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The ballot arguments in favor of Village Farms are extremely misleading about affordable-by-design housing

Arguably, they are downright deceptive

By Roberta Millstein

In a previous article, I explained how it is only the Baseline Features of a project that are guaranteed to be built.  I further explained that the Affordable Housing that Village Farms claims to provide is not part of the Baseline Features, i.e., the features that we will vote on as part of Measure V — it seems to be, but then by referring to the Development Agreement where it says only that the City “may elect to request Developer to construct the units” (emphasis added), it becomes clear that there is no guarantee of Affordable Housing at all. (Please refer back to that article for details).

In this article, I will explain that the “commitments” to affordable-by-design housing that proponents tout in their ballot arguments and elsewhere are similarly ephemeral.  Voters should be aware that the project may not include much affordable-by-design housing at all.

First, let’s clarify.  In California, capital ‘A’ Affordable Housing has a specific legal definition, with classifications based on income as a percentage of Area Median Income (AMI).  In order to qualify to occupy an Affordable Housing unit, one has to fall into the requisite income class.

But “lower case ‘a’”, affordable-by-design (also called “missing middle”) housing has no such income restrictions.  Anyone can purchase it, regardless of income.  However, as the name suggests, the point is that certain types of housing are likely to be less expensive, and thus more affordable: duplexes, triplexes, cottage courts, and multiplexes are examples.  They are still “market rate” — they will cost whatever the market will bear — but the hope is that they will be affordable to those who do not qualify for Affordable Housing but who do not earn enough money to purchase larger, single-family homes.

So, what do the Village Farms proponents promise? 

The ballot argument in favor of Measure V tells us that “young families, teachers and local workers can’t afford to live” in Davis, but Village Farms is coming to the rescue!  It will provide “diverse homes for every income level… Seventy percent of market rate homes are attached or on small lots, providing much needed “missing-middle” housing.”  The rebuttal from project proponents similarly states, “Additionally, over 70% of market-rate homes will be townhomes, half-plexes, and smaller homes, making homeownership possible for younger families with modest incomes.”

That 70% promise sounds firm, right?  Quantitative!  Exact!  Surely that is in the Baseline Features, then, right?  Nope.  What does it say about the non-Affordable Housing in the Baseline Features?  Here’s the whole thing: “The residential portion of the land will be zoned for a maximum of 1,800 residential units and will include Residential High-Density, Residential Medium-Density, and Residential Low-Density zoning designations.”  There is a map included (see above), but it has the proviso that “CONCEPTS SHOWN ON THIS EXHIBIT ARE PRELIMINARY IN NATURE AND ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE BASED ON FINAL DESIGN” (all-caps in original) and does not say how many units will be in each of these three zoning areas.

To find that 70% number, one has to go to the subject-to-change Exhibit E of the Development Agreement.  If you subtract the 360 maybe-they-will-be-built (but who knows?) Affordable Housing units from the total of 1800, there are 1440 remaining. The Development Agreement breaks down that 1440 as follows: 310 Single-Family units on lots larger than 5,000 square feet (Low-Density), 113 Single-Family units on lots larger than 5,000 square feet (Medium-Density), and 1017 Single-Family units on lots smaller than 5,000 square feet (Medium-Density).  1017 units divided by 1440 is .7 — that is, the Development Agreement says that 70% of Market Rate units will be built on lots smaller than 5000 square feet.

Again, however — it doesn’t really matter what the Development Agreement says.  These promises of affordable-by-design housing are subject to the whim of the developer and whoever happens to be on the City Council at the time.  And we have seen that Davis City Councils will, time and time again, allow developers to back out of their promises.  They did so with the Cannery, repeatedly.  Arguably, they did so with Bretton Woods as well (where even features that people thought were part of the Baseline Features, such as a memory care facility, turned out to be changeable parts of the project, too).

Ask yourself this: If the developer really wanted to promise 70% of the market rate housing to be affordable-by-design, wouldn’t that be in the Baseline Features?  Instead, it was deliberately left changeable.

A changeable promise is no promise at all.  What the developer claims to promise is misleading at best, deceptive at worst.

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Comments

6 responses to “The ballot arguments in favor of Village Farms are extremely misleading about affordable-by-design housing”

  1. Sandy Filby

    I agree and this seems to be a negative Davis developer custom. I moved into a new house in Oakshade after looking at the Master Plan and being told it was final. The developer changed the plan radically 2 weeks after we moved in. We were in the first block built. Oakshade is a pale shadow of that master plan. Developers do anything they want.

  2. John Cooper

    Fool me once, shame on them. Fool me twice and we get unaffordable housing and thousands of additional cars on the deteriorating streets of Davis.

  3. You can add Willowbank Park as another “Bait and Switch” example. The development agreement for Willowbank Park had over 50% of its units as Condos/Townhouses when it was approved. A year later with no public input, the developer got a change approved by City Council, and now there are zero (that is right, zero) condos/townhouses in that neighborhood, only expensive detached single family residences, the most recent of which sold for $1,241,600.

    Is that affordable for the teachers and restaurant/coffee shop workers and hotel workers and hospital workers who make up the workforce of Davis?

    1. Thank you so much for this comment, Matt. I was not aware of this incident. It is very telling and directly relevant to the current situation.

  4. Eileen Samitz

    Excellent article explaining the “spin” that the Village Farms developers are using in their ballot statements and especially in their 8-page glossy multi-color “booklet” to try to lure Davis residents in on their “smoke and mirrors” project. One of their biggest phony sales pitches is implying that the housing will be affordable. But clearly with the massive infrastructure changes needed that this seriously flawed and handicapped project site would raise the cost of these houses will be even higher than the estimates in the Village Farms BAE fiscal study of $740,000 to $1.3 million. We are talking about a minimum house payment of $6,000 to cover mortgage, insurance, property taxes, and other fees. Local workers and families can’t afford this, and so it will not help bring 700 kids to the schools either. Plus, with a 15-year buildout (which is overly optimistic) this also would not help with the School Districts timeline.

    These enormous Village Farms infrastructure costs would include: a) moving ONE MILLION cubic yards of soil to try to fill the 200-acre flood plain, b) re-routing Channel A, c) removing toxics soils at the Heritage Oak Park site where neurotoxic toxaphene and lead is in high levels, and d) building TWO grade-separated crossings.

    But, as Roberta points out, the Village Farms developers don’t want to include the fact that any development agreement is completely subject to change later in their glossy AI generated image mailers. But as pointed out in this article, the developer has the ability to change anything they are claiming on the housing.

    And on top of this to not even have definitive exhibits which admit ““CONCEPTS SHOWN ON THIS EXHIBIT ARE PRELIMINARY IN NATURE AND ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE BASED ON FINAL DESIGN” is astonishing. This project was fast-tracked by the City prioritizing the developers wishes to race this project to an early ballot over the concerns of Davis residents was a travesty and this is the result. Village Farms is a disastrous project environmentally, as well as is misleading and disingenuous on the affordability of its housing proposed.

  5. Ron O

    So, here’s what someone can expect to pay for any “new” house in Davis (with essentially no yard):

    $795,000 for an “attached” 3 bedroom house with a long, shared driveway.

    https://foutshomes.com/pole-line-terrace/pole-line-terrace-site-and-floor-plans/

    $825,600 for a detached, 1,472 square foot house.

    https://www.centurycommunities.com/find-your-new-home/california/northern-california-metro/davis/harvest-glen/?utm_source=google_local&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=harvest-glen_gmb_ccs&utm_content=california

    (Existing housing stock is a much better deal than either of these.)

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