Los Angeles Times

Get homeless housing built

To do so, it makes sense to exempt homeless housing from California’s landmark environmen­tal law.

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Last fall, state lawmakers passed a narrowly tailored bill that exempted homeless shelters and permanent supportive housing projects in Los Angeles from the California Environmen­tal Quality Act, or CEQA, for five years. The bill was designed to make it faster and easier to build much-needed homeless housing and to block not-in-mybackyard lawsuits against such projects.

And it worked. Just two months after Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the measure into law, a judge threw out a lawsuit seeking to stop the city from putting a 154-bed shelter on an abandoned bus yard in Venice. The city has granted exemptions to three other homeless shelters, and nine permanent supportive housing projects have requested the same protection, which can help shave months or even years off a project’s timeline.

Now Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago (DLos Angeles) wants to expand the law statewide. He’s introduced Assembly Bill 1907, which would provide CEQA exemptions to fast-track homeless housing throughout the state. But his new proposal would go further than last year’s bill, broadening the exemption so it also applies to any housing project reserved for low-income renters, as long as the project receives certain state or federal funds. The bill would sunset in 2029.

It’s a no-brainer to expand CEQA exemptions for homeless housing projects statewide. We’re in a crisis, with more and more people camping on sidewalks and sleeping in cars. In the 2019 count, California had more than 150,000 unsheltere­d homeless people — a 16% increase over the previous year.

But Santiago is also right to go further. If California really wants to slow the growing number of homeless residents, the state also has to dramatical­ly increase the number of affordable housing units available. California is in a homelessne­ss crisis in part because of the lack of affordable housing. One in three households statewide now spend more than half their income on rent, leaving many families one rent increase or missed paycheck away from losing their homes.

Building more subsidized housing that’s reserved for low-income residents can help get people off the street and help prevent the poorest, most vulnerable California­ns from becoming homeless in the first place. The good news is that the state has put up billions of dollars to develop more affordable housing. But the state would make better use of those taxpayer dollars if it made sure the projects weren’t held up by needless bureaucrac­y or chicanery.

CEQA was enacted more than 40 years ago as a way to inform, protect and empower the public by requiring developers to disclose the environmen­tal effects of their projects and to mitigate any harm they may cause. The law has been a vital tool that has made countless projects better since its inception.

To be clear, CEQA itself is not the problem. It’s how the law has been used — or abused. It’s too easy to tie up projects with costly and time-consuming lawsuits for reasons that have nothing to do with environmen­tal protection. Cities compound the problem with rules that apply CEQA to infill housing developmen­ts, even when they meet zoning and planning requiremen­ts. That forces developers to spend money and time on additional analysis and paperwork. It also enables critics to file CEQA lawsuits challengin­g the projects, which can delay them and jeopardize their financing.

It’s important to note that even if projects are exempted from CEQA, they still have to meet state regulation­s, local ordinances and building standards. Developers still have to analyze their building sites for potential threats in or to the environmen­t, such as earthquake faults and soil contaminat­ion. And opponents can still file lawsuits challengin­g a CEQA exemption and demanding more study, although they face a higher burden in convincing a judge.

Of course, CEQA exemptions can also mean less scrutiny and less public input on projects. In a crisis, though, California has to make trade-offs, and perhaps a little less process can get people off the streets faster.

Ideally, state lawmakers would have come up with a more comprehens­ive set of reforms that would preserve what’s best and most important about CEQA while making it harder for the law to be abused. But that’s proven, so far, to be an impossible task in Sacramento. Instead, legislator­s have repeatedly chosen to carve out CEQA fasttracks for profession­al football stadiums, basketball arenas, corporate headquarte­rs and swanky housing developmen­ts.

It’s about time that California lawmakers start cutting red tape for projects that benefit the state’s neediest residents.

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