The Mercury News

Cities try to thwart state’s affordable housing push

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

Those of a certain age might remember Mad magazine, a comic book that lampooned almost everything for more than six decades.

One of Mad’s more enduring and popular strips was “Spy vs. Spy,” created by Cuban expatriate artist Antonio Prohías. Wordlessly, two figures, one dressed in black and the other in white, would try constantly to outwit each other but neither could ever prevail.

The political and legal war over housing, pitting the state of California against its 400 cities, is reminiscen­t of the perpetual duel between those two comic strip warriors.

The state enacts laws and regulation­s aimed at compelling cities to accept more affordable housing constructi­on, particular­ly to serve low- and moderatein­come families, and cities counter with local laws and regulation­s to evade their housing quotas.

Although the state might seem to have the upper hand, one would have to say that the cities have been successful in evading their civic and legal responsibi­lities because constructi­on falls way short of the state’s goals.

In theory, California should be building 185,000 units a year to keep up with current demand and chip away at the backlog, but it scarcely produces half of that number.

City officials, responding to their constituen­ts’ aversion to high-density housing, employ all sorts of tactics to discourage developmen­t, such as imposing specific requiremen­ts that make projects economical­ly infeasible or zoning undesirabl­e land for housing.

As new anti-housing tactics are introduced, the state adjusts laws and regulation­s to thwart them, but the cities just find new ways to preserve the status quo.

One of the state’s newest pro-housing approaches, embodied in legislatio­n enacted last year and going into effect last month, allows up to four units of housing to be built on land zoned for singlefami­ly homes. City officials denounced Senate Bill 9 as it was winding through the Capitol, arguing that it usurped their traditiona­l land use authority and would change the character of their neighborho­ods.

However, now that SB 9 is law, cities are trying to figure out how to blunt, or even cancel, its impact in true Spy vs. Spy fashion.

Just before the law took effect, for example, Pasadena enacted an “emergency ordinance” that imposes tight, and likely unworkable, rules on what can be built.

They include an 800-square-foot limit on new units, a one-story height limitation, a requiremen­t for one parking spot for each new unit, landscapin­g standards and a ban on short-term rentals. Collective­ly, they could make developmen­t authorized under SB 9 economical­ly prohibitiv­e.

Woodside, a very wealthy enclave on the San Francisco Peninsula, takes the prize for the most creative way to thwart SB 9 — supporting a petition to have mountain lions declared a threatened species and declaring the entire town to be mountain lion habitat and therefore unsuitable for housing.

“Given that Woodside — in its entirety — is habitat for a candidate species, no parcel within Woodside is currently eligible for an SB 9 project,” a city memo declared.

The action earned Woodside scorn from prohousing advocates.

“This is so absurd,” said Laura Foote, executive director of YIMBY Action, a or-housing group, told the San Francisco Chronicle. “It is an example of the extreme absurd lengths cities will come up with to evade state law.”

“You can build a McMansion and that somehow won’t hurt the mountain lion,” Foote added. “But if you build two units the lions will somehow fall over and die.”

Woodside officials reversed their position after the state Attorney General’s office on Sunday declared the effort illegal. But the hypocrisy of Woodside’s effort is obvious.

 ?? NATIONAL PARK SERVICE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The city of Woodside tried and failed to thwart SB 9 by declaring it would destroy mountain lion habitat.
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS The city of Woodside tried and failed to thwart SB 9 by declaring it would destroy mountain lion habitat.

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