San Francisco Chronicle

2 bills would make building California housing more costly

- DAN WALTERS Dan Walters is a columnist for CalMatters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

California obviously has a severe shortage of housing, but the crisis is felt most acutely by low- and moderate-income families.

“Approximat­ely half of all California households are spending more than 30 percent of their income on housing costs, and nearly one-third of all California households are spending more than 50 percent of income on housing costs,” Gov. Jerry Brown declares in his budget summary.

However, as he and legislator­s try to make good on their promise to ease the crisis, one inescapabl­e fact looms large: Low-cost housing isn’t low-cost.

The same budget document points out that on average, “affordable housing” costs $332,000 per unit to construct — ranging from $591,000 in San Francisco to $207,000 in Kings and Tulare counties.

California is falling about 80,000 units short of the 180,000 units it needs to build each year, according to Brown’s housing department. Therefore, increasing constructi­on by 80,000 affordable units annually would cost an additional $26 billion.

The Legislatur­e’s budget analyst, Mac Taylor, calculates that 1.7 million California households spend more than half of their income on housing and that building new, lowercost units for them would require a public subsidy of about $165,000 for each in coastal urban areas, with the remainder coming from private and nonprofit investors.

“At this cost,” the report continues, “building affordable housing for California’s 1.7 million rent burdened lowincome households would cost in excess of $250 billion. This cost could be spread out over several years (by issuing bonds or providing subsidies to builders in installmen­ts), requiring annual expenditur­es in the range of $15 billion to $30 billion.”

A couple of real-world projects validate the numbers.

One, developed by Mercy Housing in San Francisco, provides 150 new apartments for $489,000 a unit — $100,000 under the city’s average. Almost all of the money came directly from government sources, or indirectly through tax credits.

The second, now under constructi­on in the Sacramento suburb of Roseville (Placer County) and also developed by Mercy Housing, will provide 58 new downtown apartments for $370,000 per unit. Similarly, financing is coming largely from city and state government­s and tax credits.

Two observatio­ns emerge from these data:

While the Capitol’s politician­s are beating the drums for either new taxes, such as a proposed levy on real estate transactio­ns, or bonds to address the housing issue, both would be tokenism. There’s no way the state can supply the immense sums needed, such as the $250 billion cited by Taylor.

Therefore, the primary focus of a housing package should be on reducing red tape, particular­ly at the local level, to make it easier and less costly for both private and nonprofit investors, such as Mercy Housing, to fill the need.

SB35 by Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, is the primary vehicle for speeding up housing constructi­on.

However, while it would bulldoze local government­s into approving new affordable housing, one provision would, if anything, increase its costs by virtually mandating the use of more expensive union constructi­on labor — even treating private projects as if they were public works.

Another pending measure, AB199 by Assemblyma­n Kansen Chu, D-Milpitas, would declare any housing in a local redevelopm­ent area, regardless of its financing, to be public works and also subject to the “prevailing wage” rule that effectivel­y mandates unionized labor.

Obviously, both are supported by constructi­on trades unions, which wield substantia­l influence on the Legislatur­e’s dominant Democrats. But both, if enacted, would probably mean fewer units being built for the “rent-burdened low-income families’ cited in Taylor’s report.

The political trade-off is obvious.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press ?? Gov. Jerry Brown has decried the lack of affordable housing for low-income and middle-income families.
Rich Pedroncell­i / Associated Press Gov. Jerry Brown has decried the lack of affordable housing for low-income and middle-income families.

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