East Bay Times

Social housing can solve the crisis of affordable housing in Bay Area

- By Michael R. Fisher Jr. Michael R. Fisher Jr. is an assistant professor of African American studies at San José State University and an affiliate scholar at the Metropolit­an Policy Center at American University. He is also a Public Voices Fellow with the

Rent in the Bay Area is still too high for most working-class people. The affordable housing crisis has gotten so bad that the Milpitas Unified School District recently asked parents to rent rooms in their homes to teachers struggling to afford a place to live. In the East Bay, the Antioch City Council recently approved rent stabilizat­ion protection­s for tenants against landlords who attempted to raise rents by $500 a month or more.

As a poverty, housing and urban policy expert and an assistant professor at San Jose State University who is rent-burdened (paying more than 30% of one's annual income on housing costs) despite living in faculty housing on campus, I know that the viable solution to address the affordable housing crisis in the Bay Area and across the state of California is social housing.

Last year, the average monthly fair market rent for a one-bedroom apartment in the Bay Area was nearly $2,200. In San Francisco, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties, the average monthly rent is nearly $3,000, in which case any household making under $79,000 annually would be rent-burdened. Social housing would offer relief by providing rental housing at below market rents to those with financial need.

Here is how social housing should work:

First, housing is treated as a public good rather than a private commodity. This means that the public or nonprofit sector assumes responsibi­lity for production and maintenanc­e to ensure permanent affordabil­ity for everyone.

Second, social equity promotes equal status among residents regardless of background or socioecono­mic status. While anyone can live in social housing, the principle of social equity mitigates undue privilege or influence of one group over another, such as high-income over low-income tenants.

Lastly, democratic resident control collective­ly gives social housing tenants meaningful influence over the decisions that shape community life. It values their feedback and participat­ion and takes policy recommenda­tions seriously.

Social housing is also good economic policy. According to Data for Progress, social-housing programs would create hundreds of thousands of skilled, living-wage jobs for people looking for work. This may be a contributi­ng reason for why, according to polling from Data for Progress and the Justice Collaborat­ive Institute, more than 60% of Democrats, Republican­s and Independen­ts combined support a federal social-housing program.

Moreover, social housing already has proven to be an effective solution to affordable housing production in cities in Europe and Asia such as Vienna, Norwich and Singapore.

In California, Assemblyme­mbers Alex Lee, Wendy Carillo and Ash Kalra have introduced AB 2053, the California Social Housing Act of 2022 that would establish a statewide social-housing program responsibl­e for eliminatin­g the gap between housing need and housing production. The bill would ensure that no California­n pays more than 30% of their annual income on housing costs by the year 2050. Moreover, all housing units produced would be protected for the duration of their existence from being sold or transferre­d to the private real estate market, ensuring permanent affordabil­ity.

The California Legislatur­e should pass AB 2053. Assemblyme­mbers Lee, Carillo and Kalra need your support for the bill, which failed in the Senate Committee on Governance and Finance.

The affordable housing crisis in the Bay Area needs a remedy. The lives of working-class California­ns depend on the implementa­tion of viable solutions. For me, the choice is clear based on my decade of experience working on affordable housing issues and studying housing and urban policy.

Social housing for all is the solution.

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