CC 04-16-19 #11 Senate Bills 50 and 330 Written CommunicationsGrace Schmidt, MMC
From: Liang Chao
Sent: Tuesday, April 16, 2019 12:18 PM
To: Timm Borden; Steven Scharf, City Clerk
Subject: Letters from American Planning Association, California Chapter
Here are some positions by American Planning Association, California Chapter.
https://www.apacalifornia.org/legislation/legislative-review-teams/position-letters/
Could we print them out for all Council members and include them in the meeting record?
Thanks.
SB 50 (Oppose Unless Amended) (WIENER) HOUSING DEVELOPMENT INCENTIVES AND
REQUIREMENTS — In Senate Housing Committee — Tuesday, April 2nd
Senate Bill 50 will create mandatory overrides of local zoning around transit as well as areas with high job but
low housing rates. Although our organization is generally supportive of increasing housing development and
planning for density near transit and promoting a healthy regional jobs -housing fit, APA is concerned about
the mechanics of implementing SB 50 in its current form.
Letter to Scott Wiener from APA California on SB 50: https://www.apacalifornia.orgp-
contenthiploads/2019/03/SB-50-OUA-Letter-3-25-19.pdf
SB 330 (Oppose Unless Amended) (SKINNER) HOUSING CRISIS ACT OF 2019 — In Senate Government
& Finance Committee — Wednesday, April 10th
Senate Bill 330 would freeze or prohibit a number of housing -related requirements for 10 years with the goal of
speeding up housing production in areas with the most severe housing shortages.
Letter to Scott Wiener from APA California on SB 330: https://www.apacalifomia.org/wp--
content/uploads/2019/04/SB-330-OUA-S-Gov-Fin-4-3-19.pdf
Liang
1
American Planning Association
California Chapter
Making Great Communities Happen
March 25, 2019
Senator Scott Wiener
Room 2028
State Capitol
Sacramento, California 95814
SUBJECT: SB 50 (Wiener) — Notice of Oppose unless Amended
Housing Development Incentives and Requirements
In Senate Housing Committee—Tuesday, April 2nd
Dear Senator Wiener:
The American Planning Association, California Chapter must respectfully oppose SB 50
unless amended. SB 50 will create mandatory overrides of local zoning around transit
as well as areas with high job but low housing rates. Although our organization is
generally supportive of increasing housing development and planning for density near
transit and promoting a healthy regional jobs -housing fit, APA is concerned about the
mechanics of implementing SB 50 in its current form. APA appreciates meeting with
you and your staff on this bill to discuss our perspective.
Without having more information on the points below, even as recently amended it is
hard to know how effective SB 50 would be, where it would apply, and what local
options for influencing development would remain. The responses to these
comments will determine if APA can eventually support the bill.
• The definitions of "job -rich housing project' and "job -rich area" need to be
defined in statute, rather than deferred to a determination by HCD in
consultation with OPR, so that the areas subject to the "equitable
communities incentive" that are not within a one-half mile radius of a major
transit stop or a one-quarter mile radius of a stop can be understood in
advance. (S. 65918.50 (e) - (f).)
• The bill appears to apply to all zones where residential uses are permitted,
even where such uses are only considered conditionally permitted uses. The
bill should not require communities to adopt residential projects in
commercial zones where residential in only a permitted use with a CUP, for
example, to avoid incompatible uses. (S. 65918.52(b).)
• Projects eligible for an equitable communities incentive should be required to
build the affordable units in exchange for the incentive benefits rather than
permit project to qualify through payment of an in -lieu fee or other
alternative that is not guaranteed to result in affordable housing production.
C/O STEFAN/GEORGE ASSOCIATES
1333 36'" STREET
SACRAMENTO CA 95816-5401
P: g16.736.2434
F: 916.456.1283
www.calapa.org
IS. 65918.52 (c).)
• The new unit threshold of 10 or fewer units for imposing affordability contribution
requirements for eligible projects will be below existing density bonus requirements,
which apply to projects with five or more units. To avoid confusion about whether a
project can receive incentives and concessions and waivers under the density bonus
law after qualifying for an equitable communities incentive, the two laws should be
harmonized. Moreover, because an equitable communities incentive would increase
development potential beyond what is allowed under density bonus law, the
affordability requirements to qualify for an equitable communities incentive should be
greater than what is needed to qualify for a density bonus. (S. 65918.52(B) and
65918.53.)
• The bill still requires the same incentives be given developers in every jurisdiction of
the state. It should allow jurisdictions that agree to approve the eligible projects by
right to gradually increase heights/FAR/densities up to the greater of four times
greater than surrounding neighborhoods or the maximum specified in the bill. As
noted above, however, the increases in development potential allowed for equitable
communities incentive projects must be provided in exchange for much higher
affordability percentages in the project than are currently required in the bill or in
density bonus law. This approach is more similar to LA's JJJ concept and would still
substantially increase the development potential in these targeted areas. (S. 65918.52
(B) and 65918.53.)
• Under GC S. 65915 subdivision (e), density bonus law requires local jurisdictions to
waive any development standards that "physically preclude" development at the
permitted density. If an applicant receives a "waiver from density" as an -equitable
communities incentive and continues to qualify for density bonus waivers, as written
this could potentially allow a project to waive any other development standards. ((S.
65918.53(a)(1) and (b)(1).) This must be fixed by defining what, if any, waivers must be
granted to an equitable communities incentive project.
• Rather than inventing a new "sensitive communities" definition and process, using the
SB 1000 definition and process would allow communities to understand where this
section would apply and to use the recently adopted community plans already
completed. IS. 65918.50 (j) and 65918.55.)
If you have any questions, please contact our lobbyist, Sande George, with Stefan/George
Associates, sgeorge stefangeorge.com, 916-443-5301.
Sincerely,
Eric S. Phillips
Vice President, Policy and Legislation - APA California
cc: Governor's Office
Senate Housing Committee
OPR
Republican Caucus
2 C/O STEFAN/GEORGE ASSOCIATES
1333 36' STREET
SACRAMENTO CA 95816-5401
P: 916.736.2434
F: 916.456.1283
www.calapa.org
Arnerican Planning Association
California Chapter
Making Great Communities Happen
April 3, 2019
Senator Nancy Skinner
Room 5094
State Capitol
Sacramento, California 95814
SUBJECT: SB 330 (Skinner) —Oppose Unless Amended
Housing Crisis Act of 2019
In Senate Government & Finance Committee Wednesday, April 10th
Dear Senator Skinner:
The American Planning Association, California Chapter has taken an oppose unless
amended position on SB 330 as recently amended. SB 330 would freeze or prohibit a
number of housing -related requirements for 10 years with the goal of speeding up
housing production in areas with the most severe housing shortages. We appreciate
original letter of concerns.
It is important to note that APA believes that the general concepts in the bill are
worth pursuing. APA supports the freeze for local limits on the number of land use
approvals or permits, as, well as the imposition of a moratorium on housing
development without a health or safety finding. Voiding requirements for local voter
approval before key housing decisions are made also makes sense. In the
amendments to the Permit Streamlining Act, APA also agrees with the clarification
that in response to the local agency's determination that the application for
development project is not complete, the local agency may only decide if an amended
application has items on the submittal requirement checklist that were listed in the
original list of items that were not complete. Jurisdictions should not be asking for
new requirements beyond the list.
However, other provisions in the bill are too proscriptive and will have widely differing
impacts depending on the circumstances in the city or county, notwithstanding our
organization's general support for the concept of requiring jurisdictions to plan for
and facilitate their fair share of housing development. A number of sections in the bill
are also confusing, and the multiple repeated sections raise the concern that the bill
may not be internally consistent. It also confers substantial benefits to developers
without provisions to require affordability for the projects that will benefit from the
restrictions placed on local planning departments.
C/O STEFAN/GEORGE ASSOCIATES
1333 30 STREET
SACRAMENTO CA 958i6-5401
P: g16.736.2434
F: g16.456.1283
www.calapa.org
In addition, it is difficult to judge if the requirements in the bill will really produce more housing faster
and more affordably. Enforcement of required upzoning and requiring use by right on all of those sites
would have more immediate impacts. A tight definition of "housing emergency" and who determines
when it starts, and ends would also make for a cleaner process, rather than changing the entitlement
procedures for projects every year based on fluctuations in the housing market.
Below are APA's major concerns:
Restrictions on General Plan, zoning and specific plan requirements
-The General Plan, zoning and specific plan sections of the bill should be combined into one section
rather than the repetitive differing code sections that are hard to read and sort out. The repetitive
structure will lead to inconsistencies that a single list of imposed provisions would avoid.
-Making the determination of "affected county or city" each year would be too difficult to implement.
Instead, APA suggests that the bill use the SB 35 model: once a jurisdiction is determined to be subject to
the provisions, there is a check every 4 years to determine if circumstances have changed.
-The threshold of "land where housing is an allowable use" should be clarified. Even on agricultural land
at least one house is allowed, but these rural lands should not be part of the state's effort to provide
additional residential opportunities.
-Changing land use designations to a less intensive use is extremely limiting and difficult to administer. It
also makes it difficult to do long range planning and attract development. APA suggests instead focusing
on residential capacity, expanding the no net loss provision that currently applies only to sites identified
in the housing element to instead apply to all sites citywide.
-Freezing requirements in effect on January 1, 2018 leaves a lot of critical requirements off the table. For
instance, all of the housing requirements imposed in legislation last year could not be imposed, or new
requirements related to a newly adopted General Plan or approved housing element, or wildfire, seismic,
energy and inclusionary requirements. Many new building and efficiency measures are actually useful
and do not increase costs. Ideally, the start date should relate to the date the emergency is ordered or
specified, and limitations should be focused on increasing predictability by limiting non-objective
standards but not focused on measures that result in healthier, safer, or more affordable communities,
even if the requirements affect a developer's bottom line.
-This same concern holds for the requirement that design standards cannot be imposed if they are not
objective or if they are more costly than those in effect on January 1, 2018. The retroactive provisions
will cause complete confusion. This will be hard to define, is too subjective and will be too difficult for the
local agency to determine what will be covered. In some ways, any standard would increase costs. Efforts
to improve fire safety, increase energy efficiency, etc. should continue to be permitted. It could also
impede or undermine local requirements to meet other state priorities, such as the reduction of VMT
and sustainability, and make standards objective. A better alternative would be to be more
straightforward about what the bill is actually targeting.
-Specific to S. 65850 that applies to zoning, (B) (i) prohibits a moratorium or other similar restriction on
or limitation of housing development "other than to specifically protect against an imminent threat to
the health and safety..." An imminent threat is an impossible threshold. The purpose of a moratorium is
to prevent anticipated problems before they threaten the health and safety of residents, such as a
moratorium for jurisdictions without water allocations or other legitimate health/safety issues such as
potential wildfire threat. Such issues are not imminent, but they are clearly legitimate reasons for a
building moratorium until measures can be put in place to deal with them.
-The definition of "objective standard" is the definition of SB 35, but outside the SB 35 context it should
be triggered from completeness, not application submittal, to be consistent with the Housing
Accountability Act and the Permit Streamlining Act.
Amendments to the HAA
The changes in this new proposed section unfortunately include a number of amendments to the HAA
that were strongly opposed by APA when the HAA was revised just two years ago.
2 C/O STEFAN/GEORGE ASSOCIATES
1333 36' STREET
SACRAMENTO CA 95816-5401
P: 916.736.2434
F: g16.456.1283
www.calapa.org
-It introduces a new concept of a "complete initial application" rather than using "complete application".
APA is opposed to adding this new term. Cities and counties rely on the determination that an
application is complete as a black and white determination that applies in numerous instances and
statutes. When is "complete initial application" determined? What if the information is not actually
complete? The completeness determination is already a short process, so this change does not even
accomplish any new streamlining. This section would also restrict the imposition of new fees after this
stage. Regulatory fees don't change but are imposed later in the project and are necessary. This is not a
helpful new layer of requirements in the development process.
-Adding in (6) the SB 35 definition of "objective standard" to the HAA makes sense, but the trigger of
having the standards in place "before submittal of an application" doesn't work with the "complete initial
application" concept. Again, the trigger for non -SB 35 projects should be at the time the application is
deemed complete. Freezing objective standards retroactively before submittal of a complete initial
application is backwards.
-The new (o) raises a number of new issues. The addition of (D) helps get rid of the unlimited vesting
issue from the original version of the bill. And although commencing the construction within 3 years
following the date the project received "final approval" is consistent with the longer life of the permit
just put into law last year, given the purpose of this bill, a shorter timeframe to inspire faster
construction after approval is warranted. Since there is no deadline by which the developer has to pull
the building permit, the developer has time before that clock starts to get financing, construction
contracts, etc, in place and get started — 18-24 months should be more than enough time then to
commence construction. Additionally, the exceptions in (E) and (3) don't work together. If the applicant
initiates the change, it should be their risk that new standards apply. The density increase language in (E)
is ok, but (3) makes it hard to know how to apply certain physical development standards to portions of
projects, and it would be preferable for standards to apply to all (or none) of a project.
Definition of "complete initial application"
-As stated above, APA strongly objects to the addition of a new complete application layer. And, the new
The list of required information doesn't include for instance ownership verification, public notice
information, materials required by the subdivision ordinance (if a map requested), landscape plan, or full
environmental checklist/EA/or local equivalent.
-The standardized checklist in (b) is a reasonable concept, but the checklist should be developed by the
jurisdiction, with requirements limited to those materials identified in advance. OPR could then develop
a standard form for those jurisdictions without capacity to do their own.
Limit of three hearings
S. 65905.5 would limit hearings to three, That is an arbitrary limit and may not be enough for particularly
large or controversial projects. Requiring a specific time requirement instead would still allow the local
agency flexibility to complete all necessary hearings and is a fairer process.
S. 65913.3—Another provision for specific protects similar to the earlier General Plan, zoning and specific
plan limitations and freezing fees for 10 years
-Freezing changes on January 1, 2018 is too limiting as noted in the first three sections of the bill. And, to
the extent the language is similar to the first three sections, APA has the same concerns as noted above.
-Restricting fees to the amount in place as of January 1, 2018 is particularly problematic as is eliminating
all fees for affordable housing. There are legitimate reasons fees may either increase or decrease over
ten years and those fees and costs can't be shifted to existing residents. There is also no liability
protection offered to jurisdictions in exchange for a process that forces them to cut corners at risk to
public health and safety, And, not all jurisdictions have funding to waive fees — this is a major new
mandate.
3 C/O STEFAN/GEORGE ASSOCIATES
1333 36n STREET
SACRAMENTO CA 95816-5401
P: g16.736-2434
F: g16.456.1283
www.calapa.org
Process for proiects required to have a conditional use permit zoning variance, or other permit
In (B) (3) of 65913.10, the bill would "lock historic status at time of completeness". This will not always be
possible. If this is not done correctly, this provision could lead to the unconscionable loss of legitimately
historic building, neighborhoods, districts, cultural artifacts, and Native American tribal resources. It may
not always be possible to tell what may underlie a site at the completeness stage.
Amendments to the PSA
Language should be added to prevent the clock from running while a developer is withholding
information.
New S 65950— Limits on hearings and total approval process time
-As stated, the three hearings limit is arbitrary and may not be enough depending on the size and
complexity of the project. It also isn't clear if the limitation includes study sessions, Planning
Commissions which have specified authority under state law, or appeals.
-This section now also limits consideration and final action on a project to no longer than 12 months.
Twelve months is not nearly long enough to complete an EIR if one is required. It is important to note
that the PSA is designed to complete CEQA first and then project approval must occur within 12 months.
But since the bill now requires the CEQA timeline to be mandatory not directory, CEQA would have to be
completed within the PSA timeline. It isn't possible to meet CEQA and review comments and make
changes. Courts now are requiring much more detail and analysis and CEQA requires certain things that
take longer than the bill's timeframe. It is better not to rush it and lose in court — that takes longer.
If you have any questions, please contact our lobbyist, Sande George, with Stefan/George
Associates, sgeorge@stefangeorge.com, 916-443-5301.
Sincerely,
Eric S. Phillips
Vice President, Policy and Legislation -APA California
cc: Senate Government and Finance Committee, Republican Caucus
OPR, Governor's office
4 C/O STEFAN/GEORGE ASSOCIATES
1333 36"' STREET
SACRAMENTO CA 95816.5401
P: 916.736.2434
F: 916.456.1283
www.calapa.org