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California Cuts the Red Tape on New Affordable Housing Plan

California Cuts the Red Tape on New Affordable Housing Plan

FromReal Estate News: Real Estate Investing Podcast


California Cuts the Red Tape on New Affordable Housing Plan

FromReal Estate News: Real Estate Investing Podcast

ratings:
Length:
5 minutes
Released:
Oct 11, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

California has another tool in its toolbox to help close the housing gap. It’s legislation that will make it easier to convert dilapidated strip malls, half-empty office buildings, and weed-filled parking lots into multi-family housing.Hi, I'm Kathy Fettke and this is Real Estate News for Investors. If you like our podcast, please subscribe and leave us a review. Governor Gavin Newsom signed Senate Bill 6 and Assembly Bill 2011 on September 28th. The legislation will allow the adaptive reuse of properties that are zoned for retail, offices, and parking in suburban and rural city centers.The new rules are expected to help California reach a goal of 2.5 million new housing units by the end of the decade. One million of those homes need to be affordable, according to the Statewide Housing Plan.It will also help eliminate resistance from local governments, unions, environmentalists, and developers. Supporters are calling it a win-win for housing and for run-down commercial areas that make some cities look like ghost towns. (1)Two Policies, One GoalLawmakers approved both bills to satisfy two sides of a dispute involving unions, developers, and other groups. The powerful State Building and Construction Trades Council of California supported SB 6 along with builders and business groups. The California Conference of Carpenters and the Service Employees International Union of California supported AB 2011. (2)After weeks of tense negotiations and no deal, lawmakers decided to approve both bills. They each give developers different options, but they both work toward the same goals. They both make it easier and faster to build homes in vacant or underused commercial space. They both have requirements for the amount of affordable housing produced. And they both guarantee that workers will be paid union wages.They are also both designed to keep new development near city centers and transit corridors which will help support the state’s carbon reduction goals. Developers will have the option to follow whichever policy works best for a specific project.Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins called it a “game changer when it comes to producing desperately needed housing for all income levels.” SB 6 author, Senator Anna Caballero, also sees this as a way to expedite the process of building as many as 2 million housing units. Assembly member Buffy Wicks, who wrote AB 2011, says the legislation provides land to build homes, incentives to attract workers to the construction industry, and reduces the red tape to get projects going in areas that make sense for transit-oriented affordable housing.YIMBY CEO, Brian Hanlon says this legislation “could unlock the potential for millions of affordable homes in California.” He says: “California has a huge amount of under-utilized and abandoned commercial properties that could see rapid development of subsidized affordable housing… and would include good jobs with fair wages for construction workers.” (3)Closing the Housing Gap in CaliforniaThis is just the latest in a long list of bills to create more housing in California. Among the more significant ones is Senate Bill 9, or what’s known as the California Home Act. It was approved last year, and allows single-family homeowners in most parts of California to divide their properties into two lots, and build as many as two homes on each lot. It also streamlines the permitting process. (4)That bill follows several other bills in recent years that allow more housing density, including ADU’s on properties with single family homes. As reported by The Atlantic, there’s been an ADU boom since new laws made them legal and desirable. They’ve reportedly increased 1,421% from 2016 to 2021. About one out of every seven California homes is now, reportedly, an ADU.The newest adaptive-reuse legislation is another step for California in the affordable housing direction. Governor Newsom says it will help address what he calls the golden state’s “original sin” of housing affor
Released:
Oct 11, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Don’t get caught off guard by market crashes that can take all your money down with them. And don’t miss out on markets where you can build wealth practically overnight. Real Estate News for Investors with Kathy Fettke is the premiere source for savvy real estate investors who want the edge. Stay up-to-date on new laws, regulations, and economic events that affect real estate. Topics include: market trends, economic analysis that affects housing prices, updates on the best rental markets for investing in single-family rentals or multi-unit rentals, turn-key housing standards, the fate of the highly revered 1031 exchange and other tax law affecting investors, self-directed IRA investing and 401k changes, where rents and property values are rising or falling, flipping risks, new Dodd-Frank rules regarding private lending and financing standards, areas with job losses vs job growth, areas that are overbuilt or over-supplied versus areas with low supply and high demand, and how to avoid real estate scams. We'll bring you the latest reports from organizations like the National Association of Realtors, Realty Trac, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Zillow, Trulia, Redfin, Rent Range, Property Radar, the Norris Group, Peter Schiff, Robert Kiyosaki’s Rich Dad, Suse Orman, Bigger Pockets, Dave Ramsey and more. And we'll help you interpret the data in terms that make sense for your real estate goals, and portfolio. Grow and protect your wealth by staying on the forefront of economic data analysis, expert opinions, innovative investing strategies and profitable investment opportunities. We'll share all the top real estate news stories and the best trade secrets investors should know, so you can stay ahead of the curve and make fully informed real estate decisions. Host Kathy Fettke is Co-CEO of the Real Wealth Network, author of Retire Rich with Rentals and host of the Real Wealth Show on iTunes. She brings decades of media and real estate investing experience, offers her own viewpoints on particular topics, and taps into her network of real estate experts for real world news updates created just for investors like you. Get the real news on real estate on The Real Estate News For Investors Show!