Local governments play an important role in the housing development process by setting the framework so homes can be built. Under California law, cities and counties are responsible for the planning, zoning and approval of new housing. This is meant to be a transparent process with input from residents, requisite environmental reviews and documents, and approving projects consistent with approved plans.
Local officials have three roles in land use matters:
In each instance, a number of legal and procedural requirements apply to local land use and planning decisions. These include due process, public disclosure, and legal determinations and documentation. In addition, there are several important legal provisions that apply specifically to affordable housing proposals. These issues are described below.
Law and common practice provide various ways local officials can engage and involve interested members of the public in local affordable housing decisions. Public hearings are perhaps the most common and well-known method and are often required by law, but there are a number of additional ways that local governments can engage with, gather input from and provide updates to residents.
The Institute for Local Government offers several resources that outline legal requirements and best practices for local agencies making land use, planning and development decisions.
Property owners and project applicants are entitled to “due process” when an agency acts on a general plan amendment, specific plan, zoning ordinance, subdivision, or other discretionary approvals in the land use context. This typically means providing property owners, applicants and neighboring and nearby properties notice of the impending action and an opportunity to be heard before taking the action. Local agencies can meet this requirement by complying with the state laws that delineate specific notice and hearing procedures. 2
The legal standards are slightly different depending on whether the agency is acting in a legislative or quasi-judicial capacity. But the essence of the requirements is the same: 1) affected parties must receive adequate notice of all hearings (written in a way that can be reasonably understood); and 2) they must have a fair opportunity to air concerns or rebut evidence presented to local officials.
In California, the procedural requirements go farther. Several statutes require specific forms of public notice and public involvement. For example, the Brown Act, the public notice and publishing requirements in the Planning and Zoning Law, and the review and comment process in the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) all bestow residents with specific public notice and participation rights.
Taken together, these requirements provide multiple opportunities for local agencies to receive public participation at every stage of the process of considering housing and other land use proposals. However, fully realizing these opportunities relies on effective implementation at the local level.
The formal planning process includes elements in addition to due process requirements that can help the public effectively participate in land use decisions. In particular, local agencies have legal obligations in two areas that facilitate informed public engagement:
2 See Cal. Gov’t Code § 65589.5.
Productive community participation requires an informed public. It is difficult to comment on housing or other land use proposals if basic information about the project and its impacts is not made public. California requires that local agencies disclose both issues of process and substance when making land use and development decisions.
Key procedural disclosure requirements that facilitate public participation in land use decisions include the following:
Procedural disclosure lets the public know what actions the local agency is considering taking, and when and how the public can offer testimony and other information for local officials to consider. But knowing when and how to participate doesn’t help the public learn what the project is, what its impacts and benefits may be, or what action they might want the local agency to take.
That is why California’s additional requirements for public disclosure about issues of substance as well as procedure can be such a powerful tool for informed civic engagement. Two substantive disclosure requirements in particular are noteworthy:
Local agencies in California are obliged to make “findings” and “determinations” about some of their decisions related to land use. Findings are written explanations of the legal and factual support for a particular decision. By adopting these findings after a public hearing and placing them on the public record, local agencies provide another opportunity for the community to understand and weigh in on decisions.
The following are some of the most important findings and determinations that local agencies make related to land use and affordable housing proposals.
The CEQA findings explain how the agency has resolved each environmental issue raised during the proceedings. The findings explain which impacts are significant, which mitigation measures are feasible, why other alternatives were rejected, and why the project’s benefits outweigh its consequences. The public is entitled to comment on the adequacy of the FEIR or other CEQA determination before it is certified.
In addition to the legal provisions that apply generally to land use decisions, there are a number of requirements that apply specifically to housing projects, plans and proposals. This is especially true in light of the legislative session ending in 2019. The California Governor signed into law no less than fourteen (14) bills that directly affect a local agency’s authority to permit, condition or deny housing development applications. Unsurprisingly, because most – if not all – observers agree that the housing shortage in California has exacerbated housing affordability and homelessness challenges, most of the new laws are meant to remove what housing advocates and legislators have viewed as obstacles to residential development.
Findings required for housing limits. Any general plan provision or zoning ordinance that limits the number of housing units that may be constructed on an annual basis must contain specific findings. The local agency must identify specific issues related to public health, safety, and welfare that justify reducing the housing opportunities of the region. 3 SB 330 amended both the Permit Streamlining Act and the Housing Accountability Act, with special rules effective Jan.1, 2020 through Jan. 1, 2025, and also established the Housing Crisis Act.
Under the new rules, local agencies’ ability to apply new policies that might limit housing developments will be severely restricted. “Housing development” is now defined to include residential projects, mixed-use projects with 2/3 of the square footage dedicated to residential units and transitional or supportive housing projects. Additionally, SB 330 creates a “preliminary application” process under which applicants who provide certain information about a housing development to a local agency will be able to lock in those local policies and rules that are in effect at the time the application is made.
To facilitate the preliminary application process, all public agencies must compile and make available to the public in writing and on the internet a checklist that specifies what is required to complete a development application. The developer has 180 days from the submittal of the preliminary application to submit a development application. Under SB 330, the local agency now has additional disclosure obligations when rejecting an application as incomplete and cannot request anything that is not identified on the application checklist. Finally, SB 330 also shortens the timeframes for housing development approval under the Permit Streamlining Act. Local agencies now have 90 days, instead of 120 days, following certification of the environmental impact report, to approve the project. For low-income projects seeking tax credits or other public funding, that time frame is 60 days.
Findings required to deny a housing project. A local agency has limited discretion to reject affordable housing projects, including mixed-use developments consisting of both residential and nonresidential uses. For example, prior to rejecting an affordable housing development application, or imposing conditions that renders a development infeasible, the agency must make one or more of the following specific findings:
Density bonuses. State law provides a density bonus and other incentives including waivers, modifications and parking restrictions for development projects that incorporate affordable housing. While the specific provisions are complex, in general projects may be entitled to an increase in allowable density if they include a designated percentage of units affordable to very low- or low-income households, special needs populations, and students. The density bonus also applies to all senior housing projects, regardless of whether they include affordable housing. 5
Additionally, Assembly Bill 1763 amended California’s density bonus law to authorize significant development incentives to encourage 100 percent affordable housing projects. The bill allows up to 20 percent of units in a proposed project to be available for moderate income households, while the remainder of the units must be affordable to lower income households. The affordability restrictions apply to both the base units and the extra units granted through the density bonus. These 100 percent affordable housing projects can receive an 80 percent density bonus from the otherwise maximum allowable density on the site. If the project is within 1/2 mile of a major transit stop, a city may not apply any density limit to the project. In addition to the density bonus, qualifying projects will receive four regulatory concessions. And, if the project is within 1/2 mile of a major transit stop, it will also receive a height increase of up to three additional stories, or 33 feet. The 100 percent affordable housing projects are also not subject to any minimum parking requirements.
Incentives and concessions. Developers are also entitled under state law to a number of other incentives to encourage affordable housing. These include reduced parking requirements as a matter of right, and consideration of a number of other concessions and waivers including reductions in site development standards, zoning, architectural design, or other regulatory concessions. 6
3 See Cal. Gov’t Code §§ 65302.8 (general plan), 65863.6 (zoning ordinance).
4 See Cal. Gov’t Code § 65589.5.
5 See Cal. Gov’t Code § 65915. For more information, see California Municipal Law Handbook, § 10.5.05(F) (2007).
6 ID