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If there was ever any doubt, 2023 made two things very clear. First, California lawmakers are now fully committed to the idea that the state needs to build many more homes to tackle the stateās long term housing crisis. Second, that crisis isnāt going away anytime soon.
Ben Christopher
CalMatters
Californiaās steady rise in home prices and rents is the primary reason behind the stateās homelessness crisis, which grew even more dire in many parts of the state this year. Housing costs are also the culprit behind Californiaās sky-high poverty rate and its steady decline in population, as middle- and working-class residents seek cheaper places to live.
A throng of state legislation passed in 2023 designed to clear aside local restrictions on construction and to diminish the threat of anti-development lawsuits, all with the goal of supercharging development. Affordable housing set aside for lower income Californians was a particular beneficiary.
The pro-housing shift in the Legislature is largely thanks to the severity of the crisis, but itās also the product of a new pro-development coalition in Sacramento that includes developers, āYes in my backyardā activists and, perhaps most crucially, the stateās unionized carpenters.
The stateās executive branch wants to spur production too. The governorās Department of Housing and Community Development spent much of the past year pressuring local governments to plan for enough housing to meet statewide production goals.
In some cases, enforcement has meant promoting an old, but never-before-used state law ā the so-called Builderās Remedy ā that allows developers to ignore zoning restrictions in cities that donāt pass their housing plans on time. In other cases itās meant auditing local approval processes and taking reluctant cities to court, something Attorney General Rob Bonta has done or threatened to do on numerous occasions.
Though 2023 was a (relative) roaring success for pro-building advocates, those concerned about renter protections saw more muted gains. The Legislature passed laws that make it harder for landlords to evict tenants and that limit the size of security deposits ā relatively modest changes won over the fierce opposition of the stateās powerful landlord lobby. Now that pandemic-era eviction bans enacted by state and local governments during the pandemic have largely lifted, the number of renters being tossed from their homes has shot up, driven by eviction spikes in Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area. Even so, tens of thousands of tenants who turned to the state for rental assistance during the pandemic are still awaiting that help.
The politics around homelessness also took a turn. Growing impatient with the slow pace of progress, Newsom and many progressive lawmakers began embracing policies like clearing encampments and penalizing local governments for inaction, while promoting ātiny homesā as a scalable solution.
The governor has also sunk significant political capital into two of his favored proposals that target the stateās overlapping crises of homelessness and mental illness.
The first is the stateās new CARE Court, a parallel judicial system that can mandate treatment for those experiencing severe untreated mental illness, while also demanding services and shelter from counties. On the county-by-county roll out schedule, Los Angeles County was listed first up in December.
Newsomās second big push will go before the voters in March: A bond to fund treatment and shelter for homeless Californians with mental health problems. But thatās likely to be just one of a slate of housing-related measures California voters can expect to consider in 2024. A series of state and local affordable housing bonds along with a statewide constitutional amendment designed to make it easier for locals to pass them are likely to be on the ballot, as is a third recent attempt to repeal statewide restrictions on local rent control ordinances.
Despite all the new pro-construction legislation, a boom probably isnāt in the cards for 2024. High interest rates have put a damper on new construction and those in the business of building affordable housing say insufficient public funding remains an obstacle. Even so, the Legislature isnāt likely to let up on the cause of trying to make it easier to build apartments, duplexes and ADUs.
Housing will be on the ballot in 2024. In March, voters will weigh in on Gov. Newsomās bond to fund treatment and shelter for homeless Californians with mental health problems. The November ballot will be more crowded with a series of state and local affordable housing bonds, a statewide constitutional amendment aimed at making it easier to pass those bonds, and a third attempt to repeal statewide restrictions on rent control ordinances. In the Legislature, lawmakers arenāt likely to let up on the cause of trying to make it easier to build apartments, duplexes and ADUs and the stateās housing department will have its hands full making sure that cities are sticking to their housing plans.
About the Author
Ben covers housing policy and previously covered California politics and elections. Before these roles at CalMatters, he was a contributing writer for CalMatters reporting on the state’s economy and budget. Based out of the San Francisco Bay Area, he has written for San Francisco magazine, California magazine, the San Francisco Chronicle, and Priceonomics. Ben also has a past life as an aspiring beancounter: He has worked as a summer associate at the Congressional Budget Office and has a Masterās in Public Policy from the University of California, Berkeley.
About CalMatters
CalMattersĀ is a nonprofit, nonpartisan newsroom committed to explaining California policy and politics.
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