California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2140 Compare Versions

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11 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2140Introduced by Assembly Member Juan CarrilloFebruary 06, 2024 An act to add Section 12335 to the Government Code, relating to housing. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2140, as introduced, Juan Carrillo. Housing: Building Home Ownership for All Program.Existing law defines the duties of the Treasurer, which includes, but is not limited to, keeping an account of all money received and disbursed. Existing law required the Treasurer to, as soon as April 1, 2022, but no later than specified, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency and other specified state agencies, develop a framework for the California Dream For All Program in accordance with the goals and intent of the program, including, among other things, making home ownership more affordable by reducing the cost of home ownership by up to 45 percent for lower and moderate-income Californians, and submit a report, as specified, outlining the program framework to the Legislature.This bill would require the Treasurer, on or before December 31, 2025, and in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders deemed relevant by those state bodies, to develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program, including, among other things, expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, and submit a report, as specified, outlining the program framework to the Legislature. The bill would also make findings and declarations related to the program.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has a statewide housing crisis, represented by a shortage of nearly 3,500,000 homes.(b) Californias housing crisis stifles economic growth, contributes to the homelessness epidemic, consumes an ever-growing share of the paychecks of working families, and holds millions of households back from realizing the California dream of home ownership.(c) Home ownership is still the primary way in which most Americans build wealth and assets. California has the third-highest median home price in the nation and the high cost of housing has pushed what was once a modest goal further and further out of reach for most people of color.(d) Home ownership rates in California are among the lowest nationwide, and in recent years those numbers have continued downward. Between 2020 and 2022, California home ownership declined by 3.19 percent.(e) While the home ownership gap is an issue throughout the nation, the African American and Latinx home ownership rate is significantly worse in California. African Americans and Latinx have a home ownership rate across the nation of 42 percent and 47 percent, respectively, whereas that rate in California drops down to 35 percent and 42 percent, respectively.(f) The Legislative Analysts Office has identified a lack of housing supply as one of the culprits for the severe home ownership gap. The office completed a 2016 housing affordability report, which found that the states housing shortage also makes many Californians, not only low-income residents, more likely to commute longer distances, live in overcrowded housing, and delay or forgo home ownership.(g) Access to sustainable home ownership can be expanded with fiscal assistance, housing counseling, sound lending, flexible underwriting that ensures the ability to pay, and backing by Federal Housing Administration (FHA) mortgage insurance.(h) As production has slowed and changed, for-sale inventory has tightened, particularly for entry-level homes.(i) Higher home prices have translated to less diversity in who is able to purchase a home.(j) Home ownership is a powerful tool to close the racial and ethnic wealth gap across the State of California and nationwide.SEC. 2. Section 12335 is added to the Government Code, immediately following Section 12334, to read:12335. (a) The Treasurer shall, on or before December 31, 2025, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders determined relevant by those state bodies, develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program and submit a report outlining the program framework to the Legislature in compliance with Section 9795.(b) The goals of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, including, but not limited to, those who were impacted by generational barriers to home ownership due to systemic racism, including redlining, those who lost homes during the Great Recession and have not returned to home ownership, and those with substantial higher education student loan debt.(2) Establishing a program to finance the construction of for-sale housing units at a price that is ultimately affordable to lower and moderate-income Californians.(3) Evolving the program over time to create a self-sustaining model, including utilizing nongovernmental funding sources.(4) Ensuring that there is not a reduction in funding to existing rental programs due to enactment of the program.(c) The framework of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) Income limits for Californians and price limits for homes eligible for the program, both on a regional basis.(2) Options for the initial capitalization for the program.(3) Ongoing state financial support limited to nominal administrative costs.(4) Program structuring to encourage nongovernmental funding similar to existing programs, including, but not limited to, the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 42) and the New Markets Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 45D).(5) Opportunities to leverage existing federal, state, and local homeownership programs to support the goals of the program.(6) Integration of the program with existing state housing plans and strategies, including aligning with regional housing needs assessments and plans developed by local governments under existing law.(7) Opportunities to facilitate the involvement of small development firms, community development corporations, community land trusts, and other community based nonprofit housing developers in the production of these homes, including those owned and operated by members of formerly redlined communities.(8) Changes to existing law relating to land use and multifamily homeownership that would reduce the cost to construct for-sale single-family and multifamily homes.(9) Changes to streamline approval processes for housing projects under the program, including projects in areas with high housing demand, to expedite construction and reduce bureaucratic delays.(10) Quantification of the extent of the racial wealth gap in California.(11) Potential size, structure, and geography of a pilot project.(12) Incorporation of financial education and homeownership readiness programs, focusing on communities with lower rates of homeownership.(13) Monitoring of the impact of the program on expanding access to homeownership through the collection and analysis of data disaggregated by race, ethnicity, and income.(d) The report shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) The structure of the program, including, but not limited to, the administering entity and the financial structure of the program.(2) The type of financial assistance offered to homebuilders.(3) An analysis on the feasibility of establishing the program and the financial risks to the state, including, but not limited to, the costs and benefits of the program compared to available alternatives and existing programs, and how those costs and risks compare to the costs and risks to society of continuing current barriers to homeownership for working families and not combating systemic racism and inequities that have kept generations from building wealth and thriving in the middle class.
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33 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2140Introduced by Assembly Member Juan CarrilloFebruary 06, 2024 An act to add Section 12335 to the Government Code, relating to housing. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2140, as introduced, Juan Carrillo. Housing: Building Home Ownership for All Program.Existing law defines the duties of the Treasurer, which includes, but is not limited to, keeping an account of all money received and disbursed. Existing law required the Treasurer to, as soon as April 1, 2022, but no later than specified, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency and other specified state agencies, develop a framework for the California Dream For All Program in accordance with the goals and intent of the program, including, among other things, making home ownership more affordable by reducing the cost of home ownership by up to 45 percent for lower and moderate-income Californians, and submit a report, as specified, outlining the program framework to the Legislature.This bill would require the Treasurer, on or before December 31, 2025, and in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders deemed relevant by those state bodies, to develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program, including, among other things, expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, and submit a report, as specified, outlining the program framework to the Legislature. The bill would also make findings and declarations related to the program.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
55
66
77
88
99 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1010
1111 Assembly Bill
1212
1313 No. 2140
1414
1515 Introduced by Assembly Member Juan CarrilloFebruary 06, 2024
1616
1717 Introduced by Assembly Member Juan Carrillo
1818 February 06, 2024
1919
2020 An act to add Section 12335 to the Government Code, relating to housing.
2121
2222 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2323
2424 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2525
2626 AB 2140, as introduced, Juan Carrillo. Housing: Building Home Ownership for All Program.
2727
2828 Existing law defines the duties of the Treasurer, which includes, but is not limited to, keeping an account of all money received and disbursed. Existing law required the Treasurer to, as soon as April 1, 2022, but no later than specified, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency and other specified state agencies, develop a framework for the California Dream For All Program in accordance with the goals and intent of the program, including, among other things, making home ownership more affordable by reducing the cost of home ownership by up to 45 percent for lower and moderate-income Californians, and submit a report, as specified, outlining the program framework to the Legislature.This bill would require the Treasurer, on or before December 31, 2025, and in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders deemed relevant by those state bodies, to develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program, including, among other things, expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, and submit a report, as specified, outlining the program framework to the Legislature. The bill would also make findings and declarations related to the program.
2929
3030 Existing law defines the duties of the Treasurer, which includes, but is not limited to, keeping an account of all money received and disbursed. Existing law required the Treasurer to, as soon as April 1, 2022, but no later than specified, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency and other specified state agencies, develop a framework for the California Dream For All Program in accordance with the goals and intent of the program, including, among other things, making home ownership more affordable by reducing the cost of home ownership by up to 45 percent for lower and moderate-income Californians, and submit a report, as specified, outlining the program framework to the Legislature.
3131
3232 This bill would require the Treasurer, on or before December 31, 2025, and in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders deemed relevant by those state bodies, to develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program, including, among other things, expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, and submit a report, as specified, outlining the program framework to the Legislature. The bill would also make findings and declarations related to the program.
3333
3434 ## Digest Key
3535
3636 ## Bill Text
3737
3838 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has a statewide housing crisis, represented by a shortage of nearly 3,500,000 homes.(b) Californias housing crisis stifles economic growth, contributes to the homelessness epidemic, consumes an ever-growing share of the paychecks of working families, and holds millions of households back from realizing the California dream of home ownership.(c) Home ownership is still the primary way in which most Americans build wealth and assets. California has the third-highest median home price in the nation and the high cost of housing has pushed what was once a modest goal further and further out of reach for most people of color.(d) Home ownership rates in California are among the lowest nationwide, and in recent years those numbers have continued downward. Between 2020 and 2022, California home ownership declined by 3.19 percent.(e) While the home ownership gap is an issue throughout the nation, the African American and Latinx home ownership rate is significantly worse in California. African Americans and Latinx have a home ownership rate across the nation of 42 percent and 47 percent, respectively, whereas that rate in California drops down to 35 percent and 42 percent, respectively.(f) The Legislative Analysts Office has identified a lack of housing supply as one of the culprits for the severe home ownership gap. The office completed a 2016 housing affordability report, which found that the states housing shortage also makes many Californians, not only low-income residents, more likely to commute longer distances, live in overcrowded housing, and delay or forgo home ownership.(g) Access to sustainable home ownership can be expanded with fiscal assistance, housing counseling, sound lending, flexible underwriting that ensures the ability to pay, and backing by Federal Housing Administration (FHA) mortgage insurance.(h) As production has slowed and changed, for-sale inventory has tightened, particularly for entry-level homes.(i) Higher home prices have translated to less diversity in who is able to purchase a home.(j) Home ownership is a powerful tool to close the racial and ethnic wealth gap across the State of California and nationwide.SEC. 2. Section 12335 is added to the Government Code, immediately following Section 12334, to read:12335. (a) The Treasurer shall, on or before December 31, 2025, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders determined relevant by those state bodies, develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program and submit a report outlining the program framework to the Legislature in compliance with Section 9795.(b) The goals of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, including, but not limited to, those who were impacted by generational barriers to home ownership due to systemic racism, including redlining, those who lost homes during the Great Recession and have not returned to home ownership, and those with substantial higher education student loan debt.(2) Establishing a program to finance the construction of for-sale housing units at a price that is ultimately affordable to lower and moderate-income Californians.(3) Evolving the program over time to create a self-sustaining model, including utilizing nongovernmental funding sources.(4) Ensuring that there is not a reduction in funding to existing rental programs due to enactment of the program.(c) The framework of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) Income limits for Californians and price limits for homes eligible for the program, both on a regional basis.(2) Options for the initial capitalization for the program.(3) Ongoing state financial support limited to nominal administrative costs.(4) Program structuring to encourage nongovernmental funding similar to existing programs, including, but not limited to, the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 42) and the New Markets Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 45D).(5) Opportunities to leverage existing federal, state, and local homeownership programs to support the goals of the program.(6) Integration of the program with existing state housing plans and strategies, including aligning with regional housing needs assessments and plans developed by local governments under existing law.(7) Opportunities to facilitate the involvement of small development firms, community development corporations, community land trusts, and other community based nonprofit housing developers in the production of these homes, including those owned and operated by members of formerly redlined communities.(8) Changes to existing law relating to land use and multifamily homeownership that would reduce the cost to construct for-sale single-family and multifamily homes.(9) Changes to streamline approval processes for housing projects under the program, including projects in areas with high housing demand, to expedite construction and reduce bureaucratic delays.(10) Quantification of the extent of the racial wealth gap in California.(11) Potential size, structure, and geography of a pilot project.(12) Incorporation of financial education and homeownership readiness programs, focusing on communities with lower rates of homeownership.(13) Monitoring of the impact of the program on expanding access to homeownership through the collection and analysis of data disaggregated by race, ethnicity, and income.(d) The report shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) The structure of the program, including, but not limited to, the administering entity and the financial structure of the program.(2) The type of financial assistance offered to homebuilders.(3) An analysis on the feasibility of establishing the program and the financial risks to the state, including, but not limited to, the costs and benefits of the program compared to available alternatives and existing programs, and how those costs and risks compare to the costs and risks to society of continuing current barriers to homeownership for working families and not combating systemic racism and inequities that have kept generations from building wealth and thriving in the middle class.
3939
4040 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4141
4242 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4343
4444 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has a statewide housing crisis, represented by a shortage of nearly 3,500,000 homes.(b) Californias housing crisis stifles economic growth, contributes to the homelessness epidemic, consumes an ever-growing share of the paychecks of working families, and holds millions of households back from realizing the California dream of home ownership.(c) Home ownership is still the primary way in which most Americans build wealth and assets. California has the third-highest median home price in the nation and the high cost of housing has pushed what was once a modest goal further and further out of reach for most people of color.(d) Home ownership rates in California are among the lowest nationwide, and in recent years those numbers have continued downward. Between 2020 and 2022, California home ownership declined by 3.19 percent.(e) While the home ownership gap is an issue throughout the nation, the African American and Latinx home ownership rate is significantly worse in California. African Americans and Latinx have a home ownership rate across the nation of 42 percent and 47 percent, respectively, whereas that rate in California drops down to 35 percent and 42 percent, respectively.(f) The Legislative Analysts Office has identified a lack of housing supply as one of the culprits for the severe home ownership gap. The office completed a 2016 housing affordability report, which found that the states housing shortage also makes many Californians, not only low-income residents, more likely to commute longer distances, live in overcrowded housing, and delay or forgo home ownership.(g) Access to sustainable home ownership can be expanded with fiscal assistance, housing counseling, sound lending, flexible underwriting that ensures the ability to pay, and backing by Federal Housing Administration (FHA) mortgage insurance.(h) As production has slowed and changed, for-sale inventory has tightened, particularly for entry-level homes.(i) Higher home prices have translated to less diversity in who is able to purchase a home.(j) Home ownership is a powerful tool to close the racial and ethnic wealth gap across the State of California and nationwide.
4545
4646 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has a statewide housing crisis, represented by a shortage of nearly 3,500,000 homes.(b) Californias housing crisis stifles economic growth, contributes to the homelessness epidemic, consumes an ever-growing share of the paychecks of working families, and holds millions of households back from realizing the California dream of home ownership.(c) Home ownership is still the primary way in which most Americans build wealth and assets. California has the third-highest median home price in the nation and the high cost of housing has pushed what was once a modest goal further and further out of reach for most people of color.(d) Home ownership rates in California are among the lowest nationwide, and in recent years those numbers have continued downward. Between 2020 and 2022, California home ownership declined by 3.19 percent.(e) While the home ownership gap is an issue throughout the nation, the African American and Latinx home ownership rate is significantly worse in California. African Americans and Latinx have a home ownership rate across the nation of 42 percent and 47 percent, respectively, whereas that rate in California drops down to 35 percent and 42 percent, respectively.(f) The Legislative Analysts Office has identified a lack of housing supply as one of the culprits for the severe home ownership gap. The office completed a 2016 housing affordability report, which found that the states housing shortage also makes many Californians, not only low-income residents, more likely to commute longer distances, live in overcrowded housing, and delay or forgo home ownership.(g) Access to sustainable home ownership can be expanded with fiscal assistance, housing counseling, sound lending, flexible underwriting that ensures the ability to pay, and backing by Federal Housing Administration (FHA) mortgage insurance.(h) As production has slowed and changed, for-sale inventory has tightened, particularly for entry-level homes.(i) Higher home prices have translated to less diversity in who is able to purchase a home.(j) Home ownership is a powerful tool to close the racial and ethnic wealth gap across the State of California and nationwide.
4747
4848 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
4949
5050 ### SECTION 1.
5151
5252 (a) California has a statewide housing crisis, represented by a shortage of nearly 3,500,000 homes.
5353
5454 (b) Californias housing crisis stifles economic growth, contributes to the homelessness epidemic, consumes an ever-growing share of the paychecks of working families, and holds millions of households back from realizing the California dream of home ownership.
5555
5656 (c) Home ownership is still the primary way in which most Americans build wealth and assets. California has the third-highest median home price in the nation and the high cost of housing has pushed what was once a modest goal further and further out of reach for most people of color.
5757
5858 (d) Home ownership rates in California are among the lowest nationwide, and in recent years those numbers have continued downward. Between 2020 and 2022, California home ownership declined by 3.19 percent.
5959
6060 (e) While the home ownership gap is an issue throughout the nation, the African American and Latinx home ownership rate is significantly worse in California. African Americans and Latinx have a home ownership rate across the nation of 42 percent and 47 percent, respectively, whereas that rate in California drops down to 35 percent and 42 percent, respectively.
6161
6262 (f) The Legislative Analysts Office has identified a lack of housing supply as one of the culprits for the severe home ownership gap. The office completed a 2016 housing affordability report, which found that the states housing shortage also makes many Californians, not only low-income residents, more likely to commute longer distances, live in overcrowded housing, and delay or forgo home ownership.
6363
6464 (g) Access to sustainable home ownership can be expanded with fiscal assistance, housing counseling, sound lending, flexible underwriting that ensures the ability to pay, and backing by Federal Housing Administration (FHA) mortgage insurance.
6565
6666 (h) As production has slowed and changed, for-sale inventory has tightened, particularly for entry-level homes.
6767
6868 (i) Higher home prices have translated to less diversity in who is able to purchase a home.
6969
7070 (j) Home ownership is a powerful tool to close the racial and ethnic wealth gap across the State of California and nationwide.
7171
7272 SEC. 2. Section 12335 is added to the Government Code, immediately following Section 12334, to read:12335. (a) The Treasurer shall, on or before December 31, 2025, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders determined relevant by those state bodies, develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program and submit a report outlining the program framework to the Legislature in compliance with Section 9795.(b) The goals of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, including, but not limited to, those who were impacted by generational barriers to home ownership due to systemic racism, including redlining, those who lost homes during the Great Recession and have not returned to home ownership, and those with substantial higher education student loan debt.(2) Establishing a program to finance the construction of for-sale housing units at a price that is ultimately affordable to lower and moderate-income Californians.(3) Evolving the program over time to create a self-sustaining model, including utilizing nongovernmental funding sources.(4) Ensuring that there is not a reduction in funding to existing rental programs due to enactment of the program.(c) The framework of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) Income limits for Californians and price limits for homes eligible for the program, both on a regional basis.(2) Options for the initial capitalization for the program.(3) Ongoing state financial support limited to nominal administrative costs.(4) Program structuring to encourage nongovernmental funding similar to existing programs, including, but not limited to, the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 42) and the New Markets Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 45D).(5) Opportunities to leverage existing federal, state, and local homeownership programs to support the goals of the program.(6) Integration of the program with existing state housing plans and strategies, including aligning with regional housing needs assessments and plans developed by local governments under existing law.(7) Opportunities to facilitate the involvement of small development firms, community development corporations, community land trusts, and other community based nonprofit housing developers in the production of these homes, including those owned and operated by members of formerly redlined communities.(8) Changes to existing law relating to land use and multifamily homeownership that would reduce the cost to construct for-sale single-family and multifamily homes.(9) Changes to streamline approval processes for housing projects under the program, including projects in areas with high housing demand, to expedite construction and reduce bureaucratic delays.(10) Quantification of the extent of the racial wealth gap in California.(11) Potential size, structure, and geography of a pilot project.(12) Incorporation of financial education and homeownership readiness programs, focusing on communities with lower rates of homeownership.(13) Monitoring of the impact of the program on expanding access to homeownership through the collection and analysis of data disaggregated by race, ethnicity, and income.(d) The report shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) The structure of the program, including, but not limited to, the administering entity and the financial structure of the program.(2) The type of financial assistance offered to homebuilders.(3) An analysis on the feasibility of establishing the program and the financial risks to the state, including, but not limited to, the costs and benefits of the program compared to available alternatives and existing programs, and how those costs and risks compare to the costs and risks to society of continuing current barriers to homeownership for working families and not combating systemic racism and inequities that have kept generations from building wealth and thriving in the middle class.
7373
7474 SEC. 2. Section 12335 is added to the Government Code, immediately following Section 12334, to read:
7575
7676 ### SEC. 2.
7777
7878 12335. (a) The Treasurer shall, on or before December 31, 2025, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders determined relevant by those state bodies, develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program and submit a report outlining the program framework to the Legislature in compliance with Section 9795.(b) The goals of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, including, but not limited to, those who were impacted by generational barriers to home ownership due to systemic racism, including redlining, those who lost homes during the Great Recession and have not returned to home ownership, and those with substantial higher education student loan debt.(2) Establishing a program to finance the construction of for-sale housing units at a price that is ultimately affordable to lower and moderate-income Californians.(3) Evolving the program over time to create a self-sustaining model, including utilizing nongovernmental funding sources.(4) Ensuring that there is not a reduction in funding to existing rental programs due to enactment of the program.(c) The framework of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) Income limits for Californians and price limits for homes eligible for the program, both on a regional basis.(2) Options for the initial capitalization for the program.(3) Ongoing state financial support limited to nominal administrative costs.(4) Program structuring to encourage nongovernmental funding similar to existing programs, including, but not limited to, the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 42) and the New Markets Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 45D).(5) Opportunities to leverage existing federal, state, and local homeownership programs to support the goals of the program.(6) Integration of the program with existing state housing plans and strategies, including aligning with regional housing needs assessments and plans developed by local governments under existing law.(7) Opportunities to facilitate the involvement of small development firms, community development corporations, community land trusts, and other community based nonprofit housing developers in the production of these homes, including those owned and operated by members of formerly redlined communities.(8) Changes to existing law relating to land use and multifamily homeownership that would reduce the cost to construct for-sale single-family and multifamily homes.(9) Changes to streamline approval processes for housing projects under the program, including projects in areas with high housing demand, to expedite construction and reduce bureaucratic delays.(10) Quantification of the extent of the racial wealth gap in California.(11) Potential size, structure, and geography of a pilot project.(12) Incorporation of financial education and homeownership readiness programs, focusing on communities with lower rates of homeownership.(13) Monitoring of the impact of the program on expanding access to homeownership through the collection and analysis of data disaggregated by race, ethnicity, and income.(d) The report shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) The structure of the program, including, but not limited to, the administering entity and the financial structure of the program.(2) The type of financial assistance offered to homebuilders.(3) An analysis on the feasibility of establishing the program and the financial risks to the state, including, but not limited to, the costs and benefits of the program compared to available alternatives and existing programs, and how those costs and risks compare to the costs and risks to society of continuing current barriers to homeownership for working families and not combating systemic racism and inequities that have kept generations from building wealth and thriving in the middle class.
7979
8080 12335. (a) The Treasurer shall, on or before December 31, 2025, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders determined relevant by those state bodies, develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program and submit a report outlining the program framework to the Legislature in compliance with Section 9795.(b) The goals of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, including, but not limited to, those who were impacted by generational barriers to home ownership due to systemic racism, including redlining, those who lost homes during the Great Recession and have not returned to home ownership, and those with substantial higher education student loan debt.(2) Establishing a program to finance the construction of for-sale housing units at a price that is ultimately affordable to lower and moderate-income Californians.(3) Evolving the program over time to create a self-sustaining model, including utilizing nongovernmental funding sources.(4) Ensuring that there is not a reduction in funding to existing rental programs due to enactment of the program.(c) The framework of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) Income limits for Californians and price limits for homes eligible for the program, both on a regional basis.(2) Options for the initial capitalization for the program.(3) Ongoing state financial support limited to nominal administrative costs.(4) Program structuring to encourage nongovernmental funding similar to existing programs, including, but not limited to, the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 42) and the New Markets Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 45D).(5) Opportunities to leverage existing federal, state, and local homeownership programs to support the goals of the program.(6) Integration of the program with existing state housing plans and strategies, including aligning with regional housing needs assessments and plans developed by local governments under existing law.(7) Opportunities to facilitate the involvement of small development firms, community development corporations, community land trusts, and other community based nonprofit housing developers in the production of these homes, including those owned and operated by members of formerly redlined communities.(8) Changes to existing law relating to land use and multifamily homeownership that would reduce the cost to construct for-sale single-family and multifamily homes.(9) Changes to streamline approval processes for housing projects under the program, including projects in areas with high housing demand, to expedite construction and reduce bureaucratic delays.(10) Quantification of the extent of the racial wealth gap in California.(11) Potential size, structure, and geography of a pilot project.(12) Incorporation of financial education and homeownership readiness programs, focusing on communities with lower rates of homeownership.(13) Monitoring of the impact of the program on expanding access to homeownership through the collection and analysis of data disaggregated by race, ethnicity, and income.(d) The report shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) The structure of the program, including, but not limited to, the administering entity and the financial structure of the program.(2) The type of financial assistance offered to homebuilders.(3) An analysis on the feasibility of establishing the program and the financial risks to the state, including, but not limited to, the costs and benefits of the program compared to available alternatives and existing programs, and how those costs and risks compare to the costs and risks to society of continuing current barriers to homeownership for working families and not combating systemic racism and inequities that have kept generations from building wealth and thriving in the middle class.
8181
8282 12335. (a) The Treasurer shall, on or before December 31, 2025, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders determined relevant by those state bodies, develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program and submit a report outlining the program framework to the Legislature in compliance with Section 9795.(b) The goals of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) Expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, including, but not limited to, those who were impacted by generational barriers to home ownership due to systemic racism, including redlining, those who lost homes during the Great Recession and have not returned to home ownership, and those with substantial higher education student loan debt.(2) Establishing a program to finance the construction of for-sale housing units at a price that is ultimately affordable to lower and moderate-income Californians.(3) Evolving the program over time to create a self-sustaining model, including utilizing nongovernmental funding sources.(4) Ensuring that there is not a reduction in funding to existing rental programs due to enactment of the program.(c) The framework of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) Income limits for Californians and price limits for homes eligible for the program, both on a regional basis.(2) Options for the initial capitalization for the program.(3) Ongoing state financial support limited to nominal administrative costs.(4) Program structuring to encourage nongovernmental funding similar to existing programs, including, but not limited to, the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 42) and the New Markets Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 45D).(5) Opportunities to leverage existing federal, state, and local homeownership programs to support the goals of the program.(6) Integration of the program with existing state housing plans and strategies, including aligning with regional housing needs assessments and plans developed by local governments under existing law.(7) Opportunities to facilitate the involvement of small development firms, community development corporations, community land trusts, and other community based nonprofit housing developers in the production of these homes, including those owned and operated by members of formerly redlined communities.(8) Changes to existing law relating to land use and multifamily homeownership that would reduce the cost to construct for-sale single-family and multifamily homes.(9) Changes to streamline approval processes for housing projects under the program, including projects in areas with high housing demand, to expedite construction and reduce bureaucratic delays.(10) Quantification of the extent of the racial wealth gap in California.(11) Potential size, structure, and geography of a pilot project.(12) Incorporation of financial education and homeownership readiness programs, focusing on communities with lower rates of homeownership.(13) Monitoring of the impact of the program on expanding access to homeownership through the collection and analysis of data disaggregated by race, ethnicity, and income.(d) The report shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:(1) The structure of the program, including, but not limited to, the administering entity and the financial structure of the program.(2) The type of financial assistance offered to homebuilders.(3) An analysis on the feasibility of establishing the program and the financial risks to the state, including, but not limited to, the costs and benefits of the program compared to available alternatives and existing programs, and how those costs and risks compare to the costs and risks to society of continuing current barriers to homeownership for working families and not combating systemic racism and inequities that have kept generations from building wealth and thriving in the middle class.
8383
8484
8585
8686 12335. (a) The Treasurer shall, on or before December 31, 2025, in consultation with the California Housing Finance Agency, the Department of Housing and Community Development, and other stakeholders determined relevant by those state bodies, develop a framework for the Building Home Ownership for All Program in accordance with the goals and elements of the program and submit a report outlining the program framework to the Legislature in compliance with Section 9795.
8787
8888 (b) The goals of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:
8989
9090 (1) Expanding access to homeownership by making it affordable for lower and moderate-income Californians, including, but not limited to, those who were impacted by generational barriers to home ownership due to systemic racism, including redlining, those who lost homes during the Great Recession and have not returned to home ownership, and those with substantial higher education student loan debt.
9191
9292 (2) Establishing a program to finance the construction of for-sale housing units at a price that is ultimately affordable to lower and moderate-income Californians.
9393
9494 (3) Evolving the program over time to create a self-sustaining model, including utilizing nongovernmental funding sources.
9595
9696 (4) Ensuring that there is not a reduction in funding to existing rental programs due to enactment of the program.
9797
9898 (c) The framework of the program shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following elements:
9999
100100 (1) Income limits for Californians and price limits for homes eligible for the program, both on a regional basis.
101101
102102 (2) Options for the initial capitalization for the program.
103103
104104 (3) Ongoing state financial support limited to nominal administrative costs.
105105
106106 (4) Program structuring to encourage nongovernmental funding similar to existing programs, including, but not limited to, the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 42) and the New Markets Tax Credit Program (26 U.S.C. Sec. 45D).
107107
108108 (5) Opportunities to leverage existing federal, state, and local homeownership programs to support the goals of the program.
109109
110110 (6) Integration of the program with existing state housing plans and strategies, including aligning with regional housing needs assessments and plans developed by local governments under existing law.
111111
112112 (7) Opportunities to facilitate the involvement of small development firms, community development corporations, community land trusts, and other community based nonprofit housing developers in the production of these homes, including those owned and operated by members of formerly redlined communities.
113113
114114 (8) Changes to existing law relating to land use and multifamily homeownership that would reduce the cost to construct for-sale single-family and multifamily homes.
115115
116116 (9) Changes to streamline approval processes for housing projects under the program, including projects in areas with high housing demand, to expedite construction and reduce bureaucratic delays.
117117
118118 (10) Quantification of the extent of the racial wealth gap in California.
119119
120120 (11) Potential size, structure, and geography of a pilot project.
121121
122122 (12) Incorporation of financial education and homeownership readiness programs, focusing on communities with lower rates of homeownership.
123123
124124 (13) Monitoring of the impact of the program on expanding access to homeownership through the collection and analysis of data disaggregated by race, ethnicity, and income.
125125
126126 (d) The report shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following:
127127
128128 (1) The structure of the program, including, but not limited to, the administering entity and the financial structure of the program.
129129
130130 (2) The type of financial assistance offered to homebuilders.
131131
132132 (3) An analysis on the feasibility of establishing the program and the financial risks to the state, including, but not limited to, the costs and benefits of the program compared to available alternatives and existing programs, and how those costs and risks compare to the costs and risks to society of continuing current barriers to homeownership for working families and not combating systemic racism and inequities that have kept generations from building wealth and thriving in the middle class.