Los Angeles Times

California’s housing shortage is an environmen­tal problem

Let’s treat it accordingl­y by encouragin­g smart developmen­t

- By Melissa Breach and Liz O’Donoghue Liz O’Donoghue

California’s housing shortage and climate crisis are often treated as if they are unrelated to each other. In fact, they are deeply interconne­cted. We need to address not only how much housing we build but also where we build it. That’s the idea and the promise behind new legislatio­n backed by a novel coalition of housing and environmen­tal advocates.

California must add at least 2.5 million new homes by 2030 to meet its needs. Decades of underprodu­ction have exacerbate­d skyrocketi­ng rental prices, put homeowners­hip increasing­ly out of reach for most California­ns and pushed more of our neighbors into homelessne­ss than in any other state. The housing shortage is driven in large part by local government policies that prevent new housing from being built in existing neighborho­ods, forcing most developmen­t into exurban and rural areas.

Without enough affordable housing near jobs, schools, transit and other resources in existing communitie­s, California­ns are increasing­ly forced into long commutes from remote areas that are often more vulnerable to wildfires, flooding and other climate-accelerate­d disasters. Between 1990 and 2010, half the housing developmen­t in California was at the edge of wilderness areas, known as the “wildland-urban interface,” or WUI. As a result, about 25% of California­ns live in areas at high risk of catastroph­ic wildfire.

Expanding developmen­t into natural lands not only puts more people in harm’s way; it also increases the likelihood, frequency and devastatio­n of fires, floods and other disasters. Human activities spark most wildfires. And developmen­t often paves over floodplain­s that could otherwise absorb rainfall and runoff, making floods more common and destructiv­e.

California has lost more than 1 million acres of natural habitat to developmen­t over the past 20 years. Forests, wetlands, coastal areas, grasslands and rivers provide clean air, fresh water and access to green spaces for all of us. The movement of housing into more remote regions fragments wilderness, reduces community resilience and exacerbate­s the global biodiversi­ty and climate crises, affecting every California­n.

We need to reframe the way we think about the relationsh­ip between housing policies and climate change. We need to significan­tly increase the number of homes we build, but if we do so in the undevelope­d wildland-urban interface, we will only worsen the climate crisis. Building housing far from jobs doesn’t just require longer commutes and new roads, increasing the pollution that causes climate change. It also reduces the landscape’s ability to store carbon by paving over natural and agricultur­al lands that would otherwise remove it from the atmosphere. And it destroys or degrades wildlife habitat and increases water demand in areas where wells are already running dry.

Assembly Bill 68, introduced last week by Assemblyme­mber Christophe­r M. Ward (D-San Diego), would expedite approval of new housing in areas close to jobs, schools, parks, transit and other amenities. It would make it faster, cheaper and easier to build housing in safe, environmen­tally smart locations. It would do so by requiring such housing to be approved through an objective, streamline­d process that eliminates needless delays.

AB 68 would also ensure that local government­s approve such housing within existing communitie­s before they allow developmen­t of the open space and farmland that make us more climate-resilient. Cities and counties that want to add more housing in undevelope­d “greenfield­s” will essentiall­y have to demonstrat­e that a similar amount of housing can’t be built in neighborho­ods that already have infrastruc­ture and services. Most cities and counties could accommodat­e much more such climate-safe housing, but severe restrictio­ns on infill constructi­on effectivel­y mandate sprawl, pollution and disaster.

This legislatio­n’s counter-mandate — don’t sprawl unless you must — takes a novel approach to land use. For most of the last 50 years, California’s tight restrictio­ns and outright bans on dense, multifamil­y housing in existing neighborho­ods have made low-density, single-family, greenfield housing the default when we do accommodat­e growth. And while recent legislativ­e reforms have sought to ease developmen­t of affordable, multifamil­y housing in cities by reducing zoning, planning and other restrictio­ns, it’s still easier in many cases to build in rural areas that are more vulnerable to fires and floods. AB 68 would begin to correct the incentives that too often pit the need for housing against environmen­tal stewardshi­p by encouragin­g sprawl.

It’s significan­t that the environmen­tal and housing movements are coming together to address these problems. Historical­ly we have worked separately or have even been at odds. Environmen­tal and conservati­on organizati­ons, focused on maintainin­g vital habitats, protecting air and water quality and preserving open spaces, sometimes oppose developmen­t and growth in general. Meanwhile, housing advocates working to open up cities and towns to more housing developmen­t may have been less concerned about the dangers of building where we shouldn’t.

Now our issues are colliding. The housing affordabil­ity crisis has become a significan­t contributo­r to loss of habitat as well as climate pollution, so we’re breaking our silos and working on a shared vision. These problems are inextricab­le from each other, and we need to tackle them together.

Housing and conservati­on advocates are uniting to deal with a crisis that has often divided them.

Melissa Breach is the chief operating officer of California YIMBY. is the director of sustainabl­e and resilient communitie­s strategy for the Nature Conservanc­y.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? LOS ANGELES’ urban sprawl as viewed from the Pico-Union neighborho­od in September.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES’ urban sprawl as viewed from the Pico-Union neighborho­od in September.

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