California’s largest cities are indeed subject to its Surplus
Land Act, which says cities must prioritize affordable housing on
surplus publicly owned land, a new court decision implies.
California’s Surplus Land Act directs local agencies to prioritize
low-income housing with their surplus land, either by selling or leasing
it to builders who will develop a certain amount of affordable housing.
The law dictates that California agencies must first offer available
land to a developer that will turn it into a community of 25% affordable
units.
If a deal isn’t reached, the agency can put the extra land on the
market as long as a 10-plus-unit project has at least 15% of its homes
reserved for low-income households.
The California Supreme Court said last week it wouldn’t review an
appeals court decision of Anderson v. City of San Jose, which concluded
charter cities like San Jose are just as subject to the state law as the
rest of California. The Constitution of California gives cities the
right to become a charter city, which gives a city’s law concerning a
“municipal affair” authority over a state law dealing with the same
issue.
Aside from bolstering the Surplus Land Act itself, the appeals
court decision, which overturned a Santa Clara County Superior Court
ruling giving the city of San Jose more freedom under the law, will
likely impact other cases, said Richard Marcantonio, managing attorney
of Public Advocates, one of the co-counsel law firms on Anderson v. City
of San Jose.
In 2016, San Jose started allowing developers of high-rises on
surplus land not to meet the state law’s affordable housing
requirements, which led to a lawsuit against the city for that policy.
The city argued the state law didn’t apply to charter cities and that
they could exempt developers from its requirements.
In its reversal last year, the appeals court determined that the
shortage of sites around California available for affordable housing
amounted to a statewide concern; therefore, “it meets the test for
statewide preemption,” the ruling reads.
Marcantonio said similar arguments have been made by other charter
cities, like Huntington Beach, against different state housing
legislation, and that the state court’s decision should have
implications beyond the Surplus Land Act.
“The same legal analysis that the courts relied on in holding that
the Surplus Land Act applies to charter cities also applies to a whole
range of other interconnected affordable housing statutes at the state
level,” he said.
Huntington Beach, for instance, faced a lawsuit for a housing plan
that would result in a number of affordable housing units short of
state-mandated goals. Arguing for its right to do so as a charter city,
the city prevailed in a 2017 appeals court decision.
Marcantonio said the recent appeals court decision on the San Jose
case clarifies legal questions raised by charter cities like Huntington
Beach, which, incidentally, now looks poised to meet state-mandated
affordable housing goals as of January. That clarity and the fact the
Surplus Land Act was expanded for local agencies in the fall through AB
1486 should mean more affordable housing, he said.
“I think there’s a lot of potential to build affordable housing or
mixed-income housing on publicly owned land at the local and state
level,” Marcantonio said. “Between the court’s ruling and the amendments
to the bill to strengthen it, I think we’re really going to see the
bill start to achieve its potential.”
https://www.bisnow.com/national/news/affordable-housing/court-decision-means-sf-san-jose-other-charter-cities-must-prioritize-affordable-housing-on-surplus-land-103438
No comments:
Post a Comment