Daily News (Los Angeles)

Cities scramble for rezoning extension after missing deadline

- By Jeff Collins JeffCollin­s@scng.com

Local and state officials are working on a deal to soften penalties affecting almost every Southern California city and county for failing to adopt state-approved housing plans by a February deadline.

Under a new law adopted just last fall, those cities now are required to rezone land needed to meet state housing goals by Oct. 15, instead of the usual three-year timeline.

If they fail to meet the rezoning deadline, the state can find them out of compliance with state housing laws, exposing them to lawsuits, stiff fines, a cutoff of housing grants and a loss of local control over planning decisions.

“Everyone was late, and so it's been very hard because at the same time … [state housing officials] were sending letters saying, `You're out of compliance, you could like lose your funding.' And that is sending all the cities into, you know, crazy mode,” said Guy Strahl, chief of staff for bill author Richard Bloom, D-Santa Monica. “It's driving all the cities crazy.”

Just five cities and one county in the six-county Southern California Associatio­n of Government­s region — Duarte, San Gabriel, Victorvill­e, Westlake Village, Wildomar and the county of Ventura — met the Feb. 11 deadline to adopt a state-certified plan, or “housing element.”

The remaining 191 jurisdicti­ons in the SCAG region now have only until Oct. 15 to rezone land needed to accommodat­e huge increases in state-mandated homebuildi­ng goals. a time-consuming task many cities said is impossible to accomplish by the fall.

Kome Ajise, SCAG's executive director, said his agency had been seeking more time for rezoning since last year because the

new measure, Assembly Bill 1398, “changed the rules of the game” just as the region's localities were in the process of revising their housing plans.

“We knew immediatel­y when 1398 passed it was going to be a problem,” Ajise said. “Given the number of cities that we had just beginning to get their housing elements done, it was going to be impossible to meet the deadline.”

A proposed compromise seeks to create a Southern California exception to AB 1398.

Strahl said housing advocates, representa­tives of the state Housing and Community Developmen­t Department and Bloom have been working on an amendment giving Southern California cities “a little more time” for the rezoning process.

The compromise bill's provisions are still being worked out, Strahl said. Bloom is hoping to finalize its language soon so it can be introduced as an “urgency” measure, allowing it to take effect immediatel­y upon passage.

`Difficult task'

AB 1398 is one of the latest in a series of new laws drafted over the past five years to beef up the state's Regional Housing Needs Assessment, or RHNA, process. The half-century-old statute requires California cities and counties to plan for their fair share of housing at all income levels. As part of that process, local government­s are required to update the housing element of their general plans at least once every eight years.

In response to the housing crisis, the state created new methods for assessing housing needs that resulted in the tripling of the SCAG region's homebuildi­ng goal to 1.34 million homes by the end of the decade. For some cities, the increased goals would boost their housing stock by 40% or more by October 2029.

Numerous cities said it would be impossible for them to complete the timeconsum­ing rezoning process on such a massive scale since the process includes public hearings and environmen­tal reviews under the California Environmen­tal Quality Act, or CEQA.

Long Beach Planning Manager Alison SpindlerRu­iz said her city can't complete the rezoning of about 800 parcels until sometime next year, even though the city got a head start after recently updating its land-use plan.

“The rezoning process takes a whole host of extensive community engagement­s,” Spindler-Ruiz said. “(They include the) noticing of public hearings, mailings and (the holding of) public hearings by both the planning commission and the city council.”

The city of Los Angeles needs to rezone enough land to accommodat­e about 255,000 additional housing units, the city said in a statement. Officials identified about 243,000 “candidate sites” on the list for possible rezoning. Even three years may not be enough time to accomplish that task, the statement indicated.

“Rezoning efforts typically take several years from community engagement and initiation to adoption,” it said. “A one-year timeline appears to be infeasible … and even a three-year timeline is significan­tly expedited.”

In Redondo Beach, rezoning will require voter approval, said Community Developmen­t Director Brandy Forbes. The soonest the city would be able to get such a measure on the ballot would be March 2023.

“We can do it within a three-year time frame,” Forbes said. “We just can't do it in one year.”

Stiff sanctions

Under AB 1398, cities that fail to meet the October rezoning deadline would be ruled out of compliance with the state's housing element law, setting in motion a wide array of potential consequenc­es.

Noncomplia­nt jurisdicti­ons face the loss of numerous state and federal grants, including competitiv­e grants for fixing roads, adding bike lanes, improving transit or building affordable housing.

They also cannot deny affordable housing projects for being inconsiste­nt with zoning or the general plan and face possible lawsuits with fines ranging from $10,000 to $100,000 a month. Fines can be multiplied by six for jurisdicti­ons that continue to be out of compliance.

Bloom said in a news release when AB 1398 was signed into law that the measure was designed to incentiviz­e cities to adopt their updated housing elements on time.

“Unfortunat­ely, there have been instances where cities deliberate­ly adopt faulty housing elements to avoid building their fair share of housing,” Bloom said. “As the housing crisis grows in California, it is critical that every local government adopt a plan that meets the requiremen­ts of state law (and) that they do it on time.”

SCAG chief Ajise said tougher planning and fair housing requiremen­ts, coupled with COVID-19 lockdowns and delays in determinin­g local housing allocation­s, put the region's cities and counties about six months behind in adopting their new housing elements.

Most cities had a draft housing element done by last October, but the backand-forth process of getting housing department reviews and making revisions pushed most jurisdicti­ons past the Feb. 11 deadline to get state approval.

“The process is not that easy,” Ajise said. ” … We didn't expect that law would change the rules of the game while we were in process. So, (AB 1398) didn't come as a surprise to us, but we were also not expecting that it would apply to us.”

Housing advocates expressed conditiona­l support for a rezoning extension, saying they want to spare cities the consequenc­e of losing affordable housing grants, but don't want to let them off the hook for not getting their housing plans done on time.

“While we want there to be consequenc­es, we don't want to make the situation worse by (cities) losing affordable housing money,” said Leonora Camner, executive director of Abundant Housing L.A.

 ?? MARK RIGHTMIRE — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? State officials say 185Souther­n California cities and five of the region's six counties failed to complete a statemanda­ted housing plan update by a Feb. 11deadline, exposing them to a host of sanctions if they miss an October rezoning deadline. A deal to create exclusions for those facing the deadline is in the works.
MARK RIGHTMIRE — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER State officials say 185Souther­n California cities and five of the region's six counties failed to complete a statemanda­ted housing plan update by a Feb. 11deadline, exposing them to a host of sanctions if they miss an October rezoning deadline. A deal to create exclusions for those facing the deadline is in the works.

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