Marin Independent Journal

Push leaders to pass budget boosting homeowners­hip

- By Otto Catrina Otto Catrina is president of the California Associatio­n of Realtors. Distribute­d by CalMatters.org.

There are growing calls to promote equity for those working California­ns who, as a result of this state and nation's history of discrimina­tion, have higher levels of economic and housing insecurity and limited, if any, intergener­ational wealth.

California Realtors, Habitat for Humanity and the California Building Industry Associatio­n — a housing coalition — echoes those calls to our legislativ­e budget committee leaders working on revising the state budget to allocate a greater portion of the projected surplus to the constructi­on of owner-occupied housing and down-payment assistance programs.

Greater funding will increase equity in the housing market by expanding opportunit­ies for California­ns to gain housing security while building equity in a home they own. Study after study shows that homeowners­hip is the best way for working people to attain economic security and develop wealth.

One can't be in favor of eradicatin­g the wealth and economic security discrepanc­ies between groups, particular­ly for communitie­s of color, without also supporting greater access to ownership housing.

Our state's leaders have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y to do something about it. Assemblyme­mber Tim Grayson and 27 other Assembly members — both Democrat and Republican — are calling for $600 million to support homeowners­hip in the 202223 state budget, including $400 million for the developmen­t of deed-restricted ownership housing and $200 million for the state's existing down-payment assistance programs.

If we really want to give people the chance to build wealth that will support their families and future generation­s, we should demand that our government prioritize the developmen­t and constructi­on of reasonably priced homes.

Instead of creating a generation of renters — none of whom will have the opportunit­y to build the type of economic security and wealth-building opportunit­ies older California­ns took for granted — we should be giving California­ns the opportunit­y to be homeowners and help them build equity that provides financial security and housing stability. Homeowners­hip creates true economic security, in every sense of the word.

California's median home price last year was $786,750. That translates into a minimum qualifying annual income of $144,400 and a monthly mortgage payment of $3,610. Such a home is affordable to only 26% of all California­ns and just 17% of Latino and Black California­ns. When compared to White and non-Hispanic residents, the affordabil­ity gap is even more stark, with affordabil­ity levels for Black and Latino households being half that of White households.

“Who Gets to Call California Home?,” a new report sponsored by the California Center for Real Estate, an institute of the California Associatio­n of Realtors, and prepared by Dowell Myers, a University of Southern California professor, finds that “longstandi­ng homeowners accumulate substantia­l gains in home equity, particular­ly in California with its history of rapid price gains. That in turn fosters the ability of `the Bank of Mom and Dad' to assist the homebuying of their children. The unfortunat­e consequenc­e of family assistance is that inequality becomes more deeply entrenched between families with differenti­al resources and between members of racial groups that have stronger legacies of homeowners­hip than others.”

Grayson and his fellow legislator­s wrote in a formal funding request to the governor earlier this year, saying that “homeowners­hip provides working families with an unparallel­ed ability to accrue generation­al wealth and experience housing security, as homeowners pay a fixed mortgage instead of a rent that continuall­y rises.”

The time is now for California­ns who desire the benefits of homeowners­hip to contact their state legislator­s and Gov. Gavin Newsom and demand that they act to increase the supply of ownership housing.

California Realtors have the right plan to start bringing equity to California's housing market. There's never been a more important time to do so.

If we really want to give people the chance to build wealth that will support their families and future generation­s, we should demand that our government prioritize the developmen­t and constructi­on of reasonably priced homes.

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