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Recommendation to the Davis City Council for Changes in Davis’ Affordable Housing Ordinance

By The Sierra Club Yolano Group Management Committee

June 27, 2023

Introduction

The Davis Affordable Housing Ordinance is now implemented on a temporary basis. Renewal with some modest changes is anticipated this evening.

However, the existing Affordable Housing Ordinance has provisions which we believe do not provide social justice, equity, and fairness in terms of meeting the needs of the City’s low-income population because it is biased toward the financial benefit of developers rather than maximizing the availability of affordable income housing in Davis.

Following please find our recommendations for immediate changes to update the City's temporary Affordable Housing Ordinance for ownership development projects. Additionally, we suggest the City embark on a concerted effort to further revise the ordinance to make it more equitable and understandable to developers and the general public for both ownership and rental development projects as more fully described below.

Recommendation for Immediate Change

1) Eliminate Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) as an acceptable alternative to provide on-site Affordable Housing – Prior to the immediate renewal of the Affordable Housing Ordinance, we strongly recommend completely eliminating the provision whereby ADUs are allowed as fulfillment for up to 50% of a For Sale project’s affordable housing obligations as currently exists.

2) Substantially increase in-lieu fees if chosen by a developer as an acceptable alternative to provide on-site or offsite Affordable Housing – We recommend that in-lieu fees be substantially increased so that it is no longer a financially preferable option for developers to pursue.  We endorse the staff recommendation to have an "in lieu fee to represent the full cost to build an actual unit."

Recommendations for Further Changes in the Very Near Future

3) Increase the minimum percentages of affordable housing required in most developments

a) For rental multifamily developments and ownership detached housing, increase the standard 15% requirement for onsite or offsite affordable housing units to 25% (15% Very Low Income and 10% Low Income).

b) For ownership and rental mixed use and stacked-flat condominiums, increase the affordable housing requirement from 5% to 10% (5% Very Low Income and 5% Low Income) and eliminate the exemption for such units in the core area from the requirements of the Affordable Housing Ordinance.

4) Increase the minimum parcel size for land donated to alternatively meet affordable housing requirements to 4 acres – Experts in the field of non-profit low income housing project financing have stated that land donation requirements of lesser sizes are not feasible to finance given the realities of financing requirements and available tax credits.

We elaborate on each of these recommendations further below.

 

Recommended Changes to the Current Ordinance

1) Completely Eliminate the Maximum 50% Allowance for Accessory Dwelling Units (ADU) – The Accessory Dwelling Unit is typically viewed as a very modestly-sized standalone, self-contained structure on a private property parcel which has its own entrance, bathroom, and kitchen facilities. The current Affordable Housing Ordinance allows for up to 50% of a project’s required affordable housing component to be satisfied by the placement of ADUs in a project.

However, there is not even a rudimentary definition in the existing Davis Affordable Housing Ordinance of what constitutes an acceptable ADU in terms of its size and required amenities. Allowing ADUs to partially satisfy the requirement for affordable units in new projects is believed to have been first implemented when The Cannery housing project Development Agreement was being negotiated. At the time, the stated understanding was that that the units would be subsequently rented by homeowners to lower income workers or students and thus decrease demand for other low income housing stock in the City. However, there is absolutely nothing in the Affordable Housing Ordinance that mandates the units be rented at all, much less rented at an affordable price.

Further, to our knowledge the City has never polled owners of ADUs in The Cannery to verify that any of the units have been rented and at what rate. It is believed the vast majority are used simply as office space or for living quarters for other family members of the primary household and not rented at reduced or subsidized rates to low income renters. Thus, the entire premise for allowing ADUs to replace subsidized purchase or rental by low-income residents has been circumvented to the developers’ obvious financial advantage.

If ADUs are allowed to replace subsidized ownership or rental housing as partial fulfillment of developers’ affordable housing obligation, it must be accompanied by a) a strict definition of what is an acceptable ADU and b) a mechanism for monitoring to ensure that the units are actually subsequently rented and at a price making them accessible to true low-income renters.

However, given the costs and difficulties of implementing such a monitoring mechanism, we recommend that ADUs simply no longer be allowed to count as Affordable Housing, period. In summary, we believe ADUs can be a valuable way to increase the amount of available housing overall, but they are a very poor way to provide subsidized Affordable Housing and functionally impossible to monitor ongoing compliance.

This proposed change can be easily accomplished by simply deleting the following section of the Affordable Housing Ordinance:

18.05.050 (a) (2) (C) (ii) On-site construction of accessory dwelling units for rental to fulfill up to half of the requirement;

2) Substantially Increase the In-Lieu Fees Allowed for up to 50% of the Affordable Housing Unit Requirements to Make it Financially Disadvantageous for a Developer to Employ – The Affordable Housing Ordinance should always require subsidized ownership or rental housing to be built if at all physically possible. In rare instances where site considerations may preclude construction of Affordable Housing on the site, in-lieu fees may be an appropriate alternative means of satisfying the developers’ Affordable Housing obligations. Under the current Affordable Housing Ordinance, up to 50% of the Affordable Housing obligations can be satisfied by payment of in-lieu fees which are not specifically defined and are variable under the current Affordable Housing Ordinance.

However, there is potentially substantial downside to the City and the low-income community and substantial upside financial impacts to the developer(s) when this alternative mechanism is used to satisfy the affordable housing obligations. That is, if the in-lieu fee is so low as to provide a financial incentive to the developer to simply pay in-lieu fees to avoid actual construction of affordable housing, this will likely result in less construction of affordable housing. The Staff Report indicates the current In-Lieu fee is $81,979.

But the cost to construct even a very modest 2-bedroom apartment by a developer for use as subsidized rental housing is now in the range of $250,000 or more. Clearly there is an enormous advantage to a developer to forego construction of an affordable housing unit if they can otherwise just pay to the City a fee that represents only about fraction of that amount.

Further, way too much latitude is given to Council to change the minimum in-lieu fees based on what a developer can convince them is feasible. Davis has a history of concessions given to developers who claim that requirements normally demanded for projects “don’t pencil out” and then they are given waivers by the City because the City Staff and Council do not have the financial acumen and experience to push back.

Thus, we strongly recommend that in-lieu fees be immediately increased to eliminate the financial incentive for developers to pursue them. Of course, this will have the added benefit of providing additional funding to the City for future construction or maintenance of Affordable Housing projects.

The Staff Report acknowledges this by stating, “Both the Social Services Commission and the City Council have expressed interest in recalculating the in lieu fee to represent the full cost to build an actual unit. It is staff’s intent to return with a proposed fee that represents this concept. This fee would then be included in the guidelines, which would be approved by resolution.” 

We agree and urge that this change be given an immediate fast-track, high priority status.

3. Increase the minimum percentages of affordable housing required in most developments –

a) For rental multifamily developments and ownership detached housing, increase the standard 15% requirement for onsite and offsite affordable housing units to 25% (15% Very Low Income and 10% Low Income).

b) For ownership and rental mixed use and ownership stacked-flat condominiums, increase the affordable housing requirement from 5% to 10% (5% Very Low Income (and 5% Low Income) and eliminate the exemption for such units in the core area from the requirements of the Affordable Housing Ordinance.

We believe the findings on the economics of housing arid development by Cascadia Partners are overly conservative and these percentages can be increased without harming project viability. For instance, the State of California has allowed the Builders Remedy to be invoked in cities that do not meet the Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA) housing requirements but mandates a 20% minimum affordable housing requirement. Some cities also impose a 20% affordable housing requirement (e.g. Larkspur). The higher prices commanded by Davis real estate (for sale and rental) provide for higher profit margins to developers thereby allowing increased affordable housing contributions.

We believe the imposition of a greater minimum requirement and the removal of the exemption for such developments in the core area is reasonable given that one development project has already been proposed under the Builder's Remedy in the core area providing for such a 20% level of affordable housing. This demonstrates the economics of stacked flat condominiums and mixed used housing development and that the current percentages can be increased without harming project economic viability and rebuts the findings of the Cascadia Partners report that otherwise states only the lower 12% levels of affordability are possible.

We additionally note that it will be very difficult for the City of Davis to meet its Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA) imposed by the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) for low income housing targets through use of only a 15% affordable housing requirement. The RHNA is a process mandated by California state law that requires that cities and unincorporated areas of counties to plan for new housing to accommodate projected growth. RHNA operates on an eight-year cycle.

The current cycle’s RHNA allocation for the City of Davis includes 580 Very Low Income (VLI) units and 350 Low Income (LI) units

The City’s interim affordable housing baseline is 15% of new housing, with 5% LI, 5% VLI, and 5% Extremely Low Income units. L

RHNA does not have a category for Extremely Low Income households. So for this analysis, it is assumed that Extremely Low units are combined with Very Low Income units totaling 10%.

Thus, 5,800 LI units would be required to meet the RHNA Low Income targets if a combined 10% of the affordable units were Extremely Low Income and Low Income (580 / 10%). An additional 7,000 units would need to be constructed to achieve the 350 Low Income units (350 / 5%). Thus the current interim 15% affordable housing requirement would require a total of 7,000 units to be built for the City to meet their RHNA allocated total low income housing units.

If alternatively a 25% affordable housing requirement were imposed on developers comprising 15% Very Low Income units and 10% Low Income units, only 3,866 new units would be required to be built. (580 VLI/15% = 3,866 Units vs 350 LI/10% = 3,500 Units). Thus it is far more likely that the City’s RHNA allocation would be met with a 25% requirement for affordable housing.

In summary, we believe there is substantial benefit to the Davis community to increase the percentages of required low-income housing to the maximum possible without incurring excessive economic disadvantage to developers. With that in mind and given the disparity in the maximum low-income requirements estimated by Cascadia Partners that can be borne by developers (at 12%) and the state imposed minimum low income requirements for the Builders Remedy (at 20%), we strongly urge the Council to reexamine the economics of low income housing for Davis developers in an expedited manner . At minimum, this should include an independent 3rd party review of the assumptions, calculations, and conclusions of the Cascadia Partners study to determine if the minimum percentage of minimum required low income housing can be further increased to 25%.

4. Increase the minimum parcel size for land donated to alternatively meet affordable housing requirements to 4 acres

A local expert in the field of low income and affordable housing (David Thompson – private communication) has stated that land donation requirements of lesser sizes are not feasible to finance given the realities of financing requirements and available tax credits.

___________________________________________________

Thank you for your consideration of these recommended changes.

Respectfully submitted,

The Sierra Club Yolano Group Management Committee

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Comments

15 responses to “Recommendation to the Davis City Council for Changes in Davis’ Affordable Housing Ordinance”

  1. Taking out the ADU loophole is an easy change and should be a no-brainer. I hope the City Council seriously considers it tonight. As things stand now, it’s a way for developers to pretend to provide affordable housing without actually doing it.
    (I support the rest of the Sierra Club recommendations as well, just want to highlight that one).

  2. Ron O

    ADU’s provide housing, even if it’s not “affordable”. In fact, they’re one of the few “bright spots” for those who actually want to see housing get built (statewide). I’m obviously not one of those folks.
    But I do wish that the Sierra Club would take a stand against sprawl, rather than create rules for sprawl.
    And leave the social justice to the social justice groups. Aren’t there plenty of those, already? Pushing for sprawl, already? This is what YIMBYs and the Vanguard lay claim to.
    Ultimately, these are two different subjects. And the more that the Sierra Club promotes social justice (rather than environmental protection), the less I’m interested in supporting them. (Actually, that occurred a long time ago, for me.)

  3. The point is not to object to ADUs as providing housing, as the statement says explicitly. The point is that ADUs should not be used to satisfy the affordable housing ordinance. The current ordinance makes it all too easy for developers to do something minimal that does not actually fulfill the intended purpose.
    This is not about sprawl. The affordable housing ordinance applies to infill as well as peripheral.

  4. Ron O

    Thanks for the clarification.
    But even though the proposal applies to infill (as well as peripheral), I’m failing to see what this has to do with environmental protection – which is supposedly the mission of the Sierra Club.
    And by creating “rules for sprawl” (rather than opposing it), the Sierra Club is putting itself in a position to “support” sprawl. Already, the leader of the local chapter started supporting a “particular” 400-acre proposal, before these guidelines were even created.
    Affordable housing is a “social justice” issue, not an environmental one. Not making a judgement on that here, but that’s what it is.
    Sure, you can argue that it allows local workers to be “local”, but that seems like a tenuous claim at best. Truth be told, it’s essentially a subsidy for employers who don’t (or can’t) pay their employees a sufficient wage to live on. It also assumes that those type of jobs are intended to “careers” in the first place.
    For that matter, why not take a position on rent control? Unlike Affordable housing, rent control does not cap (hinder) one’s ability to pursue better opportunities.
    On a broader (national) level, I witnessed the Sierra Club changing from a grass-roots environmental organization, to more of what seems to be a “corporate” model, primarily promoting social justice (and what type of light bulbs we use).
    There are other environmental/land protection organizations that seem to be more in-synch with environmental protection.
    One would think that the local chapter might have “learned a lesson” in regard to their endorsement of Wildhorse Ranch (now reborn as Palomino Place on the same site) years ago, only to have no one listen to them. But, I guess they didn’t take that lesson to heart.

  5. The Housing Element Committee, of which I was the chair, likewise found that contrary to prior assumptions, it cannot be automatically assumed ADUs qualify as affordable housing. Many, if not most, are occupied by family members or used for other purposes.
    If in-lieu fees are allowed at all, it should include an automatic annual inflationary adjustment.

  6. But even though the proposal applies to infill (as well as peripheral), I’m failing to see what this has to do with environmental protection – which is supposedly the mission of the Sierra Club.
    Affordable housing is relevant to the Sierra Club’s mission because 1) environmental protections shouldn’t be borne on the backs of those least able to handle the impacts and 2) having the strongest possible affordable housing ordinance ensures that land is used in the most efficient way possible, which reduces sprawl. As things stand now, it is all too easy for wealthy developers to produce project after project that doesn’t help people with low incomes and encourages inefficient and sprawling use of land.

  7. The Housing Element Committee, of which I was the chair, likewise found that contrary to prior assumptions, it cannot be automatically assumed ADUs qualify as affordable housing. Many, if not most, are occupied by family members or used for other purposes.
    Thanks, Greg. This is an important point to be brought out.
    If in-lieu fees are allowed at all, it should include an automatic annual inflationary adjustment.
    Agreed — after they have been significantly raised from their current extremely low levels. The staff suggestion to have in lieu fees that represent the full cost to build an actual unit is a good start.

  8. Ron O

    “Affordable housing is relevant to the Sierra Club’s mission because 1) environmental protections shouldn’t be borne on the backs of those least able to handle the impacts and 2) having the strongest possible affordable housing ordinance ensures that land is used in the most efficient way possible, which reduces sprawl. As things stand now, it is all too easy for wealthy developers to produce project after project that doesn’t help people with low incomes and encourages inefficient and sprawling use of land.
    Point #1 is still a “social justice” issue, not an environmental one. That is, unless you want to stretch the definition of environmental issues. (People are not an endangered species, for example.)
    Point #2 “could” be an environmental issue, but I’m not sure that it actually is. For example, Atherton and Tiburon seem to take steps to protect the local environment, at least. More so than say, Stockton or Elk Grove.
    Phoenix, Las Vegas, and the entire state of Texas (which are a lot cheaper, and have a lot fewer wealthy people per capita) generally do not.
    Ultimately, it’s wealthy people who (often) do the most to protect the environment. (See Rockefeller and The Grand Tetons, for example.)
    I don’t actually know why Davis wants to pursue “poor” people, as Dave Thompson described them. I’d rather live around people richer than me, not poorer. This ultimately is a “fiscal” issue, as well.
    But I’m not opposed to Affordable housing – it’s just not an environmental issue. I’m also supportive of rent control, which is NEVER even officially discussed in Davis.

  9. Ron, if you can’t see that using land in the most efficient way reduces sprawl, and that reducing sprawl is an environmental issue, I’m not sure how else to explain it to you.
    In this case, equitable and efficient use of land go hand-in-hand. Win-win.
    Environmentalism for the rich creates problems in the long run (has in the past) and isn’t exactly a position of moral authority, let’s just say. We ought to do the right thing by humans and the environment, humans-in-their-environments.

  10. R Keller

    I agree with the analysis in this article. I said many of these same things back in January here:
    https://www.davisite.org/2023/01/comments-on-inclusionary-multifamily-rental-housing-ordinance-review.html
    A couple of key points to emphasize extracted from that:
    1) The Cascadia pro forma analysis has a lot of “black box” qualities: Doesn’t show the calculations used or major assumptions, so it is not possible to adequately vet, double-check, and critique the methodology, assumptions, and calculations.
    The study doesn’t use a sophisticated pro forma analysis: it is very crude and basic and doesn’t allow changes in parameters of things like number of stories, unit sizes, and parking construction types and configurations.
    Because of this simplistic and opaque approach, it doesn’t offer flexibility in analysis or running different scenarios beyond the very limited canned ones shown.
    2) One terrible assumption: it considers one major parameter as given—the underlying land price.
    The fact is that land value varies by its scarcity and demand.If you increase affordable housing requirements, you reduce the bidding demand price for land
    In reality, land costs are not fixed and are influenced by the IRR that projects can achieve. If you make more affordable units required, that should actually lower land costs because the rate of return is now lower.
    Bottom line: if it approves the current proposal, the City will be locking in minimal affordable requirements based on bad data and analysis, and we’ll never adequately address the affordable housing need.

  11. Ron O

    Ron, if you can’t see that using land in the most efficient way reduces sprawl, and that reducing sprawl is an environmental issue, I’m not sure how else to explain it to you.
    It if results in “less land” being used that way, then the theory would be correct. I’m not sure that it does.
    For one thing, we now have Affordable housing developers “teaming up” with market-rate developers to pursue sprawl. If you can’t see why THAT’s a problem, I’m not sure how to explain that to you, either.
    Environmentalism for the rich creates problems in the long run (has in the past) and isn’t exactly a position of moral authority, let’s just say. We ought to do the right thing by humans and the environment, humans-in-their-environments.
    “Moral authority” is also not an environmental issue. It’s a social one (and a social “judgement”). I can tell you with near-certainty that animals don’t care about the wealth of those “who” kill them, or destroys their habitat. Nor do I believe that this is always connected to wealth.
    I will say that I’m happy that Rockefeller preserved much of the Grand Tetons (and did so in semi-secrecy, essentially to “bypass” those with less wealth) – even if I never have a chance to visit ultra-expensive Jackson Hole. One has to have money and power to accomplish that type of thing. Rockefeller did not do this for himself, and was opposed by locals AND the federal government.
    I feel much the same way about Marin. It’s the “rich” (or at least upper middle class) who took steps to preserve much of it. Same thing in regard to the mid-peninsula open space district, which abuts Silicon Valley. Poor communities generally don’t do this type of thing. There are many, many examples of this difference.
    Now, is that a reason to ensure that everyone becomes equally-rich? Maybe so, but not bloody likely. We apparently can’t even stop fighting a de facto war against Russia, control the middle east or China, etc.)

  12. For one thing, we now have Affordable housing developers “teaming up” with market-rate developers to pursue sprawl. If you can’t see why THAT’s a problem, I’m not sure how to explain that to you, either.
    Yes, and all they have to do right now is toss in some cheap ADU add-ons (no matter who actually lives there), plus some really cheap in-lieu fees. Easy-peasy, affordable housing requirement fulfilled, no actual affordable housing provided, move on.

  13. Ron O

    Roberta: Obviously, ADUs are not “Affordable” housing. That’s a total scam, and one which shouldn’t have been difficult for the city to figure out.
    I don’t even see how that can work, unless individual homeowners are subject to intrusive regulation (or become the “regulators”, themselves).
    Though I suppose they could be subject to rent control, if Costa Hawkins is ever overturned. In which case, they might not be rented out at all. (Assuming they’re rented now, for that matter.)
    I’d certainly like to have one, though. Some developers (such as Lennar) often include them. Probably adds about $100K to the cost of the house, I’m guessing. But at least it gets your aging mother-in-law (or father-in-law) out of your direct “space”. Or for that matter, your teenage son or daughter, visitors, etc. Maybe even your spouse, when you get tired of seeing them (or vice-versa). No, none of this is a reflection of “my” life.

  14. Ron, if you support eliminating ADUs from the affordable housing ordinance, then you agree with the first of the Sierra Club’s recommendations.

  15. Ron O

    Well, when you put it that way . . .
    🙂
    Actually, there’s lots of issues I agree with the Sierra Club on. But they’ve lost some focus, in my opinion. (Again, not just locally.)
    Now, if Alan P hadn’t started pushing for Covell Village II even before these recommendations were adopted, I might not be “complaining” on here.
    Perhaps the rest of you can keep him in check. No one seems to know why he’s pushing for that development, or at least – no one has actually provided an answer that makes sense – including Alan P, himself.
    I don’t need “agreement” to remain friends with someone. If I did, I wouldn’t be communicating with that “other” Alan, who has been banished to a “corner”.

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