentives for localities to remove barriers to ADU constructi­on.

Ting said encouragin­g ADU constructi­on is a way to bring more housing to communitie­s with minimal disruption. “The real goal is to get more housing production up and down the state,” he said.

The ADU bills still face review from committee panels in the Assembly and Senate in coming weeks, and will need approval from the full chambers and governor to become law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States