HomeMy WebLinkAboutStaff Report 1.B 03/11/2019DATE:
TO:
FROM:
SUBJECT:
0 -
March 11, 2019
Honorable Mayor and Members of the City Council through City Manager
Sue Castellucci, Housing Administrator
Consideration of the CASA compact, a 15 -Year Emergency Policy Package to
Confront the Housing Crisis in the San Francisco Bay Area
RECOMMENDATION
It is recommended that the City Council discuss, comment and provide direction or develop a
position regarding the CASA Compact.
BACKGROUND
The Bay Area faces many pressing regional problems — traffic congestion, air pollution, the
threat of earthquakes and other natural disasters to name a few. But the housing shortage has
reached crisis proportions. Since the recession ended in 2010, the Bay Area has added 722,000
jobs but constructed only 106,000 housing units. With affordable housing supply lagging
significantly behind housing demand, prices have escalated and our residents and businesses
suffer the consequences.
When Bay Area residents are polled about who is responsible for the region's housing crisis,
they spread the blame far and wide: it's the businesses who create all the jobs; it's the
developers who build the luxury housing; it's local government officials who oppose new
housing developments; it's environmental and labor interests whose demands make new housing
more expensive; it's community groups who fear the changes that new development will bring.
A task force of elected and civic leaders, convened by the Association of Bay Area Governments
(ABAG) and Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC), came together to address
housing issues over the past 18 months. They worked in the spirit of finding common ground,
working through entrenched difference and charting a course forward for the good of the region.
The resulting CASA Compact (Compact) represents an interlocking series of agreements among
the negotiating parties. Each signatory to the Compact pledges to support the entire agreement
and all of its provisions.
The City Council requested a workshop and study session for the CASA Compact. Additionally,
the Council asked that local members of the CASA committee be invited to attend and present.
Staff extended invitations to County Supervisor, David Rabbit, Rohnert Park City
Councilmember, Jake Mackenzie, and Ken Kirkey, Planning Director of ABAG/MTC.
Supervisor Rabbitt will provide a presentation, and Councilmember Mackenzie and Ken Kirkey
will answer questions. Finally, the City Council asked that arrangements be made for the guest
presenters, who are elected officials, to be provided seating at the Council Dais.
DISCUSSION
Attached is the CASA Compact, a 15 -Year Emergency Policy Package to Confront the Housing
Crisis in the San Francisco Bay Area. The Compact strives to produce new housing units,
preserve existing affordable housing units, and protect current residents from displacement.
The Compact states "Implementation of the CASA Compact will require bills to be passed in
Sacramento, it will require leadership from Governor, Gavin Newson, it will require changes in
transportation and housing policy-making at both ABAG and MTC, and it will require every
local government in the Bay Area to do their part."
The Compact seeks to raise $1.5 billion per year from a variety of taxes and fees to "preserve our
existing housing stock, subsidize the construction of more affordable housing, and provide
assistance to tenants facing eviction." It seeks to create a new Regional Housing Enterprise to
provide technical assistance to local governments, collect data to monitor our progress, and
administer any new regional funds that might be approved.
COMPACT ELEMENTS:
The core principles of the compact include:
• Shared responsibility — All sectors and interests should share the burdens and benefits
of housing the Bay Area.
• Inclusion everywhere — Find ways to include more housing at all income levels, in every
jurisdiction.
• Promote "Missing Middle" housing types — Encourage the development of smaller
homes that are more affordable by design and less likely to cause displacement.
• Stabilize communities — Preserve the historic diversity and access to opportunity in the
Bay Area.
• Balance across the Three Ps (Production, Preserving and Protecting) — Individual
components of the Compact should move together and avoid undermining each other.
• Level the playing field — the Compact should create fair, more uniform standards for the
housing development process, across the Bay Area.
• Minimize administrative burden — We should minimize new administrative
requirements and focus on strategies that can be implemented rapidly and efficiently,
The Compact proposes ten elements as described below:
Element 1: Just Cause Eviction Policy — A region -wide policy requiring landlords to pay
relocation assistance to tenants for no-fault evictions and state "just causes" for any termination
of tenancy. This would present tenants from arbitrary evictions as the landlord would need to
2
provide just causes for termination of tenancy. It would also require landlords to provide
relocation assistance for covered no-fault evictions.
Element 2: Rent Cap — Establish a Bay Area -wide rent cap that limits annual increases in rent to
no more than CPO+5% in any year for the next 15 years. Requires annual notices of allowable
rents. There are provisions that would provide landlords to passthrough capital improvements
and maintenance items to address health and safety to tenants.
Element 3: Rent Assistance and Access to legal Counsel — Provide access to free legal counsel
and emergency rent assistance to low-income tenants facing eviction. Ensuring that all tenants
facing eviction shave access to legal counsel would create a fairer justice system; prevent
evictions and homelessness; and preserve existing affordable housing.
Element 4: Remove Regulatory Barriers to Accessory Dwelling Units — Amend existing state
ADU law to remove regulatory barriers imposed by local jurisdictions for ADUs and Junior
ADUs, allow for multiple ADUs in multi -family homes, and create a small homes building code.
Element S: Minimum Zoning Near Transit — Neighborhoods surrounding rail stations would
have minimum zoning of housing up to 55 feet tall (75 fees tall with a density bonus).
Neighborhoods with "high quality bus service" would have minimum zoning of housing up to 36
feet tall on all residential, commercial, and institutional zones. Commercial parcels near job
zones would be rezoned to allow housing.
Element 6: Good Government Reforms to Housing Approval Process — Calls on state to adopt a
number of restrictions and requirements on local jurisdictions including locking rules, fees and
historic status at date of application; each jurisdiction to create and maintain up-to-date listing of
all rules, codes, and standards that apply to residential development; no more than three public
hearings on projects; impose uniform standards on impact fees; requires fee deferral programs
and other restrictions.
Element 7: Expeditated Approvals and Financial Incentives for Select Housing — Calls on state
to adopt CEQA exemptions and limit local jurisdictions review of certain projects; provides
reduced parking requirements, tax breaks, and higher densities for certain projects.
Element 8: Unlock Public Land for Affordable Housing — Calls on state to redefine definition of
surplus and underutilized properties; require local jurisdictions to create and report an inventory
of properties to the state; state housing department to refer cities to the Attorney General's Office
for infractions; allows residential development on all developable public land regardless of
zoning; require annual reporting of disposal of public sites; and other reforms.
Element 9: Funding and Financing the CASA Compact — Raise $1.5 billion in new revenue
annually from property owners, developers, employers, local governments, and tax payers to
fund the Compact. Figure 9 in the attached CASA Compact has more details on sources of
funds. Potential sources are taxes on vacant homes, parcels, new commercial developments
(which Petaluma already does with our Commercial Linkage ordinance), gross receipts of
employers; head tax, and retail sales.
Element 10: Regional Housing Enterprise — Establish a regional leadership entity to implement
the Compact, track and report progress, and provide incentives and technical assistance. Create
an independent Board.
LEGISLATIVE ACTION
Several Bay Area legislators have already introduced bills related to some of the subject matter
included in the Compact. It is certain that housing will be a major theme in Sacramento in 2019.
Not only did Governor Newson make housing a key element of this gubernatorial campaign, the
Senate recreated a stand-alone Housing Committee chaired by former Commissioner Senator
Scott Weiner. MTC anticipates that each of the ten elements of the Compact will eventually be
reflected in some form either as a substantive or a placeholder "spot" bill.
Bills Introduced Related to CASA to Date
CASA Compact Element #
1. Just Cause Eviction
2. Rent Cap
3. Legal Counsel
4. ADUs
5. Minimum Zoning
6. Good Government
7. Streamlining
8. Public Lands
9. Funding
10. Regional Housing Enterprise
FINANCIAL IMPACTS
Related Bill(s) in print
AB 724 (Wicks)
AB 36 (Bloom)
SB 18 (Skinner)
AB 69 (Ting)
SB 13 (Wieckowski)
SB 50 (Wiener)
SB 4 (McGuire) spot bill
SB 6 (Beall/McGuire) spot bill
SB 5 (Beall)
AB 13 (Chiu)
ACA 1 — (Aguiar-Curry)
The financial impacts of the CASA Compact are unknown until the proposals are put into
legislation. Some components of the Compact would add operating expenses as staff works to
implement the new legislation. The Compact's proposed revenue sources from property owners,
developers, employers and taxpayers may impact local governments ability to raise revenue in
their jurisdiction, and the Compact includes the possibility of a revenue measure tentatively
scheduled for the November 2020 ballot.
ATTACHMENTS
1. CASA Compact
2. PowerPoint
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mWe of Contents
CASAPreamble........................................................................... i
Introduction...................................................................I.......... 1
Tenant Protections
Compact Element #1: Just Cause Eviction Policy ......... . ....... . . . ............. I .......... 2
Compact Element #2: Rent Cap ............................................... . ........... 4
Compact Element #3: Rent Assistance and Access to Legal Counsel ........................... 6
Housing Inclusion and Capacity
Compact Element #4: Remove Regulatory Barriers to Accessory Dwelling Units ................. 8
Compact Element #5: Minimum Zoning near Transit ..... ................................... 10
Compact Element #6: Good Government Reforms to Housing Approval Process ................12
Approval Process and Timeline
Compact Element #7: Expedited Approvals and Financial Incentives for Select Housing .......... 14
Compact Element #8: Unlock Public Land for Affordable Housing .... .......... . ........... 16
Funding and Coordination
Compact Element #9: Funding and Financing the CASA Compact .. . ..........................18
Compact Element #10: Regional Housing Enterprise ............................... . ........ 20
Calls for Action
Call for Action: Redevelopment 2.0 ............................................ . .......... 22
Call for Action: Lower the Voter Threshold for Housing Funding Measures ..................... 22
Call for Action: Fiscalization of Land Use .................................................. 22
Call for Action: Homelessness........................................................... 23
Call for Action: Grow and Stabilize the Construction Labor Force ............................. 23
Local Best Practices......................................................................24
Appendices............................................................................ 29
The Bay Area faces many pressing
regional problems — traffic congestion,
air pollution, the threat of earthquakes
and other natural disasters, to name
a few, But the housing shortage has
reached crisis proportions. During our
remarkable run of economic expansion
since the Great Recession ended in 2010,
the Bay Area has added 722,000 jobs
but constructed only 106,000 housing
units. With housing supply and demand
that far out of whack, prices have shot
through the roof and long-time residents
as well as newcomers are suffering the
consequences.
of Bay Area Governments (ABAG)
and Metropolitan Transportation
Commission (MTC). Its three Co -
Chairs are Fred Blackwell of the
San Francisco Foundation, Leslye
Corsiglia of Silicon Valley @ Home and
Michael Covarrubias of TMG Partners.
The CASA Compact is a 15 -year
emergency policy package to confront
the region's housing crisis head-on. It
includes a series of policy reforms that
will allow the Bay Area to build more
- housing at all income levels while
"The Bay Area is in a stale of protecting tenants and low-income
great peril today, CASA is the best communities from unjust evictions and
rhrvnrn to fiv thic riicic " displacement.
In one OT ine weannlesi metropoiadn
areas on the planet, tens of thousands of
our fellow citizens are ill -housed or not
even housed at all. Many more families
are just one missed paycheck away from eviction. While
the recent wildfires have underscored the devastating
effects of suddenly losing a home, the reality is that too
many Bay Area residents face that situation every day.
FRED BLACKWELL The Compact also includes a series of
revenue recommendations needed to
preserve our existing housing stock,
subsidize the construction of more affordable housing, and
provide assistance to tenants facing eviction,
Our housing crisis is also a transportation crisis. Nearly
190,000 workers commute from outside the nine -county
Bay Area'to the business parks of Silicon Valley and the
Tri -Valley, and more than 220,000 East Bay residents
cross the toll bridges to the Peninsula
every day. Driven by the search for
reasonably -priced housing, these "super -
commuters" are clogging the roads and -
transit systems that we all rely on.
The Bay Area faces a housing crisis
because we have failed at three tasks: (1)
we have failed to produce enough housing
for residents at all income levels; (2) we
have failed to preserve the affordable
housing that already exists; and (3) we
have failed to protect current residents
from displacement where neighborhoods
are changing rapidly.
These 3 P's — Production, Preservation,
and Protection — are not only the
signposts of our collective failure, but they
should be the focus of our future efforts to
overcome the crisis we have created.
Finally, the CASA coalition proposes to create a new
Regional Housing Enterprise to provide technical
assistance to local governments, collect data to monitor
our progress, and administer any new regional funds that
might be approved. The new enterprise will not have
direct land use authority. These three R's — Reform,
; Revenue, and Regionalism — form the
"Our goal is to reach
consensus on big picture
responses that will move the
needle on housing
affordability in this region,"
crux of the CASA Compact.
Animating our work has been a
deep concern about how we grow
housing in a more inclusive manner
in all neighborhoods and not
accelerate displacement in the most
vulnerable communities. The Bay
Area's segregated housing patterns
`-j — both by race and by income — are
a legacy of decades of discriminatory
government policies and private
sector lending practices. The CASA
Compact contains specific protections
for neighborhoods and residents most
affected by that horrible history, And
while the Compact was not designed
to deal directly with all aspects of
LESLYE CORSIGLIA
What is CASA? Of course, it is the Spanish word for
"house." It is also the name of a blue-ribbon task force of
elected and civic leaders convened by the Association
i I CASA Compact
the region s chronic homelessness
problem, many of its elements should
result in more and better options to shelter this particularly
vulnerable segment of the Bay Area's population.
When Bay Area residents are polled about who is
responsible for the region's housing
crisis, they spread the blame far and
wide: it's the businesses who create
all the jobs, it's the developers who
build the luxury housing, it's local
government officials who oppose
new housing developments, it's
environmental and labor interests
whose demands make new housing
more expensive, it's community
groups who fear the changes that new
development will bring.
All those interests (and more) came
together around the CASA table for
the past 18 months. They worked
in the spirit of finding common
ground, working through entrenched
differences and charting a course
forward for the good of the region.
The resulting Compact represents
an interlocking series of agreements
among the negotiating parties. Each
signatory to the Compact pledges to
support the entire agreement and all
of its provisions.
The signatories to the CASA Compact
further pledge that their work will
not stop when they put down their
ceremonial pens. The real work will
have just begun.
Implementation of the CASA Compact
will require bills to be passed in
Sacramento, it will require leadership
from our new governor Gavin
Newsom, it will require regional ballot
measure campaigns in 2020 and the
years beyond, it will require changes
in transportation and housing policy-
making at both ABAG and MTC, and it
will require every local government in
the Bay Area to do their part.
It is a commonplace to say problems
that have been decades in the
making can't be solved overnight.
But we can't afford to take our time in
confronting the Bay Area's housing
crisis. We need to make significant
progress in the next 3-5 years.
�.
"We mast compromise, break
down silos, and set aside
differences for the greater good
of the Bay Area."
MICHAEL COVARRUBIAS
The CASA Compact is detailed,
comprehensive, and actionable. Yet, the
region's housing challenge really boils
down to a simple, quite personal question:
shouldn't our region be able to grow and
prosper while also ensuring that our kids
and grandkids can live as adults in the
neighborhoods where they grew up?
We say the answer is yes.
CASA is about what kind of place our kids
January 2019 1111
Figure A: The CASA Framework
Pipeline of
Workers to Fill
Professional
nd Construction '
Jobs
V Higher
Productivity in
the Construction
Sector Through
Innovation
Updated June 25, 2018
Neighborhood -`
Stabilization In :r
Vie,
Lobv�is�co-ne No Net Loss of'�
Communities -Deed-Restricted i
Affordable
Housing
°fm ore Funding '
and Land fo:
i Deed -Restricted
talo{ t Affordable
3 Ho€.53no
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Balance and Fit
By Sub -Region
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and
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iii I CASA Compact
Numeric
35,000 Housing Units / Year 30,000 Affordable Units
300,000 Lower -Income HHs
Targets
14,000 of Which are Affordable to 26,000 of Which are Market -Rale
Who are Extremely Rent -Burdened
Lower -Income and 7,000 to Affordable Units, and 4,000 are At-
(they spend more than 50 percent
Moderate -Income Households Risk Over the Next 5 Years
of their income on housing)
'Lenses"
Timfeframe Geographyf
Level of
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Typology of
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i' Conditions Assistance Financing Reform Education
iii I CASA Compact
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The recommendations in this Compact are the result of
an intensive dialogue among the key interests who are
collectively responsible for housing the Bay Area. Over
the course of 18 months, the Metropolitan Transportation
Commission (MTC) and the Association of Bay Area
Governments (ABAG) convened a series of structured
discussions with local government officials, developers,
major employers, labor interests, housing and policy
experts, social equity advocates and non-profit housing
providers. The goal was straightforward but by no means
simple: find common ground on a comprehensive set of
solutions to the Bay Area's housing crisis.
CASA was led by three Co -Chairs (Fred Blackwell, Leslye
Corsiglia and Michael Covarrubias), and Steve Heminger,
Executive Director of MTC/ABAG. It was structured around
a Technical Committee of policy experts and practitioners
and a Steering Committee of elected officials, thought
leaders and major employers. The Technical Committee's
role was to recommend actions for addressing the crisis.
Those recommendations went to the Steering Committee
for review, refinement and final approval. The CASA effort
was supported and staffed by MTC/ABAG and a team of
consultants. Profiles of the Co -Chairs and rosters for both
the Steering and Technical Committees are included as
appendices to this document.
Phase One: Foundational Mork (June 2017 -Jan 2018)
The first phase of the CASA process was focused
on learning, sharing perspectives, and developing a
framework for the process of developing the CASA
Compact. Experts from UC Berkeley provided in-depth
analysis of the many causes and consequences of the
crisis, ensuring that all members of the Committees were
operating from a shared base of knowledge. On the
basis of this shared understanding, the Co -Chairs and
Committee forged a detailed framework (shown as Figure
A) to shape the CASA process and the ultimate Compact.
The framework is organized around three principal
outcomes, or `Three Ps' as they became known In CASA
parlance:
1 Increasing housing production at all levels of
affordability,
2 Preserving existing affordable housing, and
3 protecting vulnerable households from housing
instability and displacement.
Phase Two: Brainstorming Action Ideas (Jan-JUly 2018)
Next, the Committees spent six months brainstorming
and vetting upwards of 30 action ideas. This process was
driven by workgroups who dedicated hundreds of hours to
meeting, researching and drafting ideas.
Community-based organizations and members of the
public also participated in generating ideas. A series of
listening sessions around the region solicited input from
vulnerable households in identifying priority actions that
CASA should consider. Members of the public also shared
ideas and feedback through public comment. Each idea
was written up and presented to the Technical Committee
for vetting, The Committee members used a "gradients
of agreement" tool to score each idea on a scale of
1-5. The Steering Committee reviewed and refined the
most promising ideas that emerged from the Technical
Committee.
Phase 3: Crafting the Compact (Sept -Dec 2018)
In the final phase, the Co -Chairs distilled the 30+ action
plans into the Compact you see before you. This happened
through an iterative process, with successive versions of
the Compact presented to both the Technical and Steering
Committees and refined based on their input.
Phase 4: CASA Implementation
CASA leadership and key members will continue to work
in cross -sector coordination with State and local elected
officials and agencies to implement the principles of the
CASA Compact.
Core Principles
Over the course of this process, the participants forged an
understanding around core principles that underpin the
recommendations in this document. These include:
1 Shared responsibility All sectors and interests should
share the burdens and benefits of housing the Bay Area.
2 Inclusion everywhere Find ways to include more
housing at all income levels, in every jurisdiction.
3 Promote `Missing Middle' housing types Encourage the
development of smaller homes,that are more affordable
by design and less likely to cause displacement.
4 Stabilize communities Preserve the historic diversity
and access to opportunity in the Bay Area.
5 Balance across the Three Ps Individual components of
the Compact should move forward together and avoid
undermining each other.
5 Level the playing field The Compact should create fair,
more uniform standards for the housing development
process, across the Bay Area.
7 Minimize administrative burden We should minimize
new administrative requirements and focus on
strategies that can be implemented rapidly and
efficiently.
January 2019 11
Compact Element #1— Just Cause Eviction Policy
Brief Summary Ensure that all Bay Area tenants are protected from arbitrary evictions by adopting a region -wide policy
requiring landlords to cite specific "just causes" (both fault and no-fault) for termination of tenancy, such as failure to pay
rent or violation of lease terms. Require landlords to provide relocation assistance for covered no-fault evictions.
Desired Effect Just cause protects tenants from arbitrary evictions. Studies show that eviction can cause health issues,
emotional trauma, school disruption for children, longer and costly commutes, and reduced wage earnings for adults. Just
cause eviction protections promote tenant stability and limit eviction -related health consequences.
References and Models Action Plan 2.1; NJ state Just Cause Law; Large cities in CA (SF, Oakland, San Jose, LA)
DETAILED PROPOSAL
Permissible causes for eviction Both fault and no-fault evictions should be allowable under a region -wide just cause
policy. Fault eviction causes should include failure to pay rent, substantial breach of a material term of the rental agreement,
nuisance, waste, or illegal conduct. No-fault causes should include owner move -in, withdrawal of unit from rental market
(Ellis Act/condo conversions), unit unsafe for habitation, or demolition/substantial rehabilitation
Coverage Just cause eviction standards should apply to all rental units except the following:
• Government owned and government subsidized housing units or housing with existing government regulatory
assessments that govern rent increases in subsidized rental units (e.g., Section 8)
• Transient and tourist hotel occupancy as defined in Civil Code Section 1940(b)
• Housing accommodations in a nonprofit hospital, religious facility, or extended care facility
• Dormitories owned and operated by an institution of higher education or a K-12 school
• Tenant shares bathroom/kitchen with the owner who maintains principal residence there
• Single owner -occupied residences including when the owner -occupant rents or leases 2 units (including ADU and JADU)
or bedrooms
• Resident -owned nonprofit housing
Waiting Period The protections should apply only after a tenant has been in occupancy (with or without a lease) for at least
12 months. All existing tenancies should be subject to these protections, effective immediately upon the policy being signed
into law.
Notice Requirements Owners should be required to provide notice to tenants at the beginning of each tenancy as to
tenant rights with copy of lease. This notice should be in the form of a lease addendum that is signed by the tenant at the
time the lease is signed. The grounds for eviction should be set forth in the notice to terminate tenancy.
If the reason for the termination is a curable lease violation, the owner should be required to provide an initial notice with an
opportunity to cure before the notice of termination. If the lease violation is related to specific illegal activity that presents
the potential for harm to other tenants, there should not be a right to cure. Separate provisions should be made for domestic
violence situations.
Relocation Assistance Relocation assistance should be provided in all covered no-fault causes where tenants have been
in occupancy for at least 12 months, except in cases where the owner is moving into the unit. At time of service of notice to
quit, the landlord should notify the tenants of their right to relocation assistance and provide payment directly to the tenant.
The amount of relocation assistance should be tiered based on number of bedrooms (see San Jose example). Relocation
assistance should be available to all qualifying tenants regardless of income.
Preemption of Local Ordinances This law should not preempt more restrictive local ordinances.
21 CASA Compact
Figure 1: Low -Income Renters in 2016 and Sensitive Communities
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January 2019 13
Compact Element #2 ® Heirit Cap
Brief Summary Establish a Bay Area -wide rent cap that limits annual increases in rent to a reasonable amount.
Desired Effect A rent cap would prevent extreme increases in rent on a year-to-year basis, thereby decreasing the number
of households who are at risk of displacement and homelessness, decreasing the number of households who are rent
burdened, and promoting tenant and community stability. Extreme rent increases can pose a particular burden for tenants
who are low and fixed income. The rent cap can be extended after the emergency period. Figure 2 maps the many Bay Area
communities at risk of displacement.
References and Models Action Plans 1.1, 1.2,1.3; Existing State Anti -Gouging Law in States of Emergency
DETAILED PROPOSAL
Cap on Annual Rent Increase For an emergency period (15 years), no landlord should increase rent by more than CPI+S% in
any year of tenancy. The notice of allowable rent increase should be provided annually.
Vacancy Provision The cap on rent increase should apply to the renter, not the unit.
Coverage The following unit types should be exempt from the cap:
• Affordable housing properties governed by regulatory agreements;
• ADUs on owner -occupied properties;
• Dormitories.
Pass-Throughs, Banking and Capital Improvements If rent has declined or if landlord has not increased rents for several
consecutive years, landlords should be able to bank those unused rent increases for 3-5 years. When drawing upon banked
rent increases, landlords should not be allowed to increase rents more than 10-15% annually.
A landlord should be able to pass through actual operating expense increases including water and sewer, wastewater,
trash, electric and gas using industry standards such as the RUBS system (Ratio Utility Billing System). The costs of capital
improvements inclusive of a 4% return on investment that are necessary to maintain the building(s) with reasonable
upgrades and maintenance items to address health and safety, shall be allowed to be passed through to tenants on an
amortized basis, per IRS standards.
Preemption of Local Ordinances This law should not preempt more restrictive local ordinances.
State of Emergency Rent cap shall be evaluated before any extension is granted to study impact of rent cap on housing
market overall.
Administration This Compact Element will likely require some type of oversight function.
41 CASA Compact
Figure 2: Map of Displacement Risk
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Not Losing I I Households, or VO fy fatly Stag"
_VT%f.
Al Risk of Displacement
In
WO5adi e"W
Undergoing Displacement
Advanced Exclusion
Urban - Built Up Area
Ella
S ensitivo Comm uni ty Areas
-
60
0AIAnd
W4"
rt
10
0 4 1 tt
January
2019 15
Compact Element #3 — Rent Assistance and Access to Legal Counsel
Brief Summary For low-income tenants facing eviction, provide access to free legal counsel and emergency rent
assistance.
Desired Effect Access to a lawyer can be the difference between losing a home and keeping it. Ensuring that all tenants
facing eviction have access to legal counsel would create a fairerjustice system; prevent evictions and homelessness;
improve health, stability, and opportunity for thousands of residents including children; and preserve existing affordable
housing.
Non-payment of rent is the leading cause of evictions in the Bay Area, Figure 3 shows rent increase trends in the Bay
Area. An emergency rent assistance program would assist in cases where tenants have an urgent, temporary financial
gap. It would help tenants stay in their homes, preventing evictions, periods of marginal housing, and homelessness for
households at risk of eviction due to financial instability.
There is a recognition of the importance of keeping people housed, and a significant portion of funding identified to help
with housing instability will likely be earmarked to emergency rental assistance.
This Compact Element is not intended to supersede any local government programs that might be more expansive than
what is contemplated herein.
References and Models Action Plans 3.1 and 4.1; SF Prop F (June 2018); New York City; Santa Clara County Emergency
Assistance Network
DETAILED PROPOSAL
Legal Representation All tenants who are faced with legal proceedings to evict them from their residence should have
access to legal counsel, except when eviction proceedings are brought by a landlord or master tenant who resides in the
same dwelling unit or property with tenant. The term "legal representation" should mean full scope representation provided
to an individual by a designated organization or attorney which includes, but is not limited to, filing responsive pleadings,
appearing on behalf of the tenant in court proceedings, and providing legal advice.
Emergency Rent Assistance Low-income tenants facing eviction and homelessness due to non-payment of rent should be
eligible to receive emergency rent assistance. This assistance should be targeted to tenants who have an urgent, temporary
financial gap and are at high risk for becoming homeless if evicted. The Regional Housing Enterprise (see Compact Element
#10) should establish guidelines and policies for administering the program, including how to determine eligibility. The
regional agency should identify, fund and oversee local service providers (public or non-profit) to carry out the program.
Cap on Assistance The amount of total assistance should be capped at $5,000 - $10,000 per tenancy.
Landlord Obligation Landlord obligation should be limited to providing an addendum notice of this access in the lease and
eviction notice. Landlord should have no payment or any other obligations. If a tenant fails to seek legal counsel, it will not
impede eviction proceedings for the landlord.
Means Testing Emergency rental assistance should be limited to those whose incomes do not exceed 80% of AMI. Legal
services should be provided to all qualifying tenants regardless of income.
Funding Generate significant funds through Compact Element #9 to fund regional access to legal counsel and emergency
rent assistance. Pro-bono counsel for tenants shall be encouraged.
6 1 CASA Compact
Figure 3: Map of Rent Increases, 2010-2016
Hap
WAIMT
i4l
r?W1I;IIA
It
-
9@j0
I Ir
b.1
4 9 r4
A
e
(wh
0%)
k
San
rranttstn
A, Umedo
CT
t .4. '.6y W, d
Rent Increases, 2011
to 2016
Att I it
od,
Wo Change, by Census Tracts)
Decrease greater than 30%
Decrease 15 to 30S
Decrease 5 to 15%.
Minimal Change,
Increase 5 to 1550
juk 54 4 441�.
Increase 15 to 3046
ESanta
, than
increase greater 30Y)
T�-
f [;It'.l
$eulflve (ommunityke4s
Z—
PIC
January 2019 17
Brief Summary Extend current Bay Area best practices regarding Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) to every jurisdiction in
the region. Amend existing state ADU law to remove regulatory barriers including ministerial approval for ADUs and Junior
ADUs in residential zones, allowance for multiple ADUs in multi -family homes, and creation of a small homes building code
(AB 2890 Ting).
Desired Effect Existing single-family homes make up a significant portion of the region's land base. Local best practices
in the region today allow both an ADU and Junior ADU on single family lots and multiple ADUs in existing multi -family
buildings with ministerial approval. See Figure 4 for a prototypical ADU. Expanding these best practices regionwide would
allow for a rapid increase in more affordable homes, and would help stabilize cost -burdened homeowners by creating
a new source of income. If 20% of the region's 1.5 million single-family homeowners choose to build an ADU; this policy
could create 300,000 new homes distributed throughout existing neighborhoods. This includes about 50,000 new units in
Priority Development Areas alone.
References and Models Action Plans 10.3,10.4; UCB Chapple 2014; UCB Terner Center 2017; Legislative history SB 1069,
AB 2890; Arlington VA, Portland OR, Seattle WA, Vancouver BC, State of Oregon Tiny Homes Code,
DETAILED PROPOSAL
Local Standards for ADUs (see AB 2890 Ting) New state law should require local jurisdictions in the Bay Area to
encourage the creation of ADUs as follows:
• Require ministerial approval for both an ADU and a Junior ADU (JADU) in all residential zones including in rear yards or by
division of existing homes into two units;
• ADUs receiving ministerial permits should not be used for short-term rentals;
• Encourage forgiveness of code violations (except health and safety) in grandfathered ADUs;
• Apply the Housing Accountability Act's provisions for determining project consistency.
Sprinklers should be required for ADUs if required under the building code for comparable home construction. Use of
unlicensed contractors under "owner builder" permits shall be discouraged by requiring that a statement of owner liability
be provided when the building permit is issued.
Impact Fees Require impact fees for ADUs and tiny homes to be charged (1).on a per -square -foot basis and (2) only on net
new living area over 500 sq. ft. per accessory unit.
Small and Tiny Homes Building Code State law should create a building code for small homes and wheeled homes to
reduce non -safety code requirements that disproportionately make small homes and tiny homes infeasible including energy
standards, appliance and room sizes, and similar requirements. Life -safety standards must be upheld.
Owner Occupancy Local jurisdictions should be encouraged to adopt owner occupancy requirements for properties
containing ADUs. If owner occupancy is required, reasonable annual monitoring programs that rely on existing published
documents should be established.
8 1 CASA Compact
square reer 4ya _ 7� ,
Year built 2003
Construction New
construction
Total Cost $777k
Jurisdiction Pacifica
Neighborhood Sharp Park
Designer
Daly City
wl er Pacifica
se member
AMn
r y
Unit S �ciflcs �'
p
y„
_ r
I
Compact Element #5 ® Minirawn Zoningnear Transit
Brief Summary This element includes three components. In neighborhoods served by high quality bus service, establish
minimum zoning on all residential, commercial, and institutional zones to allow `missing middle' housing types up to 36' tall.
In neighborhoods surrounding the region's major transit stops (rail stations and ferry terminals), establish minimum zoning to
allow midrise residential housing up to 55' tall (75' tall with a density bonus). Allow sensitive communities to defer rezoning
above 36' while they develop context -sensitive plans. On large commercial=zoned parcels located near job centers, make
housing an allowable use. For projects with 20 units or more, require inclusion of affordable units.
Desired Effect This policy would create an inclusive mix of homes near transit and jobs, consistent with the goals of Plan
Bay Area. It would spur the development of `missing middle' housing types that are within reach of working families and
blend into existing neighborhoods. This type of housing is common in pre-war neighborhoods of the East Bay and Peninsula
but has largely been zoned out of existence in recent decades.
References and Model Policies SB 827 (Wiener, 2017). CASA Action Plans 8.2,10.3,10.5, 10.6
DETAILED PROPOSAL '
Minimum Zoning Near Transit The state should establish minimum zoning for housing in neighborhoods served by existing
high-quality transit as follows:
• High quality bus service Residential uses up to 36' tall with development standards (such as lot coverage, setbacks,
density limits, and maximum unit size) should be allowed within 1/2 mile of bus stops with at least 15 -minute headways
at peak periods and 30 -minute headways on weekends (as defined in SB 827).
• Major transit stop Residential uses up to 55' tall (75' tall with density bonus) that have development standards similar
to those above (such as lot coverage, setbacks, density limits, and maximum unit size) should be allowed within 1/4
-mile radius of major transit stops (rail stations and ferry terminals).
Development standards such as setbacks, unit sizes and lot coverage requirements should apply. Neither development
standards nor other zoning and design controls should mandate densities lower than those prescribed above. These shall
not be used to reduce density where higher local standards or plans apply.
Housing Overlay on Large Low -Density Commercial Sites The state should establish minimum zoning for housing on low-
density commercial sites above a certain acreage that are located within the transit areas defined above.
Tenant Protections and Preservation All sites rezoned under this policy should be subject to tenant protections, demolition
controls and no net loss provisions. Sites occupied by a mobile home park, public housing, or Single Room Occupancy
(SRO) built prior to the effective date of the enabling legislation should not be eligible for rezoning.
Affordable Housing Requirements Onsite affordable housing should be required at levels not less than state density
bonus law. Projects with 10-20 units should have the option to pay an in -lieu fee. This in -lieu fee should be deferred or
waived for units that are sold or rented at or below missing middle income levels. This fee should be imposed at the time of
sale. Funds generated by this fee should be deposited into a local or regional housing fund.
Sensitive Communities If a major transit stop is located in or adjacent to a sensitive community, up -zoning above 36'
should be automatically deferred for a period of up to 5 years while the jurisdiction develops a context -sensitive plan for
that community. If the community so chooses, it may opt into up -zoning to 55' without a deferral period or community plan.
The decision to opt in should be made by the local legislative body (city council or board of supervisors) and must involve
consultation with residents of the sensitive community and at least one public hearing. Sensitive community areas represent
the intersection of disadvantaged and vulnerable communities as defined by the following Bay Area regional agencies: MTC
and the SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission (BCDC). See Figure 5 for the map of these Transit Access and
Sensitive Community Areas.
Labor Standards The residential development shall comply with all applicable labor, construction, employment, and
wage standards otherwise required by law and any other generally applicable requirement regarding the approval
of a development project, including, but not limited to, the local government's conditional use or other discretionary
permit approval process, the California Environmental Quality Act, or a streamlined approval process that includes labor
protections.
10 1 CASA Compact
Figure 5:Map ofTransit Access and Sensitive Community Areas
'�n
Jose
San Franessco
Oakland
unn vale
C AN
Transit Access Areas
Major Yransit Slops - Rail and Ferry
Sensitive Community Areas
January 201g|11
Compact Element #6 ® Good Government Reforrns to Housing Approval Process
Brief Summary Establish 'good government' standards for the entitlement and permitting of zoning -compliant residential
projects. Require transparency and consistency in how residential impact fees are set and enforced. Figure 6 shows how
complicated the approval process for housing can be in California.
Desired Effect Research by the UC Berkeley Terner Center for Housing Innovation demonstrates that local government
impact fees and inclusionary requirements, when combined with regulatory uncertainty and record -high construction
costs, have made it economically infeasible to build a standard mid -rise housing project in many parts of the Bay Area. The
American Planning Association recommends that local governments should restore direct reliance on adopted plans and
create transparency, predictability, reliability and timeliness to the housing approval's process.
References and Model Policies CASA Action Plan 12.1; Terner Center Report on Fee Costs; Berkeley Law Land Use Study;
Roseville fee transparency
DETAILED PROPOSAL
Standards for Processing Zoning -Compliant Residential Applications with Fewer than 500 Units Local jurisdictions
should be required to process zoning -compliant residential development applications in accordance with the following
standards:
• Each jurisdiction should create and maintain an up-to-date listing of all rules, codes and standards that apply to residential
development applications. This information should be made available online and in print.
• Rules, fees and historic status should be locked at the date of application completeness which shall be defined as
providing only the elements on the agency's written application material.
• The jurisdiction should require no more than three de novo public hearings on a zoning -compliant residential application.
• Building permits should expire if not used in 24 months, with flexibility to adapt to changing economic conditions and other
extenuating circumstances.
• Jurisdictions should apply the Housing Accountability Act's standards for project consistency and remedies..
Standards for Impact Fees State law should create a set of uniform standards and requirements for Bay Area jurisdictions
to follow when imposing impact fees on new residential development, as recommended by the UC Berkeley Terner Center:
• Every jurisdiction should conduct a comprehensive review and assessment of, their fees to better understand the
aggregate costs imposed.
• When determining the amount of fees to charge to new residential projects, jurisdictions should adhere to a standardized
methodology and set of objective standards, rather than the current "reasonableness" test which is overly broad.
• Every jurisdiction should create and maintain an up-to-date fee schedule in a publicly accessible format.
• Adopt fee deferral programs which allow builders to pay some fees later in the development process.
Standards for Inclusionary Zoning State law should establish that programs which require inclusion, such as density
bonus, local inclusionary requirements, housing impact fees and in -lieu fees, should not be additive. Require that in -lieu
fees should be an option for fulfilling inclusionary requirements imposed without the density bonus. Existing local policies
should be grandfathered in.
Standards for Downzoning and Moratoria The State should create standards that govern the circumstances in which local
governments downzone or impose building moratoria in existing or planned residential neighborhoods in urbanized areas.
Such actions run counter to state housing law and should only be undertaken to address an immediate crisis, such as a
health and safety hazard or protection of low-income families at risk of displacement.
Report Impositions That May Suppress Housing above the Hard Cost of Housing Construction Jurisdictions should
annually document all local agency impositions that increase the hard cost (excluding labor and materials) of housing
construction, including fees and inclusionary zoning requirements. This information should be included in the jurisdiction's
annual Housing Element report.
12 1 CASA Compact
Figure 6: Typical Local Housing ApprovalProcesses and Tirneframes
Larger project (35-50unkd.
public review and appeals process
Plans submitted
(including pre-SUbmittal meeting)
Appeals to
Planning
� Commission
-1% L
HeahngOfficer or
Checked for conformity QCEQA Planning Commission Determination
Staff work required /i.e. analysis, staff NPublic notification, public hearing
reports, etc.) - CEQA documents prepared Q:T
Source: the Terner Center for Housing Innovation, UC Berkeley, 2018
January 2U19|13
Compact Element #7 — Expedited rov i and Financial Incentives for Select Housing
Brief Summary Ensure timely approval of zoning -compliant housing projects and create financial incentives for enabling
on-site affordability and prevailing wages. This streamlining policy will provide another option for projects that may not
benefit from SB 35. This policy does not amend or replace SB 35. Allow Sensitive Communities to defer implementation
while they develop a context -sensitive plan.
Desired Effect This policy would make it possible to build more housing projects while addressing the critical shortage
of housing labor, curbing unsafe labor practices, and providing on-site affordability for missing -middle income ranges that
are not eligible for other sources of subsidy. By harnessing future tax increment from the proposed housing development
itself, local jurisdictions can get more affordable units built with less public subsidy. All taxing agencies will benefit from
the multiplier effect of new construction beyond the project site. By providing expedited approvals, these projects will be
approved and built more quickly. The intent of this element is that it does not overrule local inclusionary zoning.
Models and References SB 35 (Wiener,2017); New York tax abatement; Action Plans Referenced 12.2, 12.3,17.1, 17.2
DETAILED PROPOSAL
Streamlined Review Process state law should create a new, expedited review process for residential projects that meet
thresholds outlined below. These projects should be granted a statutory CEQA exemption and should be subject to a
limited discretionary review process. Projects should be approved within one year and should be subject to no more than
three de novo public hearings.
Qualifying Projects To qualify for streamlined review, projects should meet all of the following criteria:
• Complies with existing zoning standards;
• Located in an existing urbanized area;
• Eligible sites as defined in SB 35;
• Restricts at least twenty percent (20%) of onsite housing units to middle-income households through recorded long-term
deed restrictions (that may range from 80% to 150% of AMI depending on localized rents and market conditions) with an
average affordability not to exceed 110% AMI;
• Provides prevailing wages and safe working conditions for all workers;
• Utilizes apprentice labor to grow the construction workforce;
• Complies with all proposed labor standards contained in SB 35 and shall include prevailing wages and trained
apprentices to help grow the construction workforce.
Financial Incentives to Offset Costs Qualifying projects should receive financial incentives to offset the costs associated
with providing income -restricted housing units and higher wages. Incentives could include some combination of the
following:
• Fifteen years of property tax increment abatement, modeled on the New York City program. Abatement should be
structured so that units rented or sold at missing middle prices (i.e., 150% AMI or less) receive full abatement, and units
rented or sold above this shall receive a lesser abatement (i.e., 50% -75% abatement)
• Cap impact fees at a reasonable level that allows project feasibility targeted to regional median
• Density bonus of 35%
• Parking reduced to 50% of local requirement (at the discretion of the developer)
• Relief from strict liability standards for ownership housing
Sensitive Communities Implementation of this policy in sensitive communities should be automatically deferred for a
period of up to 5 years where the local jurisdiction should develop a context -sensitive plan for that community. If a Sensitive
Community so chooses, it may opt to implement this policy effective immediately. The decision to opt in should be made by
the local legislative body (city council or board of supervisors) and must involve consultation with residents of the sensitive
community, and at least one public hearing. Sensitive community areas represent the intersection of disadvantaged
and vulnerable communities as defined by the following Bay Area regional agencies: MTC, SF Bay Conservation and
Development Commission (BCDC), and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District. See Figure 5 for the map of these
Transit Access and Sensitive Community Areas.
141 CASA Compact
Figure 7: Regional Housing Production is Worst for the "Missing Middle"
Affordable Housing Permits are Lower Than Identified Need
2007-2014 Housing Need (RHNA)
2007-2014 Housing Production
200,000 -- -,
2010-2015 Job Growth
05,030
87 933
High -Income
January 2019 115
Compact Element #S — Uvilock Public Laud fol' Affolrdable Ho hi
Brief Summary Promote increased utilization of public land (surplus and underutilized) for affordable housing through a
variety of legislative and regulatory changes, as well as the creation of new regional coordination and planning functions.
Desired Effect Encourage the reuse of public land for creation of mixed-income/affordable housing by reducing barriers to
development on public land. See Figure 8 for the largest public agency landowners near public transit.
References and Models Action Plans 16.1;16.2; Puget Sound region including Seattle; Enterprise; MTC/ABAG Study.
DETAILED PROPOSAL
Support reforms introduced in AB 2065 (Ting, 2017)
• Respond to the issue of charter cities and the requirement that all cities comply with State surplus lands law
• Create clear definition of "surplus" and "underutilized."
• Require cities, counties, State agencies, and all public agencies to create a full inventory of their publicly -owned sites and
report them to HCD.
• Direct HCD to develop a statewide public lands database that will include all publicly -owned sites in the State of
California, starting with a pilot in the Bay Area. The database will also include information on present uses. HCD would
enforce a revised State Surplus Land Act with referral power to the Attorney General's Office for infractions.
Amend State Housing Element Law to:
• Allow residential uses on all developable public land, regardless of zoning, by establishing a presumption in Housing
Element Law that homes may be built on public land meeting certain criteria (e.g., not parkland).
• Require that Housing Elements include a discussion of the jurisdiction's policies and plans to encourage the development
of affordable housing on these sites.
• Require jurisdictions to report annually through housing element progress reports how they disposed of public and
surplus sites.
• State and regional agencies should give preference in screening and scoring projects for discretionary funds to public
agency project sponsors that dispose of surplus lands for affordable housing.
Regulatory and Process Changes
• Require State agencies to comply with the State Surplus Land Act and make surplus and underutilized property available
for affordable housing, including deploying 10% of underutilized/surplus property for affordable housing on an annual
basis.
• Amend State law time frames for surplus land disposition to expedite the process to no more than 24 months.
• Competitive funding programs for affordable housing, including the Low -Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) and
Affordable Housing & Sustainable Communities (AHSC) programs, should reward additional points to projects that
propose affordable development on public land.
• The State of California should review its spatial guidelines for public facilities (i.e., schools) to evaluate potential for
changes that could open up land for housing without compromising the quality of on-site public services.
Labor Standards Public lands released for housing should include policies that help expand the trained labor pool
available for housing construction including requirements for trained apprentices and prevailing wages. Exceptions to these
requirements should be made for temporary housing built to address an emergency, and for housing built with volunteer
labor (see Labor Code § 1720.4). Temporary housing shall be defined as follows:
• Designed and constructed to be relocatable and transportable over public streets.
• Floor area of 500 square feet or less when measured at the most exterior walls.
• Sited upon a temporary foundation in a manner that is designed to permit easy removal.
• Designed to be removed within three (3) years of installation.
16 1 CASA Compact
Figure 8: Top Ten Landowners for Publicly -Owned Parcels Suitable for Housing Near Transit
Publicly -Owned
Land
),-t C�r if, m%(fi, lf'�}'.'-
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) District
91
229
Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority
26
178
(VTA)
State of California
17
42
City/County of San Francisco
18
26
San Mateo County Transit District (SamTrans)
11
18
Union City Community Redevelopment
6
15
County of Santa Clara
7
15
City of Oakland
19
10
City of San Jose
5
8
Suisun City
17
8
Source: MTC
January 2019 117
Compact Element #9 — Funding i cine act
Brief Summary Raise $1.5 billion in new revenue annually from a broad range of sources, including property owners,
developers, employers, local governments and the taxpayers, to fund implementation of the CASA Compact. While not all
revenue ideas in Figure 9 will be implemented, no one sector would bear the burden on its own. No more than one revenue
idea should be implemented under each of the five categories.
Desired Effect The Compact identifies a range of strategies to protect tenants, preserve affordability and produce new
units. Many of the strategies, such as "Access to Legal Counsel," building 14,000 new subsidized housing units annually, and
preserving 26,000 market -rate units as permanently subsidized units for lower-income households, require an infusion of
new revenue.
References and Models The entire CASA Compact
DETAILED PROPOSAL
Funding gap CASA estimates that the funding gap to implement the Compact is $2.5 billion per year over the next 15
years. CASA proposes to meet $1.5 billion of this deficit with regional and local self-help measures. The remainder would be
funded from additional state and federal sources. Any regional impositions that duplicate similar local impositions shall be
reduced proportionally.
Potential sources New revenue could be raised through fees or taxes. In principle, new revenue would be raised from
a range of sources to spread the responsibility among different sectors of the economy. These sources may include
property owners, developers, employers, local governments and taxpayers. CASA also recommends exploring with other
stakeholders whether a `mega measure' involving transportation and housing could be pursued. The Compact identifies a
menu of options (for further details see Figure 9)
A. Vacant Homes Tax levied on property owners;
B. Parcel Tax levied on property owners (residential and commercial);
C. Commercial Linkage Fee charged to developers;
D. Gross Receipts Tax levied on employers;
E. Head Tax levied on employers;
F. Revenue Set Asides for Redevelopment Agencies (local governments);
G. Revenue Sharing Contribution into a region -wide housing program for local governments;
H. 1i4 -cent Sales Tax: and
I. General Cbl�gation Bonds. reissued every five years.
Allocation formula New revenues would be allocated by the following shares:
Up to 10 percent for local jurisdiction incentives (including funding for hiring more building inspectors);
• Up to 10 percent for tenant protection services;
• Up to 20 percent for preservation; and
• A minimum of 60 percent for subsidized housing production.
Distribution formula New revenues would be distributed by the following shares (total expenditures would still meet the
allocation formula (see above), and be subject to objective performance standards and outcomes):
• 75 percent to county of origin (return to source); and
• 25 percent to a regional program (revenue-sharing).
Labor Standards Public funding through CASA shall include a requirement for trained apprentices and prevailing wages.
Projects under a certain size should be required to comply with existing wage and labor laws and standards.
Administration Revenue collection and disbursement would be managed by the Regional Housing Enterprise (RHE)
described in Compact Element #10. New revenue would be authorized based on fund source but may include state
enabling legislation, a decision of the RHE board, or a vote of the people in the Bay Area.
18 1 CASA Compact
tom' $100 million
1 percent
Vacant Homes Tax on the
assessed value of vacant home,
region -wide
Vancouver adopted an Empty
Homes Tax of 1 percent in 2016
Oakland adopted a Vacant
Property (parcel) Tax of $3,000
to 6,000 in 2018
$100 million
48 per year
Parce! Tax, region -wide
Bay Area approved Measure AA
for S12 per year in 2016
Key
Voter Approval
State Legislation
Policy Benefit Ul
Fee Imposition
Wit) $200 million
$5.20 per s. ft.
Commercial Linkage Fee
on new construction; variable
rates based on number of
workers at location, jobs -housing
ratio of host jurisdiction, and
location within or outside transit -
served areas, region -wide
38 jurisdictions in the Bay Area
have a commercial linkage fee,
with a median of $10 per sq. ft.
Jurisdictions with an existing
linkage fee (which is set aside for
housing) will get a credit
0 $200 million
$10 per sq. f.
Flat Commercial Linkage Fee
on new construction, region -wide
$200 million
0,1%-0.75%
Gross Receipts Tax,
variable rates based on sector
and firm size, region -wide
Almost half the jurisdictions in
the Bay Area charge some form
of gross receipts tax, often as a
business tax
Small businesses would be
exempt from the tax. Employers
in a jurisdictions with an existing
tax will get a credit
C $200 million
$40.120 per job
Head Tax; variable rates based
on number of employees, jobs -
housing ratio and transit access,
region -wide
Mountain View adopted a Head
Tax of up to $149 in 2018
t $200 million
25 percent
Redevelopment Revenue Set -
Aside for affordable housing in
TPAs (including portion for
schools and special districts),
statewide
Former Redevelopment
Agencies were required to set
aside 20 percent of their revenue
towards affordable housing
(. $100 million
20 percent
Revenue Sharing Contribution
from future property tax growth,
region -wide
Minneapolis -St. Paul adopted a
seven -county Fiscal Disparities
Program (tax -base sharing) in
1971 that pools 40 percent of
future revenue increase
5400 million
1/4. -cent
Sales Tax, region -wide
Most jurisdiction have local sales
taxes. Could be linked to `point of
sale" and e-commerce
legislation. Could be folded into a
"mega -measure" that incudes
funding for transportation,
$100 million
5 -Yr. Terra
General Obligahon Bonds,
issued by a regional housing
enterprise, renewed every five
years, region -wide
CZI-TSFF InitiatAe
Policy and Infrastructure Funds
Compact Element #10 — Regional Housing Enterprise
Brief Summary Establish a regional leadership entity to implement the CASA Compact, track and report progress, and
provide incentives and technical assistance. The entity must be governed by an independent board with representation from
key stakeholder groups that helped develop the Compact. The housing entity would not play a regulatory/enforcement role.
Desired Effect Existing regional agencies either do not have the mandate (e.g., the Metropolitan Transportation
Commission) or the resources/tools (e.g., the Association of Bay Area Governments) to directly tackle the region's pressing
displacement and affordable housing crisis. The CASA Compact will set a bold region -wide agenda for addressing
protection of existing tenants, preservation of existing affordable units and production of both market -rate and subsidized
units. To implement this agenda, a broad coalition of stakeholders, who have helped shape the CASA Compact, must stay
engaged with state legislative advocacy, building support for raising new revenue and financing programs, tracking and
monitoring progress, keeping the public engaged, and taking a regional approach to challenges such as homelessness. A
regional approach can balance inequities and imbalances across multiple'jurisdictions that have to contend with varying
market strengths, fiscal challenges and staff expertise.
Models New York City Housing Development Corporation (housing finance); Twin Cities (revenue-sharing)
References The entire CASA Compact
DETAILED PROPOSAL
Board Structure and Governance CASA recommends establishing a Regional Housing Enterprise (RHE) to coordinate and
lead implementation of the CASA Compact. State law should establish an independent board, with broad representation
from MTC, ABAG and key stakeholder groups that helped develop the CASA Compact, See Figure 10 for a graphic
depiction of the RHE.
Authority The state should form the RHE through an act of legislation and give it authority to collect new revenue (through
fees or taxes); disburse the revenue to programs and projects in the expenditure plans (consistent with the CASA Compact);
purchase, lease and hold land; and provide direct assistance. The RHE will not have regulatory authority.
Roles and Responsibilities
Revenue administration and debt issuance — Using the authority to levy fees and seek voter approval to impose taxes
for housing, the RHE may collect and disburse new funding, issue debt as needed, and allocate funding to protection,
preservation and production programs, as laid out in the CASA Compact.
Land leasing and disposition — The RHE may act on behalf of the related public agency to lease or purchase land for
housing development and assemble parcels, when appropriate. The RHE may hold and bank land, based on market
conditions.
Monitoring and reporting — The RHE will coordinate with MTC/ABAG and local jurisdictions to collect specified data
(including on local housing performance), conduct research and analysis, and disseminate information as part of its
monitoring and reporting role. The RHE may also conduct an evaluation of its program to improve stated CASA outcomes.
Enhanced technical assistance — The RHE may coordinate with MTC/ABAG to provide extensive support and technical
assistance to local jurisdictions (especially smaller jurisdictions with limited staff capacity), education and awareness for
stakeholders (such as tenants and landlords), and communication materials for the broader.public.
Oversight of protections programs — While the RHE will not have an administrative role in implementing tenant protection
policies, the board would provide oversight when allocating funding.
Staffing The RHE will be supported by the consolidated staff of MTC/ABAG, with additional staff added in specialized areas
such as debt issuance, land leasing and disposition, financing projects, etc.
Administration This state -enabled policy package in the CASA Compact will be implemented by the RHE. Some capacity
would be needed at the local and county -level to implement the protection strategies.
20 1 CASA Compact
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January 2019 121
The CASA Compact sets a bold region -wide agenda for addressing the protection of existing tenants, preservation of
existing affordable units and production of both market -rate and subsidized units. The CASA Compact Elements represent
key reforms that were developed through an intensive 18 -month process encompassing multiple stakeholders and
constituencies. Supportive state action on the issues outlined below in concert with the implementation of the CASA
Compact will fundamentally "turn the tide" on the Bay Area's housing crisis.
Cali for Action: Redevelopment 2.0
Background: The elimination of redevelopment agencies in California severely restricted the production of affordable housing and
market rate housing in the Bay Area. Prior to dissolution, redevelopment agencies in the region provided $200 million in annual
funding for affordable housing that was highly leveraged with other funding sources. In addition, redevelopment agencies provided
funding, expertise and infrastructure to advance the production of market rate housing in mixed-use, infill developments. CASA
supports the development of a new redevelopment framework to advance the production of extremely low, very low, and low-
income housing, and to leverage funding for mixed income, infill housing.
CASA Call for Action: Pass legislation enabling the re-establishment of redevelopment in California to provide a significant source of
new funding for affordable and mixed income development. Redevelopment agencies should be focused on development activities
that are audited regularly, with local projects subject to state level reviews. A new redevelopment framework in California should
reinforce a strong link between housing and jobs and transit. Funding should be designed to leverage other sources, including new
regional funding through the implementation of the CASA Compact.
References: The entire CASA Compact
Call for Action: Lower the Voter Threshold for Housing Funding measures
Background: Bay Area voters have demonstrated — through their past approval of major transportation, school, housing, and water
bonds — that they understand the importance of investing in the region's future. Although Bay Area voters have passed a significant
number of funding measures to expand the supply of affordable housing, on too many occasions an overwhelming majority of voters
have supported new funding but the final tally fell short of the two-thirds majority needed for approval under current state law. When
provided the opportunity, voters supported lowering the voter threshold for school bonds to a 55 percent vote. The well-being of
California's children was a motivating factor in lowering the voter threshold for school funding. Ensuring that future generations, our
children and grandchildren, have the housing opportunities they will need to remain in the Bay Area is a central purpose of the CASA
Compact.
CASA Call for Action: Pass legislation that will provide voters statewide with the opportunity to apply a 55 percent threshold for
investments in affordable housing and housing production. This legislative priority is critical to the successful implementation of the
CASA Compact — and to the Bay Area's prosperity and quality of life.
References: The entire CASA Compact
Call for Action: Fiscalization of Land Use
Background: Under Proposition 13, local jurisdictions in California are "paid more" for commercial land uses than for housing. This
"fiscalization of land use" is a central factor in the Jobs -Housing Imbalance that exists in the Bay Area resulting in long commutes,
traffic congestion and a diminished quality of life for millions of Bay Area residents. The California Tax Code in effect punishes
cities that build more housing and rewards cities that build commercial space without commensurate housing for workers and their
families. To address the revenue imbalance related to new housing, jurisdictions have raised impact fees and other development
requirements that make housing even more expensive so that cities and counties may maintain infrastructure and provide for the
needs of existing residents.
CASA Call for Action: Pass legislation that will return e-commerce/internet sales tax revenues to the point of sale — not the point of
distribution as currently mandated — to provide cities that have a significant residential base with a commensurate fiscal stimulus for
new housing. Also pass legislation that will change the Proposition 13 property tax allocation formula to provide jurisdictions building
more housing with a higher share of property tax revenue.
References: CASA Elements # 9 and # 10.
22 1 CASA Compact
Call for Action: Homelessness
Background: The Bay Area has one of the largest and least sheltered homeless populations in North America. The proliferation
of homeless encampments from select urban neighborhoods to locations across the region is the most visible and arguably
disheartening manifestation of the Bay Area's extreme housing affordability crisis. Although this is one of the most prosperous
regions in the world, every night thousands of people sleep on our streets. The complexity and scale of homelessness in the Bay
Area has increased exponentially as previously housed people including families with children, veterans, and senior citizens cannot
find shelter. In the nation's most expensive housing market, commonplace life circumstances (e.g., illness, job loss, and separation/
divorce) result in too many of our neighbors being unable to afford monthly rent, resulting in a downward spiral to homelessness.
CASA Call for Action: California is experiencing an affordability and housing crisis that is negatively impacting thousands of
Californians. The work of CASA has endeavored to put forth a package of policy interventions to house the Bay Area. Homelessness
is a humanitarian crisis that is deeply impacting the entire Bay Area. CASA recognizes that homelessness is a regional issue that
requires alignment across geographies in order to tackle this problem. CASA's funding package must include resources that help
produce housing for formerly homeless people, prevent homelessness when possible and make homelessness rare, brief and non -
reoccurring.
References: The following CASA Elements include measures to reduce the region's unhoused population, provide more temporary
options for homeless housing, and streamline approvals of permanent homeless housing developments which are often strongly
opposed by project neighbors:
CASA Elements 923 - Tenant Protections: Critical to stabilize households and reduce displacement from housing that has caused a
significant rapid rise in the unhoused population.
CASA Element 4 — Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs)/Tiny Homes: Create more housing options for populations vulnerable to
economic setback, including seniors or their family members, disabled family members, students and Section 8 recipients, by
allowing more of the smallest naturally affordable home types in every neighborhood.
CASA Elements 5. 6, 7- Up -zone and streamline to increase income restricted and market rate housing options and reduce
displacement and upward rent pressure on existing homes and neighborhoods.
CASA Element 8 - Public land: Encourage immediate disposal of more public land for affordable housing to create more sites and
reduce the subsidy needed.
CASA Element 9 - Public funding: More funding for the preservation and production of affordable housing, the provision for new
tenant protection measures, and new permanent supportive housing.
Background: Growing the construction labor force and improving labor force productivity is critical to expanding the supply of
housing. By increasing the safety and desirability of construction work, and thereby expanding the pool of available workers and
contractors, we can grow the labor force without which we cannot increase housing production. The following are recommended by
CASA as a starting point. We also recommend ongoing work to implement the CASA recommendations in a manner which creates an
effective and coordinated regional and State response to the need for a larger construction labor force.
CASA Call for Action:
1. Grow the workforce by increasing apprentice training, placement, and payment of prevailing wages when direct public funding,
public land, fee abatement, tax abatement, CEQA exemptions, and other fiscal/economic development incentives are provided for
housing (Compact items 7, 8, 9).
2. Discourage the underground economy and require compliance with existing wage and workforce laws (Compact items 4, 5).
3. Create a CASA/State labor workgroup charged with coordinating implementation of CASA policies and needed labor force
expansion consistent with CASA principles.
4. Call upon the State to use its workforce development and training programs to improve the construction employment pipeline and
create improved pathways from secondary education into apprentice training programs.
References: Compact Elements 4, 5, 7, 8 and 9.
January 2019 123
Local Best Practices
This section describes local best practices that are relevant to the CASA Compact.
Protection, Preservation and Production (3 -Ps) Framework
While many jurisdictions in the Bay Area focus on one or two of three Ps, the City of Oakland was one of the first to codify the 3-P
framework in'a citywide policy developed through a multi -stakeholder process. The underlying policy outcome for Oakland was to
address housing insecurity in a rapidly changing community that faces both historic disinvestment as well as very high displacement
pressures.
City of Oakland
In 2016, the Oakland Housing Cabinet developed a comprehensive plan, called Oakland at Home — Recommendations for
Implementing A Roadmap Toward Equity, to address the city's chronic housing affordability and homelessness crisis. The plan
outlines a three -pronged strategy to protect renters, preserve existing affordable housing by taking it off the speculative real estate
market and produce more affordable and market -rate housing. The plan identifies several strategies under each "P" designed
to significantly improve housing affordability in Oakland. CASA borrowed this concept from Oakland's plan to form the three Ps
framework.
•
13 jurisdictions in the Bay Area have adopted some form of rent stabilization policies. This section highlights two such examples, in
the City of Richmond and County of Sonoma.
City of Richmond
In 2016, Richmond residents approved Measure L, which established the Richmond Fair Rent, Just Cause for Eviction and
Homeowner Protection Ordinance. The ordinance applies to all multifamily properties, including duplexes. The annual rent increase
is set at 100% of the Consumer Price Index. Landlords are required to file all notices of rent increase, termination of tenancy, and
change of terms of tenancy notices with the Rent Program. Landlords and tenants may petition the Rent Board for an Individual
Rent Adjustment.
The city established a Rent Board, an appointed governing body, and a Rent Program Department to administer the program. The
department is set up to function on a cost -recovery basis, with no financial assistance.from the city's general funds. Funding for the
department comes from the Rental Housing Fee, which must be paid by all Richmond landlords on an annual basis.
City of Santa Rosa and County of Sonoma
On October 9, 2017, the Governor of California issued an Executive Order declaring a state of emergency in Napa and Sonoma
Counties due to widespread damage caused by wildfires. California Penal Code section 396 prohibits price gouging (defined as
increases over 10%) for necessary goods and services after the governor declares a state of emergency, including rental housing
and hotels.
The City of Santa Rosa(adopted additional protections for tenants, which allow renters to file civil lawsuits for violations. The county
also adopted protections for tenants in mobile home parks. In addition, the county adopted several Urgency Ordinances to address
the immediate need for housing for persons displaced by the wildfires. The Urgency Ordinance allows: the use of recreational
vehicles and trailers as homes, with an emergency temporary permit; a Safe Parking Program for RVs, trailers and campers, to be
parked overnight on county -owned land (basic services such as bathrooms, showers, and warming stations are provided); year-round
occupancy in seasonal farmworker housing; replacement schools and child care centers in specific zones without a use permit; and
long-term rental of bed and breakfasts, inns, resorts.
Just Cause Eviction Protections
Ten jurisdictions in the Bay Area have already adopted some form of just cause eviction protections for renters. This section
highlights one such example, in the City of East Palo Alto.
City of East Palo Alto
East Palo Alto has adopted both a Just Cause for Eviction as well as a Rent Stabilization Ordinance to protect tenants in the city
from harassment and displacement due to rising market pressures on the city's existing housing stock. The just cause policy applies
to both mobile home parks and residential rental units, including single family dwellings. The ordinance identifies fourteen just
causes for eviction, establishes a noticing and filing requirement (with the city rent board) and gives tenants the right to request
documentation of all rent payments and charges. The program is funded entirely through fees, half of which are passed on to tenants.
24 1 CASA Compact
Accessto Legal Counsel
City and County of San Francisco
In June of 2018, San Francisco voters approved Proposition F that guarantees free legal representation for any renter facing eviction,
regardless of income. Proposition F calls for full -scope representation within thirty days of an eviction notice or filing of an unlawful
detainer action. San Francisco estimates that as many as thirty-five hundred tenants a year will be eligible for the free services, for
which it earmarked $5.8 million over the first two years of the program. San Francisco also currently spends $4.4 million a year on
eviction -related services such as counseling, education, outreach and basic no -cost or low-cost legal services.
Rent Assistance
Twenty-six jurisdictions in the Bay Area provide some form of tenant assistance. This section highlights one such example, in the
County of Sonoma.
County of Sonoma
The county's Home Tenant -Based Rental Assistance Program (TBA) provides rent subsidies to homeless families in shelters,
survivors of domestic violence, seniors and persons with HIWAIDS. Only very low-income individuals are eligible to receive this
assistance. They are referred by emergency shelters, transitional shelters, non-profit service providers, the County's Human Services
Department and the Division of Adult and Aging Services. The TBA program is administered similarly to the US Department of
Housing and Urban Development's Section 8 program.
Auli,iisition and Rehabilitation of Affordable Uni s
Thirty jurisdictions in the Bay Area have established some form of a preservation program to support acquisition, rehabilitation and
protection of affordable units occupied by low-income renters. This section highlights one such example, in the City and County of
San Francisco.
City and County of San Francisco
Launched by the Mayor's Office of Housing and Community Development in 2014, San Francisco's Small Sites Program (SSP) is an
acquisition and rehabilitation loan program for small multifamily rental buildings. The program was created to protect and establish
long-term affordable housing throughout San Francisco. SSP is funded through multiple sources, including voter -approved bonds,
inclusionary housing fees, and the city's Housing Trust Fund. As of May 2018, the program has acquired 160 units in 25 buildings,
serving 327 residents that earn less than 65% of the Area Median Income. The units are located in the following neighborhoods: the
Mission District, Downtown/Civic Center, South of Market, Castro/Upper Market, Haight Ashbury, Bernal Heights and Richmond.
Homebuyer Assistance
Twenty-eight jurisdictions in the Bay Area have established some form of a homebuyer program. This section highlights two such
examples, in the cities of Napa and Oakland.
City of Napa
Napa's Down Payment Assistance Program, funded with grants from the State of California Department of Housing and Community
Development, provides assistance to lower-income first time home buyers in the form of a silent (deferred) loan of up to $150,000. To
qualify, an applicant must meet income and credit restrictions and cannot have owned a home in the last three years. Homes must be
located within city limits and cannot be bigger than 3 bedrooms and 2 baths.
City of Oakland
He Housing, a regional non-profit organization, has partnered with the City of Oakland and the Alameda County Treasurer -Tax
Collector's Office, to acquire and convert formerly blighted and tax -defaulted properties into permanently affordable housing for
low -and -moderate income residents. Hello Housing and three local developers have acquired 26 vacant properties, a majority of
which will be developed into single-family homes for ownership and two properties into multifamily affordable rental units to house
approximately 15 to 20 families. Construction on the first homes is now underway with occupancy on many of the homeownership
properties expected in late 2018 and early 2019.
January 2019 125
Fifty jurisdictions in the Bay Area have adopted some form of permit streamlining policies. This section highlights two such examples,
in the County of Sonoma and the City of San Jose.
City of Santa Rosa and County of Sonoma
In the aftermath of the wildfires in Sonoma in 2017, the City of Santa Rosa adopted multiple policies to expedite the permitting
process for those who wanted to rebuild. These included: establishing a Resilient City Permit Center with dedicated staff; exemptions
from environmental review; expansion of damaged nonconforming residential structures to added living areas, ADUs, and JADUs;
increasing the allowable residential floor area in mixed-use projects from 50 to 80 percent; and delaying collection of fees until near
occupancy. The county also established a Resiliency Permit Center to expedite permitting, and relaxed rules related to accessory
dwelling units (ADUs).
City of San Jose
In 2014, the City of San Jose formed an ad-hoc committee to explore permit streamlining for small businesses as well as for major
projects. Based on the committee's recommendations, the city created a planning desk dedicated to small projects and recently
established an electronic plan review system to simplify permitting. The electronic system has resulted in time and cost savings for
both the city as well as the applicant. The system provides real-time updates on the status of the approval process.
Fey Waiver
Twenty-six jurisdictions in the Bay Area offer some form of fee waivers to housing developers. This section highlights one such
example, in the City of Sunnyvale.
City of Sunnyvale
Sunnyvale charges all new rental housing projects an impact fee of $9 to $18 per habitable square feet. If a developer opts to provide
affordable units on-site instead of paying the housing impact fee, the city credits the developer $300,000 per very low-income unit
and $150,000 for every low-income unit, up to the total housing impact fee amount owed by the project. In case any fee obligation
remains after the affordable unit developer credits are applied, the developer may opt to provide additional affordable units to
reduce the fee to zero.
These developer credits are based on the subsidy amounts required to develop affordable units, which the 2014 rental impact fee
nexus study determined to be $302,496 for a very low-income unit and $146,233 for a low-income unit. The city also waives the park
and recreation fee for affordable units.
Twenty-four jurisdictions in the Bay Area have adopted some form of a zoning overlay for housing projects. This section highlights
one such example, in the City of Menlo Park.
City of Menlo Park
Menlo Park's Affordable Housing Overlay (AHO) zone was established to encourage the development of housing for low, very low and
extremely low-income households on housing opportunity sites identified in the city's adopted Housing Element. The AHO establishes
development standards for these sites and is designed to benefit all affordable housing projects, including market -rate developments
that provide a higher share of low- and very low-income units than what is called for in the State's Density Bonus Program.
New Revenue and Organizational Capacity for Housing
Multiple cities and counties in the Bay Area have raised new revenue for housing in the last two election cycles and/or adopted a
regional or sub -regional approach to solving the housing crisis. This section highlights four such examples, in the counties of Santa
Clara, San Francisco, Alameda and Sonoma.
County of Santa Clara
In June 2016, Santa Clara voters approved Measure A, a $950 million affordable housing bond program to build and preserve 5,000
affordable housing units countywide. The bond proceeds will help stabilize housing for the county's most vulnerable populations
including veterans, seniors, the disabled, low and moderate -income individuals or families, foster youth, victims of abuse, the
homeless and individuals suffering from mental health or substance abuse illnesses. Measure A priorities include advancing
supportive housing for special needs populations, including homeless and chronically homeless persons and increasing housing
supply for extremely low-income populations.
As of June 2018, the first year of implementation, the county approved $111 million for 10 projects that will add more than 800
multifamily units in 6 cities. The county also approved $25 million for a first-time homebuyer program.
26 1 CASA Compact
City and County of San Francisco
In November 2018, San Francisco voters approved Proposition C, a business tax measure, which will generate up to $300 million per
year to fund homelessness services. Businesses with over $50 million in gross annual receipts will pay a tax equal to 0.175 percent
to 0.69 percent of their gross receipts. Businesses with over $1 billion in gross annual receipts and those with administrative offices
in San Francisco will pay 1.5 percent of payroll expenses. In June 2018, San Francisco voters approved Measure F, which will provide
tax -funded legal help to tenants facing eviction. The expanded legal services is estimated to cost the city $5.6 million a year.
In November 2016, San Francisco voters approved Proposition C, which authorized the city to repurpose $261 million in unused
general obligation bond funding that voters originally approved in 1992 for seismic upgrades. Under Proposition C, bonds would be
used to acquire and rehabilitate multi -unit properties and convert them to permanently affordable housing.
In November 2015, San Francisco voters approved Proposition A, a $310 million General Obligation Bond for affordable housing, to
finance the construction, acquisition, improvement, rehabilitation, preservation and repair of affordable housing for low and middle
income households. The bond will address pressing housing needs by: investing in neighborhoods; developing and acquiring
housing for a broad population, from families to seniors; transitional -aged youth to single working adults; and veterans to disabled
households; and, meeting housing needs through a range of activities, including new multi -family construction, acquisition of existing
apartment buildings, SRO rehabilitations, down payment assistance for first-time homebuyers, and other efforts that will effectively
increase the affordable housing supply.
County of Alameda
In November 2016, Alameda County voters approved Measure Al, a $580 million general obligation bond to finance the construction
and rehabilitation of affordable rental units, loans for moderate -income homebuyers and upgrades to existing low-income housing.
City of Oakland
In November 2018, Oakland voters approved Measure KK, a $600 million infrastructure bond earmarking $100 million for affordable
housing. A citizen oversight committee would audit all spending from the measure.
County of Sonoma
The City of Santa Rosa and the county are moving forward with establishing a joint powers authority, called the Renewal Enterprise
District (RED), with the explicit goal for regionalizing housing production; pooling and leveraging financing and funding; sharing risks
and benefits of development in new ways; streamlining environmental review and providing confidence in good projects; and putting
equity, affordability and climate solutions in the center of local economic strategy.
When established, the RED will focus housing development in specific geographies; define project criteria for which incentives and
streamlined permitting processes are appropriate; pursue new models for public-private partnerships; expand, pool, and leverage
public and private financing in new ways; explore the most strategic use of publicly -owned land; and leverage the regional housing
planning tools and resources of MTC/ABAG.
Cross -Jurisdictional Collaboration
This section highlights the unique process in San Mateo County to coordinate housing strategies across jurisdictions, including
conducting a "nexus" study for setting impact fees.
The .21 Elements Effort
21 Elements is a multi-year, multi -phase collaboration of all twenty-one San Mateo County jurisdictions, along with partner agencies
and stakeholder organizations. The project aims to support jurisdictions in developing, adopting, and implementing local housing
policies and programs. It is a forum for sharing resources, successful strategies and best practices. The project is co-sponsored and
coordinated by the San Mateo County Department of Housing (DOH) and the City/County Association of Governments of San Mateo
County (C/CAG).
The project recognizes that cities in the county often struggle with similar housing issues and consider similar solutions. 21 Elements
helps those cities find policies that are right for them, working with their neighbors in a supportive, cooperative environment.
Respecting local control, 21 Elements makes it easier to adopt innovative policies that address important housing needs. From
affordable housing to accessory dwelling units, 21 Elements has resources to help.
Grand Nexus Study
Through a multi -jurisdiction collaborative process, 15 cities in San Mateo County and the City of Palo Alto embarked on developing
a nexus study for their respective linkage fee programs. This project, which came to be known as the Grand Nexus Study, reduced
costs by 75 percent and helped establish best practices. Customized, jurisdiction -specific reports focusing on local conditions were
completed and provided to each participating city in the second half of 2015. (continued on nest pore)
January 2019 127
Affordable housing Needs Allocation
In the fourth Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA) cycle, 11 of San Mateo County's 21 jurisdictions engaged in "housing unit
trades." Five of these jurisdictions accepted additional unit allocations for proposed development adjacent to their city limits. Three
additional jurisdictions who had already adopted a land use plan that calls for more housing development also accepted additional
allocations. In all, these trades covered a total of 396 units, or 2.5% of the total 8 -year allocation for the county. While numerically
insignificant, the trades represent an important accomplishment for these 11 jurisdictions as they work together on other multiple
efforts to meet the county's housing crisis.
28 1 CASA Compact
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A __. CASA Leadership
Fred Blackwell, CASA Co -Chair
Chief Executive Officer I The San Francisco Foundation
Fred Blackwell is a visionary leader working to ensure shared prosperity, innovation,
and equity in the Bay Area. As CEO of The San Francisco Foundation, he leads one of
the largest community foundations in the country, working hand-in-hand with donors,
nonprofits, community leaders, business, and government partners in philanthropy to
identify, influence, and leverage best practices and long-term solutions to make a greater
impact in our community.
Mr. Blackwell currently serves on the board of the San Francisco Bay Area Super Bowl 50
Legacy Fund, on the advisory council for Berkeley's College of Environmental Design, and
as an advisor for Google Impact Challenge: Bay Area. He previously served on the boards
of the California Redevelopment Association, Urban Habitat Program, LeaderSpring, SPUR,
and Leadership Excellence. He holds a master's degree in City Planning from U.C. Berkeley
and a bachelor's degree in Urban Studies from Morehouse College.
Leslye Corsiglia, CASA Co -Chair
Executive Director I Silicon Valley @ Home
Leslye Corsiglia began her professional career at the California Department of Housing and
Community Development, where she held several positions before taking on the challenge
of overseeing the day-to-day activities of the state's housing loan and grant programs. In
that capacity, she worked to pass and then implement the first affordable housing bond
initiatives, which made $550 million available for the construction and rehabilitation of
affordable housing throughout the state.
Ms. Corsiglia joined the City of San Jose as the Department of Housing's first Assistant
Director in 1991, and then served for 14 years as the Director. While with the City, she
oversaw a program that developed and improved 21,000 affordable housing units,
leveraging the City's funds with more than $2.7 billion from public and private sources.
She has served on a number of federal, state, and regional boards and currently serves on
the Board of the Non -Profit Housing Association of Northern California. She is a dedicated
housing wonk, loves policy and research, and is excited to take on the challenge of leading
the new start-up venture known as SV@Home.
SV@Home is the voice for affordable housing in Silicon Valley. Based initially in the Housing
Wfaa h o m e Trust Silicon Valley, SV@Home is a membership organization that advocates for policies,
programs, land use, and funding that lead to an increased supply of affordable housing.
350 W. Juila;, St. u5 Additionally, SV@Home educates elected officials and the community about the need
Sun Jose, CA 95110 for housing and the link between housing and other quality of life outcomes, including
P: (408) 730-8411 education, health, transportation, and the environment.
E: leslye,rnsilicoiivai!e/athon�e.org
301 CASA Compact
Established in 1948, The San Francisco Foundation (TSFF) is committed to serving the
people of the Bay Area. As an incubator for community investment, original ideas, and
passionate leadership, TSFF has become one of the nation's largest community foundations
•
in grant -making and assets, giving millions of dollars a year to make the Bay Area the best
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place it can be. Currently, TSFF is tackling widening inequality, increasing poverty, and
San Franc.sco, CA 04111
declines in upward economic mobility despite historic levels of prosperity. Staying true to
P: (415) 733-85.0
its commitment to serving the people of the Bay Area, TSFF recently launched an ambitious
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strategy to advance racial and economic equity across the Bay Area.
Leslye Corsiglia, CASA Co -Chair
Executive Director I Silicon Valley @ Home
Leslye Corsiglia began her professional career at the California Department of Housing and
Community Development, where she held several positions before taking on the challenge
of overseeing the day-to-day activities of the state's housing loan and grant programs. In
that capacity, she worked to pass and then implement the first affordable housing bond
initiatives, which made $550 million available for the construction and rehabilitation of
affordable housing throughout the state.
Ms. Corsiglia joined the City of San Jose as the Department of Housing's first Assistant
Director in 1991, and then served for 14 years as the Director. While with the City, she
oversaw a program that developed and improved 21,000 affordable housing units,
leveraging the City's funds with more than $2.7 billion from public and private sources.
She has served on a number of federal, state, and regional boards and currently serves on
the Board of the Non -Profit Housing Association of Northern California. She is a dedicated
housing wonk, loves policy and research, and is excited to take on the challenge of leading
the new start-up venture known as SV@Home.
SV@Home is the voice for affordable housing in Silicon Valley. Based initially in the Housing
Wfaa h o m e Trust Silicon Valley, SV@Home is a membership organization that advocates for policies,
programs, land use, and funding that lead to an increased supply of affordable housing.
350 W. Juila;, St. u5 Additionally, SV@Home educates elected officials and the community about the need
Sun Jose, CA 95110 for housing and the link between housing and other quality of life outcomes, including
P: (408) 730-8411 education, health, transportation, and the environment.
E: leslye,rnsilicoiivai!e/athon�e.org
301 CASA Compact
Michael Covarrubias, CASA Co -Chair
Chair and Chief Executive Officer I TMG Partners
TMG
PARTNERS
100 Bush Street
San Francisco, CA 94101
P: (415) 772-5900
E: michael.c otrngpartners.com
Michael Covarrubias joined TMG Partners in 1988. He oversees all of the company's
operations and has directed the company since 1995. Prior to TMG, Mr. Covarrubias'
professional background includes 17 years with Union Bank, including commercial and
real estate lending as well as administrative management. In his last position, he served
as Senior Vice President and Manager of Union Bank's Silicon Valley Regional Real Estate
Center.
Mr. Covarrubias is a graduate of the University of San Francisco with a bachelor's degree in
business administration.
TMG Partners is a privately -held, full-service development company headquartered in San
Francisco focusing on urban infill projects in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Its exclusive focus in the Bay Area helps the firm understand the nuances of market trends
and timing. This allows TMG Partners to be highly responsive and opportunistic while
contributing to the vibrancy of the communities that make up the Bay Area region.
Dr. Jennifer Martinez, Protection Work Group Moderator
Executive Director I Faith in Action Bay Area
Dr. Jennifer Martinez currently leads Faith in Action Bay Area, a regional network of
community and faith -based organizations. She has also been an organizer with the PICO
National Network since 2001. Dr. Martinez has a bachelor's degree from Stanford University
and a master's degree and Ph.D. from the University of Nottingham in England. Her
graduate research focused on social movement strategies in the struggle for housing and
land rights in Venezuela and South Africa. In 2011, her Ph.D. won the British International
Studies Association thesis of the year award.
She has several published works and, in addition to being a participant in faith -based
movement -building, continues to write about the ways in which social movements transform
people and places.
FAITH
Faith in Action Bay Area is a regional network of community and faith -based organizations
INACTION
working to create innovative solutions to problems facing urban and suburban communities
B AY A R E A
in San Mateo and San Francisco Counties. Faith in Action Bay Area has successfully worked
to increase access to health care, improve public schools, make neighborhoods safer, build
J
affordable housing, redevelop communities, and revitalize democracy.
1336 Arroyo Avenue
The organization helps engage ordinary people in public life, building a strong legacy of
San Carlos, CA 94070
leadership in local communities across the region, and is part of PICO, a national network
P: (650) 796-4160
of faith -based organizing groups. Faith in Action Bay Area is non-partisan, multi -faith, and
E: Jennifer Opicocalifornia.org
multicultural.
January 2019 131
Linda Mandolini, Protection Work Group Moderator
President I Eden Housing
22645 Grard Street
Hayward, CA 9.1541
P. 8510) 582-1460
E: imando9ir`' «edenhousing.crg
Linda Mandolini has served Eden Housing as a Project Developer, as Director of Real
Estate Development, and since 2001 as President. She oversees affordable housing
production, resident support services, and property management components of the
organization, and a staff of more than 340 employees. She is guided in her work by Eden's
active, volunteer Board of Directors.
Under Ms. Mandolini's strong leadership, Eden has become one of the most productive
and successful nonprofit affordable housing developers in California. Eden has received
numerous awards including being named as a Best Place to Work in the Bay Area in 2012,
2015, and 2016 and Healthiest Employers in the Bay Area by the San Francisco Business
Times for the past five years in a row (2012-2016).
Ms. Mandolini received her A.B. from Wheaton College in Massachusetts and earned a
master's of Business Administration at Boston University.
Eden Housing revitalizes California communities through its affordable housing
development and property management activities, through the partnerships it establishes
and the investments it makes in California neighborhoods, and through the resident
services programs it provides to meet the needs of its residents.
Since its founding in 1968, Eden Housing has developed or acquired 7,450 affordable
housing units in nearly 100 properties that have provided homes for more than 65,000
people. Eden currently has more than 1,000 units in its immediate pipeline.
Eden's housing now includes rental apartments, cooperatives, and supportive living
environments for families, seniors, and people with disabilities. Eden has so far partnered
with 29 cities in 10 California counties and it is rapidly expanding its geographical
operations to new communities, including the greater Sacramento area, the Central Valley,
and Southern California.
Derecka Mehrens, Production Work Group Moderator
Executive Director I Working Partnerships USA
1i�RKll"tC PAtfTRiPS :�
2102 Al maaon Road Suite 107
San Jose. CA 95125
P: 1408) 809-2120
E: derecka(a,wpusa.org
32 1 CASA Compact
Derecka Mehrens, Executive Director at Working Partnerships USA, brings 15 years
of community organizing, civic engagement, and public policy experience working in
communities of color and with low- and moderate -income families.
Under Ms. Mehrens' leadership, Working Partnerships USA co- founded Silicon Valley
Rising, a coordinated regional campaign to inspire a tech -driven economy where all
workers, their families, and communities thrive. The unprecedented labor -faith -community
alliance is working to build a new economic model that rebuilds the middle class, to raise
wages and workplace standards for all workers in this valley, and to address a regional
housing crisis that is pushing families and children to live in garages, cars, or near creek
beds in order to survive.
Ms. Mehrens graduated from the University of Oregon with a bachelor's degree in
Sociology, History, and International Studies.
Working Partnerships USA is a community organization that drives the movement for a just
economy by bringing together public policy innovation and the power of grassroots organizing.
Working Partnerships USA builds the capacity of workers, low-income neighborhoods, and
communities of color to lead and govern. Based in Silicon Valley, it tackles the root causes
of inequality and poverty by leading collaborative campaigns for qualityjobs, healthy
communities, equitable growth, and vibrant democracy.
Denise Pinkston, Production Work Group Moderator
Housing Committee Co-chair I Bay Area Council
353 Sacramento St., 10th Floor,
San Francisco, CA 94111
P: (415) 946-8777
E: cil)inl<ston(c�,tmgpartners.coni
Denise Pinkston has over 30 years of experience in real estate including acquisitions, asset
and construction management, marketing, leasing, planning/entitlements, transit and green
building program development, and public affairs. Ms. Pinkston was named one of the Bay
Area's Most Influential Women in Bay Area Business by the San Francisco Business Times in
2012 and 2013 and was named to their Forever Influential Honor Roll in 2014. Ms. Pinkston
teaches real estate at the Lorry I. Lokey Graduate School of Business at Mills College.
Ms. Pinkston attended the University of California, Berkeley where she earned a bachelor's
degree in History and a master's degree in City and Regional Planning.
The Bay Area Council is a business -sponsored, public -policy advocacy organization for
the nine -county San Francisco Bay Area. The Council proactively advocates for a strong
economy, a vital business environment, and a better quality of life for everyone who lives
here.
Steve Heminger, CASA Convener
Executive Director I Metropolitan Transportation Commission
METROPOLITAN
TRANSPORTATION
COMMISSION
375 Beale Street
San Francisco, CA 94105
P: (415) 778-5228
E: sheminger<<i�bayareametro.gov
Steve Heminger is Executive Director of MTC and responsible for the administration of
more than $2 billion per year in funding for the operation, maintenance, and expansion of
the Bay Area's surface transportation network.
Mr. Heminger was appointed by House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi to serve on the
"National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission," which helped
chart the future course for the federal transportation program. As Chair of the Toll Bridge
Program Oversight Committee, he also oversaw construction of the new east span of the
San Francisco -Oakland Bay Bridge, the largest transportation project in California history. In
addition, he is a member of the Board of Trustees for the Mineta Transportation Institute and
of the Executive Committee for the Transportation Research Board.
Mr. Heminger received a bachelor's degree from Georgetown University and a master's
degree from the University of Chicago.
The Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) connects the nine -county Bay Area's
communities by allocating regional, state, and federal funds for transportation projects,
planning for the future, and coordinating the participation of governments and residents in
the planning process.
The Commission's central purpose is to make sure that the transportation networks that
connect the residents and communities within the Bay Area region function smoothly and
efficiently. Its job is to plan responsibly to meet the mobility needs of residents, now and in
the future.
January 2019 133
Appendix
�� Committee Members
��D����u�� �� -- `���������~��� m�m��������rs
rr
Steering Committee Members Technical Committee Members
Nome Organization Nome Organization
Robert Nmthern California Ca,pentarx Californiaia Community �
Bob Alvarado
Regiona/Counci| Bu'/ders
Kofi Bonner FivePo|nt Ophe|iaBaaga| Te/ne/Research Center
London Breed City/Cnu,itynrSan Francisco Michele Byrd City of Oakland
Keith Carson Alameda County
Stuart Cohen '3ansFonn
Julie Combs City cfSanta Rosa
Dave Cortese Santa Clara County
8eooCmnican
BART
Matthew Franklin
M!dPenHousing
Ariane Hogan
Genentech
5amUccardo
City nfSan Jose
Jake Mackenzie NITC
Michael Matthews
Facehook
RnboncuProzan
Google
.` David Rabbitt
ABAS
Dave Regan
5BU
Libby Schaaf
City ofOakland
Ellen Wu
UroanHabitet
Building and Construction
AndeaoOuver
Trades Council
JnnathanFeam
GREYSTAR
Jacky Morales Fenand
City ofSan Jose
Non -Profit Housing
Arnie Fishman
Association
CaitlynFnx
Chan ZuckedoergInitiative
Bob Glover
B|4Bay Area
Rich Gross
Enterprise
Jennifer Hernandez
Holland and Knight
California Apartment
Joshua Howard
Association
Lynn Hutchins
Goldfarb Lipman LLP
Aimee Inglis
TenanuTogether
Janice Jensen
Hah!tatfor Humanity
Mark Kroll
Saris Regis Group
Nor Cal Carpenters Reg,
SoottLitt|eha|o
Council
LindeK4ando|in|
Eden Housing
Dr. Jennifer Martinez
P|COCo|ifomie
D*mokak8ohvans
Working Partnership, USA
TomiquiarNooy
Hamilton Families
Mary Murtagh
EAHHous|ng
AdhiNagn4
SPUR
Denise Pinkston
Bay Area Council
Ken Rich
City/County ofSan Francisco
CAHousing Partnership
Matt Schwartz
Corp.
Doug Shoemaker
Me/cyHouning
AbbyThome'Lynan
BART
Randylsuda
City nfMountain View
Matt Vander
5|uisGreenbelt Alliance
Contra Costa Housing
Joseph Villarreal
4uthn, ity
Bill Witte
Related California