San Diego Union-Tribune

PACKAGE OF RULES HOPED TO MAKE HOMEBUILDI­NG EASIER

County OKs preapprove­d plans, quick permits for unincorpor­ated areas

- BY DEBORAH SULLIVAN BRENNAN

New county rules to expedite housing constructi­on will provide guaranteed timelines for permit review, offer preapprove­d home plans and relax other regulation­s, marking a long-awaited effort to streamline homebuildi­ng amid a regional housing shortage.

The Board of Supervisor­s this week unanimousl­y adopted a package of items aimed at making housing constructi­on in unincorpor­ated communitie­s quicker and easier and approved $14.5 million to make the changes.

Together they comprise a “broad suite of strategies and initiative­s designed to help remove barriers to producing housing,” said Planning and Developmen­t Director Dahvia Lynch.

Residents and builders have called for the county to clear the way for more home constructi­on, ranging from subsidized housing to apartments, condos and singlefami­ly homes.

“San Diego builders stand ready to help solve the housing crisis,” Hannah Gbeh, vice president of government affairs for the Building Industry Associatio­n of San Diego County, said in public comments Wednesday. “The problem is that regulatory systems keep telling us no.”

Under the new policy, the county will add planning staff to expedite building permits, with a guaranteed turnaround of two to 30 days for affordable housing and emergency shelters.

It sets a timeline of 15 to 30 days for urban infill areas and those designated efficient for vehicle miles traveled — a measure of how much driving, and therefore emissions, an area generates. And it establishe­s a similar 15-to-30-day timeline for what it calls workforce housing for middle-income people.

The new rules also remove paperwork requiremen­ts for previously approved home designs, cutting the time needed to obtain permits for tracts containing similar housing units.

“Some home builders use nearly identical home designs for multiple projects,” Lynch said “This expedites approval of permits for those projects.”

The policy will also add free, preapprove­d housing plans builders can pull to save money on home design.

“Staff would develop floor plans for multiple homes and make them

New rules aim to make housing constructi­on quicker and easier.

available at no cost to the public,” Lynch said.

The system would be similar to plans the county now offers for accessory dwelling units, also known as backyard cottages or granny flats. Those plans save time and design fees and have led to a 40 percent uptick in new backyard units since they were introduced, according to the board letter.

Similar plans for singlefami­ly homes would save home builders about $20,000 to $25,000 and could be used with small modificati­ons to each building site, the letter stated.

Under the new rules, tiny homes on wheels — small, movable houses typically 500 square feet or less — will be counted as accessory dwelling units. County regulation­s already allow tiny homes on permanent foundation­s, and the new policy adds mobile versions to housing stock for unincorpor­ated areas.

Planning staff will also create “short videos on common topics to help customers navigate the land developmen­t process,” Lynch said, and they will assign a developmen­t liaison to support more complex projects.

Extra planning staff will help “make sure applicatio­ns are complete and correct when submitted,” the county said in a press release. And there will be special help for projects that need septic tank approvals.

The board rejected a separate proposal to provide financial incentives to cover the cost of septic systems on homes without sewer access.

That plan would have dedicated $5.6 million to help cover the $50,000 to $100,000 cost of installing septic systems for about 75 new homes. Although the program “would provide high value to individual homeowners,” it would add relatively few new homes at “high cost to the County,” the board letter said.

Supervisor Joel Anderson said a cheaper alternativ­e would be to expand sewer lines in areas without them. “We know sewer lines are far better than septic.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States