San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

OUTCRY GROWS OVER BUILDING GRANNY FLATS

City Council member proposes repealing some San Diego rules

- BY DAVID GARRICK

Growing outcry over granny flat constructi­on in some San Diego neighborho­ods has prompted city officials to propose rolling back some recent policy changes that have made San Diego’s rules among the least restrictiv­e in California.

Critics who say the city’s granny flat rules are too lenient are calling the recently proposed rollback from Councilmem­ber Sean Elo-rivera a good start, but they say it won’t prevent some property owners from destroying neighborho­od character by building multiple granny flats in one backyard.

Ardent proponents say that granny flats — which city officials call accessory dwelling units or ADUS — are the cheapest and fastest way to solve San Diego’s housing crisis. They say Elo-rivera’s new proposal is an overreacti­on to a problem that isn’t widespread and probably never will be.

People on both sides of the issue agree that how the city balances its incentives to build granny flats with its restrictio­ns on them will likely affect the look and feel of many San Diego neighborho­ods for decades to come.

Elo-rivera is proposing a series of complex adjustment­s to city granny flat rules that aim to increase their availabili­ty to lowincome tenants and to prevent

corporate investors from turning granny flats into a lucrative business.

Elo-rivera’s district includes Kensington and some other areas that have loudly opposed loosening granny flat rules.

He wants new parking restrictio­ns and a requiremen­t to replace any trees removed to make way for a granny flat.

He also proposes charging the owners of large granny flats ongoing maintenanc­e fees, to help pay for new infrastruc­ture needed to accommodat­e the additional residents living in a neighborho­od’s granny flats.

His six-page, multiprong­ed proposal comes after the first backlash against the city’s looser granny flat rules emerged last spring in Kensington, Talmadge, Rolando and some nearby neighborho­ods.

Vocal opposition has since spread to the College Area and some other communitie­s, and the opponents have formed a wellorgani­zed lobbying organizati­on called Neighbors for a Better San Diego.

While the group is praising Elo-rivera for addressing the issue and applauding some of his ideas, they stress that his proposal would not eliminate one issue that has prompted the most opposition — a granny flat density bonus.

That policy, adopted last fall by the City Council, goes beyond current state law by allowing property owners to construct extra granny flats on their property if they agree to rent restrictio­ns on at least one of their granny flats.

While state law does not include bonus units, San Diego allows any property owner willing to build a rentrestri­cted granny flat to build one bonus granny flat that can be rented at market rate.

And if the property is within a half-mile of an existing or planned transit line, the property owner can build multiple bonus granny flats if they also build an equal number of rentrestri­cted flats.

The residents say that “density bonus” will destroy neighborho­od character, making residentia­l zoning mostly meaningles­s. They said it also will exacerbate parking scarcity in many neighborho­ods and lengthen the time it takes to get to freeways in others.

“The density bonus has made the (granny flats) program more impactful than it has to be,” said Geoff Heuter, one of the group’s leaders. “We like some of Elo-rivera’s proposals, but there’s a gap between what he is proposing and what needs to be done.”

Elo-rivera wants to strengthen the affordabil­ity component of the density bonus by requiring that tenants in rent-restricted granny flats earn less than 80 percent of the area’s median income, down from the 120 percent now allowed.

Elo-rivera said Friday that eliminatin­g the density bonus altogether would sharply limit the potential of granny flats to help solve San Diego’s affordable housing crisis.

“Solving our housing crisis requires density,” said Elo-rivera, adding that concerns about climate change prevent cities from building more housing in outlying areas.

He said granny flats, or ADUS, are ideal because of their relatively low cost and their location.

“Housing must be created and it must be close to jobs and shopping, so ADUS need to be part of our policy,” he said.

To prevent real estate speculatio­n by corporate investors, Elo-rivera is proposing a significan­t change to a city policy that waives developer impact fees for granny flats. Such fees usually help pay for libraries, fire stations and other amenities.

Under his proposal, the fees would continue to be waived for granny flats on owner-occupied properties, so property owners wouldn’t be charged; but the fees would be restored if the property is not owneroccup­ied or is owned by an investor, corporatio­n or real estate trust.

Elo-rivera said the only people with any reason to oppose that change are developers planning to take advantage of the city’s looser granny flat rules to build many granny flats and make them rental properties.

“They are probably not going to be thrilled with this,” he said.

Greg Cantor, chief executive of Murray Lampert constructi­on, said city policies should favor granny flats built by families living onsite, so they can provide housing for a relative or a tenant.

He said developers are buying up properties so they can build granny flats and make them rentals.

“Granny flats are a big part of our business, but we are focused on the family side of it,” he said. “I would like to see something in place because there is so much anger, particular­ly about parking.”

Proponents of granny flats say Elo-rivera’s proposal and policy changes requested by Neighbors for a Better San Diego would be an overreacti­on. They say only a sliver of properties would be eligible for the granny flat density bonus.

Elo-rivera strongly disagreed, contending that many of the community complaints are valid and need to be addressed.

“I reject the premise that it’s an overreacti­on,” he said.

Elo-rivera said he and his staff met with Neighbors for a Better San Diego at length so he could absorb and thoroughly understand their concerns.

Many of their concerns are valid, and they are addressed in his proposal, Elorivera said. But some others seemed to be motivated by wanting to keep out certain kinds of residents, he said.

“Some of their concerns are honest and legitimate, but some seem like a pretext for not wanting new neighbors and certain types of neighbors,” he said.

Part of the disconnect might be perspectiv­e, he said.

“Some folks are focused mostly on the buildings that will be coming, but for me it’s about who will live in those buildings,” said Elo-rivera, calling granny flats a way to make middle-class areas affordable to many San Diegans for the first time.

Neighbors for a Better San Diego says its concerns are focused entirely on keeping San Diego’s neighborho­ods livable for residents. They say neighborho­ods with large lots featuring relatively small houses on them are ripe for explosions in granny flats.

Hueter said his group also is disappoint­ed Elorivera’s proposal doesn’t fix a city rule allowing granny flats to directly abut property lines, a policy allowing them to be 30-feet-tall and the city’s definition of a transit area, which the group calls too loose.

San Diego’s rules are much less restrictiv­e than the state’s on many of these issues.

The state requires 4-foot buffers to property lines and a 16-foot height limit, and it doesn’t allow people to build bonus granny flats if a flat is rent-restricted, like the city does.

Loose granny flat rules in San Diego have helped spur a sharp increase in constructi­on.

Granny flat constructi­on in the city climbed from nine units built in 2016 to 386 units in 2020. The increase has been steady: 13 in 2017, 61 in 2018 and 202 in 2019.

Approvals of new granny flats have followed a similar trend. The 14 units approved in 2016 climbed to 19 in 2017, 237 in 2018, 501 in 2019 and 541 in 2020.

Another factor in the debate is Senate Bill 9, a new state law that requires cities to allow up to four dwellings on many single-family lots.

Neighbors for a Better San Diego says city officials should immediatel­y stipulate that any property owner taking advantage of SB 9 is prohibited from also building granny flats on their property.

Elo-rivera said he’s open to listening to their proposal.

Mayor Todd Gloria has left leadership of the possible rollback of the city’s granny flat rules to Elorivera.

“Whether you call them accessory dwelling units, granny flats, second units or casitas, they are a critical component of our city’s efforts to increase the supply of homes that San Diegans can afford,” the mayor said Friday. “I thank Councilmem­ber Elo-rivera for his careful focus on this important issue and look forward to working with him on policies that move the needle to address our housing crisis while we make sure the laws on the books are working as intended.”

david.garrick@sduniontri­bune.com

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