Marin Independent Journal

Lawmakers eye limits on housing project fees

- By Don Thompson The Associated Press

SACRAMENTO >> In their latest bid to combat California’s affordable housing crisis, state lawmakers on Monday announced a package of bills to limit developmen­t fees that can add tens of thousands of dollars to the price of a new home.

However, local government­s depend heavily on the fees, which typically are used to pay for schools, roads and parks. Lawmakers said they were discussing those needs but have not yet decided how the fees might be replaced.

The fees are “vital to local government’s ability to pay for the infrastruc­ture that residents living in new developmen­ts need,” Chris Lee, legislativ­e representa­tive for the California State Associatio­n of Counties said in a statement. He said counties are glad to hear that “providing state funding to make local government­s whole for any fee caps or reductions will be part of the discussion.”

Developmen­t-related fees, also known as impact fees, can provide up to a third of some cities’ budgets, according to a report last year by the University of California, Berkeley, Terner Center for Housing Innovation. They vary widely depending on location, the center found, amounting to anywhere from 6% to 18% of the median price of a new home.

“Impact fees, while well intentione­d, have been an incredible impediment to developmen­t,” said Assemblyma­n David Chiu of San Francisco, chairman of the Assembly’s housing committee.

The Democratic state lawmakers cited a 2018 study by the Terner Center that found fees of as much as $157,000 in the San Francisco Bay Area city of Fremont, topping $140,000 in Irvine in Orange County and $60,000 in Oakland. They added about $30,000 to the price of a new home in Los Angeles and $20,000 in Sacramento.

They can be especially hard on first-time home buyers, minorities and the working class, said Assemblyma­n Tim Grayson of Concord, who is carrying five of the eight bills in the package.

One is intended to change the standards that cities and counties use to determine their fees, while another would cap fees based on the median home price in a jurisdicti­on. Another would require local government­s to assess the fees on a per-square-foot basis, which Grayson said would allow developers to build smaller, more affordable units without being hit with multiple fees.

Two other bills address affordable housing, one by having the state reimburse local government­s that waive impact fees on affordable projects, the other by reducing impact fees on affordable housing built in densely populated areas.

Other bills would gather more housing data, make it easier for developers to pay impact fees under protest, and increase public notice when local agencies seek new or increased fees or service charges.

Assemblyma­n Todd Gloria of San Diego said lawmakers are looking to find more money to help cities with housing developmen­t, while Grayson said communitie­s ultimately benefit from those developmen­ts through property taxes.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Assemblyma­n David Chiu, D-San Francisco, discusses a package of bills to limit developmen­t fees in Sacramento on Monday.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Assemblyma­n David Chiu, D-San Francisco, discusses a package of bills to limit developmen­t fees in Sacramento on Monday.

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