California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2881 Compare Versions

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11 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2881Introduced by Assembly Member Lee(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bennett, Wendy Carrillo, Haney, Jackson, McCarty, and Rendon)(Coauthors: Senators Menjivar and Smallwood-Cuevas)February 15, 2024An act to add Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) to the Government Code, relating to housing.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2881, as introduced, Lee. The Social Housing Act.Existing law establishes the Department of Housing and Community Development and sets forth its powers and duties. Existing law creates a housing authority in each county or city, which functions upon the adoption of a specified resolution by the relevant governing body. Existing law authorizes these housing authorities, within their jurisdictions, to construct, reconstruct, improve, alter, or repair all or part of any housing project. Existing law establishes various programs that provide housing assistance.This bill would enact the Social Housing Act and would create the California Housing Authority as an independent state body, the mission of which would be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets and preserving affordable housing. The bill would prescribe a definition of social housing that would describe, in addition to housing owned by the authority, housing owned by other entities, as specified, provided that all social housing developed or authorized by the authority would be owned by the authority.This bill would prescribe the composition of the California Housing Authority Board, which would govern the authority, and which would be composed of appointed members and members who would be elected by residents of social housing developments, as specified. The bill would set forth the powers and duties of the authority and the board. The bill would require the authority to seek to achieve revenue neutrality, as defined, and would require the authority to seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden.This bill would require the authority to prioritize the development of specified property, including vacant parcels and parcels near transit, and would establish a process for the annual determination of required social housing units. Under the bill, social housing would accommodate a mix of household income ranges and would provide specified protections for residents, who would participate in the operation and management of the units in which they reside.This bill would require the California Housing Authority to employ 2 leasing models in social housing developments, referred to as the rental model and the ownership model, and would set forth the characteristics of both models. Under the ownership model, the authority would extend a 99-year lease, in the form of a limited equity arrangement, as defined, to individuals who commit to a minimum 5-year term of residence, and would authorize the authority to act as a lender for residents. The bill would specify how the units may be sold and transferred. The bill would establish eligibility requirements for social housing residents and would provide for the selection of residents by lottery, as specified, providing that people who may have been displaced from a property as part of its development would be granted a preference for occupancy. The bill, among other things, would require the authority to accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if specified conditions are met. This bill would establish the Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund within the State Treasury to provide, upon appropriation by the Legislature, zero-interest loans for the purposes of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes. The bill would declare the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds. The bill would authorize the authority to issue revenue bonds, as specified. The bill would require the board to provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records, as specified. The bill would also require the authority to prepare and submit specified reporting information regarding its business plan and progress to the Legislature on an annual basis.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) The housing crisis has reached unprecedented and unacceptable proportions in the State of California, where more than two in five households spend greater than 30 percent of their income on housing and more than one in five households spend greater than 50 percent of their income on housing.(b) The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development defines cost-burdened families as those who pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing and may have difficulty affording necessities such as food, clothing, transportation, and medical care. Severe rent burden is defined as paying more than 50 percent of ones income on rent.(c) Housing burden creates severe financial, physical, and emotional impacts on households.(d) The affordable housing crisis has imposed a significant toll on the California economy, as overpriced rents depress the California gross domestic product by approximately 2 percent and more than 600,000 people leave the state annually in search of lower rent.(e) Current efforts, while laudable, have proven insufficient in resolving the states affordable housing crisis, since 97 percent of cities and counties have been unable to meet the regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, and moderate-income housing.(f) With such a great failure to meet the housing needs of California residents, the state has a duty to act and help localities fill the gap by financing publicly owned, affordable housing built sustainably, based on the widely successful Vienna and Singapore models and many other successful models of mixed-income rental and ownership housing.(g) It is the intent of the Legislature to establish the California Housing Authority, an independent public entity, to offer the necessary social housing to help eliminate the gaps between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets in all jurisdictions throughout the state. The authority shall be responsible for developing, owning, and maintaining social housing in California. Social housing is publicly owned, mixed-income housing, removed from market forces and speculation, and built with the express aim of housing people equitably and affordably. Under public control and oversight, social housing is sustainable and remains affordable in perpetuity.(h) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this title to set an ambitious goal for creating social housing, through both new production and preservation of existing units, and to establish the means for achieving that goal.(i) It is further the intent of the Legislature for the California Housing Authority to ensure that no Californian pays more than 30 percent of their income on housing by the year 2050.SEC. 2. Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) is added to the Government Code, to read:TITLE 6.91. THE SOCIAL HOUSING ACTPART 1. General Provisions CHAPTER 1. Title64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act. CHAPTER 2. Definitions64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title. 64902. Above moderate income means income for households that exceeds the moderate-income level, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64903. Area median income means area median income as published by the Department of Housing and Community Development pursuant to Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64904. Authority or CHA means the California Housing Authority, an independent state body established by this title for the purpose of developing social housing for all California residents. 64905. Board means the California Housing Authority Board.64906. Cost rent means a system in which the rent of a dwelling is calculated on the cost of providing for and maintaining the dwelling, only allowing for limited or no proceeds.64907. Extremely low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for extremely low income households, as described in Section 50106 of the Health and Safety Code.64908. Limited equity arrangement means an ownership model in which residents are extended a long-term lease of a unit, take out a subsidized leasehold mortgage on the property from the authority, make monthly mortgage payments, and commit to resell at a price determined by a formula designed to balance ongoing affordability and resident wealth generation.64909. Low income means income for households that does not exceed the qualifying limits for lower income households, as described in Section 50079.5 of the Health and Safety Code.64910. Moderate income means income for households of low or moderate income whose income exceeds the income limit for lower income households, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64911. Multifamily property means a collection of units featuring extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income units. A multifamily property may be a single building, multiple buildings on the same or adjacent parcels, or multiple buildings across several blocks within a single jurisdiction, or as may be defined by the authority.64912. Regional housing needs assessment or RHNA means a representation of housing needs for all income levels in a jurisdiction pursuant to Article 10.6 (commencing with Section 65580) of Chapter 3 of Division 1 of Title 7.64913. Rent and mortgage cross-subsidization means a system in which the below-cost rents and leasehold mortgages of certain units are balanced by above-cost payments on other units within the same multiunit property so as to ensure the propertys overall revenue meets development and operational costs.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the authority are returned to the authority through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64915. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics: (a) (1) The housing units are owned by a government entity such as the California Housing Authority, a public entity, or a local housing authority.(2) For the purposes of this act, all social housing developed or authorized by the authority shall be owned by the authority.(b) If a housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges, including extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.(c) Residents of housing units are afforded, at a minimum, all protections granted to tenants with tenancies in private property under Section 1946.2 of the Civil Code, including protection against termination without just cause or for any discriminatory, retaliatory, or other arbitrary reason, and shall be afforded due process prior to being subject to eviction procedures, in addition to other protections provided by this title.(d) The housing units shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private for-profit entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.(e) Residents of the housing units have the right to participate directly and meaningfully in decisionmaking affecting the operation and management of their housing units. 64916. Very low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for very low income households, as described in Section 50105 of the Health and Safety Code.64917. Underutilized parcel means a parcel of property upon which is built a structure that contains fewer units than the maximum number of units permissible under local zoning regulations.PART 2. California Housing Authority CHAPTER 1. Creation, Powers, and Duties Article 1. Creation64920. (a) The California Housing Authority is hereby created. The authority shall be governed by the California Housing Authority Board.(b) The core mission of the authority shall be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets, and preserving affordable housing. Article 2. Powers64921. The authority shall have the following general powers:(a) Sue and be sued.(b) Have a seal and alter the same at its pleasure.(c) Enter into contracts and execute other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers to perform its mission.(d) Make rules with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.(e) Through its executive officer, appoint officers, agents, and employees; prescribe their duties and qualifications; set their employment descriptions and salaries subject to civil service rules; provide for participation in health care and retirement benefits available to similar state employees; and delegate to one or more of its agents or employees the powers and duties it deems proper.(f) Acquire, by grant or purchase, property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, lease, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.(g) Enter into development partnerships with municipalities, joint powers of authority, and other public and private entities in order to further its social housing development goals.(h) Arrange for the planning, opening, grading, or closing of roads or other places, for the furnishing of facilities, or for the furnishing of property or services in connection with a project.(i) Prepare project plans for any project, and from time to time modify those plans.(j) Provide advisory, consultative, training, and educational services, technical assistance, and advice to any person, partnership, or corporation, either public or private, to carry out its mission, and to contract with consultants provision of professional and technical assistance and advice.(k) Accept funding in any form from any source.(l) Call upon the Attorney General for legal services as it may require. Article 3. Duties64922. (a) The authority shall implement and advise on the social housing program, as prescribed by Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 64933), and is hereby granted all powers necessary for this purpose.(b) The authority may contract with property managers to manage its properties according to the following requirements:(1) Property managers shall abide by standards of responsiveness to resident needs prescribed by the authority.(2) Property managers shall abide by rules regarding resident rights and protections or be subject to termination of employment.64923. (a) The authority shall prepare, publish, adopt, and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual business plan. At least 60 days prior to the publication of the plan, the authority shall publish a draft business plan for public review and comment. The draft plan shall also be submitted to the Governor and the Legislature.(b) The business plan shall include, but need not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) A description of the type of projects the authority is producing or acquiring and the proposed timeline, estimated costs, and funding sources.(2) A projection of the expected residents, income levels, and other demographic data.(3) An estimate and description of the anticipated funds the authority intends to leverage to fund the construction and operation activities, and the authoritys level of confidence for obtaining each type of funding.(4) Any written agreements with public or private entities, such as technical assistance agreements.(c) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide and submit to the Legislature an analysis on the effect of its developments on gentrification. The report of the analysis shall be subject to public comment and shall be considered by the board for future decisionmaking.(d) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide an annual update to the Legislature on its progress, which shall include relevant resident statistics once social housing developments owned by the authority are occupied.(e) The reports and annual updates that this section requires the authority to provide to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795. CHAPTER 2. California Housing Authority Governance Article 1. Formation and Structure of Governing Board 64924. (a) The board shall be composed of all of the following:(1) An expert in housing development and finance.(2) An expert in housing construction.(3) An expert in property maintenance.(4) An appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly.(5) An appointee of the Senate Committee on Rules.(6) An appointee of the Governor.(7) Three representatives of the residents, to be appointed initially as described in subdivision (c).(b) All appointees shall serve at the pleasure of their respective appointing authorities. The Governor shall appoint the experts in housing development and finance, housing construction, and property management, whose appointments shall be subject to confirmation by Senate approval by majority vote.(c) Prior to the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, the resident representatives shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor, respectively. The Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor shall consult with advocates for tenants rights in the course of making their respective selections.(d) Following the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, resident representatives shall be elected according to the following procedure:(1) Any resident may nominate another resident to sit on the board, who shall be elected by a vote of all social housing residents who reside in units owned by the authority.(2) Each resident may vote for up to three nominees to sit on the board. The three nominees who receive the most votes shall have the right to sit on the board for terms of one year.(3) Resident elections for board seats shall take place annually and the elections shall be coordinated by the board and its executive officer. 64925. All board decisions shall be approved by majority vote. 64926. The board shall select a board chair, who may hold special powers as determined by members of the board.64927. The board is a state body for purposes of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2). Article 2. Board Powers and Duties64928. The duties of the board include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(a) Establish a strategy to achieve the core goal of elimination of the gap between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets.(b) Set objectives and performance targets designed to achieve the strategy required by subdivision (a).(c) Monitor and assess the degree of the authoritys success in achieving its objectives and performance targets.(d) Exercise exclusive hiring and firing power over an executive officer.(e) Establish and monitor performance measures for the executive officer and an associated succession plan.(f) Approve the annual budget prepared by the executive officer.(g) Foster a culture and set of values consistent with the short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals of the authority.(h) Integrate risk management into the authoritys strategic planning process.(i) Notify the Governor and the Legislature of unanticipated and sizable risks facing CHA in meeting its objectives.(j) Adopt and amend regulations, which shall include election procedures for resident board positions.(k) Following an initial trial period, create and make public an annual business plan as described in Section 64923.(l) Hold biannual meetings with resident governance councils.64929. The executive officer of the board shall have all of the following powers and duties:(a) Manage the day-to-day operations of the authority in accordance with the strategy, delegations, business plans, and policies of the board and this title.(b) Employ and manage staff, including establishing, promoting, and maintaining a positive organizational culture that effectively aligns with the values and employment principles of the authority.(c) Transform the strategic plans of the board into action.(d) Ensure the effectiveness of the authoritys operational systems, including financial management, human resource management, information systems management, risk management, communications, marketing, fund raising, asset management, and reporting.(e) Ensure the board is kept informed of changes to gubernatorial directives, relevant legislation and changes in law, and other critical information relating to the boards functions and powers.(f) Ensure compliance with applicable law and governmental policies.(g) Maintain effective communication and cooperation with external stakeholders in collaboration with the chair of the board.(h) Provide advice and information to the board on any material issues concerning strategy, finance, reporting obligations, or other important matters that arise.(i) Prepare the annual business plan, including organizational performance targets, for board approval.(j) Interact with and, where appropriate, report to the Governor and the Legislature.(k) Additional responsibilities as determined by the board. Article 3. Resident Governance Councils64930. Each multifamily social housing development owned by the authority shall form a governance council, which shall include residents in both rental and ownership model properties. The governance council shall be made up of no more than 10 percent of the overall population of the multifamily development. The authority shall establish appropriate size limitations for governance councils based on the size of the developments that they represent.64931. An authority multifamily social housing development governance council shall have the following powers and responsibilities:(a) Host regular meetings to gather feedback and perspective of residents.(b) Provide the resident perspective to property management.(c) Represent the interests of the development in biannual meetings with the board.(d) Determine how to spend the developments allotted annual budget for common room amenities and social events.(e) Participate in the approval of renovation projects.(f) Other responsibilities as determined by the board.64932. A multifamily social housing development governance council and the board may consult with outside parties with appropriate experience for the purpose of establishing managerial policies and practices that align with the requirements of affordable housing and the need to provide suitable tenant protections. CHAPTER 3. Social Housing Program Article 1. Program Design64933. (a) In all its operations, the authority shall seek to achieve revenue neutrality over the long term. The authority shall seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through the mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden, such as rent cross-subsidization or cost rent.(b) (1) The authority shall develop regional target percentages for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income housing that seek to maximize low-income housing within the constraints of long-term revenue neutrality and maintaining sufficient operational, maintenance, and capital reserves. The methodology for low-income housing maximization in each development region shall be explained at a board meeting and shall be subject to public comment.(2) Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(c) The authority shall prioritize development of property with all of the following characteristics:(1) Vacant parcels.(2) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels without affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(3) Surplus public properties.(4) Parcels near transit.(d) (1) If the development of a property requires the rehabilitation or demolition of covenanted affordable units, the new development shall include a greater number of affordable units by income group than the previous property.(2) Each multiunit property shall include a variety of mixed-income units according to area median income levels.(e) If the development of a property requires the removal of residents from the property, the authority shall cover the temporary relocation costs of these residents, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(1) Costs of searching for a new residence.(2) Moving costs.(3) Any differences between the residents previous rent at the property and their rent during the authority development period.(f) Residents who are displaced during the authoritys development of the property shall have the right to live in the new social housing property for their previous rent for the period of one year, or the authoritys established rent for the residents income level, whichever is lower.(g) If a displaced resident chooses not to occupy the new social housing development, the authority is not obligated to pay the difference between new and old rents, as described in subdivision (e), after the displaced resident could otherwise have begun occupying the property.64934. The authority shall make an annual determination of the required amount of social housing units to be produced in the following manner:(a) Annual regional housing needs assessment targets shall be calculated as the total RHNA cycle targets for each jurisdiction divided by the length of the RHNA cycle. The authority shall update its calculations each year based on housing construction data submitted by jurisdictions to the Department of Housing and Community Development.(b) On or before January 1, 2028, and each year thereafter, the authority shall determine the gap between the previous years regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development and local councils of government, and actual housing construction, as determined by official local statistics.(c) The authority shall split the very low income RHNA allocation into extremely low income and very low income allocations based on the latest available census or official survey data for the relevant jurisdiction.(d) Within a given year, the authority is authorized at least to construct the required number of units to meet the gap between the previous years extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing unit construction and regional housing needs assessment targets.64935. (a) In creating social housing, the authority shall employ two different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, consistent with the requirements of this title.(b) In the rental model, the authority shall extend a one-year lease for a social housing unit to eligible individuals who commit to a minimum of one year of residence, barring extraordinary circumstances.(c) The rents or the rates on a leasehold mortgage in a multifamily property shall be set according to all of the following requirements:(1) The authority shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) Any rental adjustments applied shall be applied in a manner that does not discourage the residents pursuit of higher income.(3) Subject to the directive of paragraph (2), if a residents income changes, upon the next vacancy, the property manager shall rent to an appropriate income group to abide by revenue neutrality and meet other requirements.(4) For cost rentals, the authority will determine a reasonable proceeds cap on rental units. Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(d) In the ownership model, the authority shall extend a 99-year lease to individuals who commit to a minimum of five years of residence in the social housing unit. This lease shall be in the form of a limited equity arrangement.(e) Under the ownership model, upon the death of the owner of the social housing unit, the unit may be transferred to the deceaseds heir by devise or as any other real property may pass. If a transferee is not eligible to be a resident, the transferee shall sell the unit to the authority.(f) Under the ownership model, all of the following conditions shall apply:(1) The estates land and common areas will be owned by the authority.(2) The authority may operate as a lender for residents.(3) Buyers shall pay at least a 15-percent down payment.(4) Housing units may only be sold after meeting all of the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The authority shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the authority does not exercise its right to purchase the unit, the unit may be sold by the owner to an eligible buyer subject to requirements established by the authority.(5) Properties shall be sold at a price that allows the owner to have a reasonable return on investment, which may include documented capital improvements and adjustments for inflation.(g) Residents may be evicted for either of the following reasons:(1) Failure to meet social housing community standards, as determined by the authority or governance council.(2) Failure to pay rent for more than two months.(h) Residents shall enjoy all of the following protections:(1) Property managers shall provide a 24-hour notice before entering the residents unit.(2) Termination for nonpayment of rent requires a 14-day notice prior to eviction.(3) Residents may recover abandoned properties within 60 days of receiving an eviction notice.64936. Applicants to be residents and continuing residents shall meet all of the following eligibility requirements, as may be applicable to them:(a) Except in the case of above moderate-income units, social housing units shall be the residents sole residence.(b) A potential resident shall prove that they have been living or working in California at the time of their application. The authority shall promulgate rules and criteria to determine the necessary residency or work qualifications solely for eligibility purposes, and these shall include sufficient qualifying criteria that do not discriminate against applicants based on their belonging to any protected class.(c) Upon approval by the authority, or the applicable governance council if authorized by the authority, residents whose units are part of the ownership model may rent their units. The authority shall prescribe the conditions pursuant to which a governance council may regulate renting.(d) Residents under the rental model shall commit to one year of residence in the rental unit, after which a month-to-month tenancy may take effect. Residents under the ownership model shall commit to at least five years of primary residence in their unit.(e) Under certain circumstances, a resident shall be allowed to interrupt residence requirements without penalty, including:(1) Job relocation.(2) Change in the household structure.(3) Serious physical or mental illness.(4) A mutually agreed-upon unit swap with another social housing resident within the same property pursuant to authority requirements.(5) Other circumstances authorized by the authority or the governance council, to the extent authorized by the authority.(f) If a resident interrupting their tenancy or leasehold mortgage does not satisfy the requirements for an exception, the resident may be subject to one of the following penalties:(1) Obligation to pay rent or make payments on a leasehold mortgage until a new resident is located.(2) In the case of a resident leasing under the ownership model, forfeiture of proceeds from resale of the property.(3) Ineligibility to reside in authority units for a period of five years, or as determined by the authority.(g) Except in cases that evidence a clear and manifest danger to the development or its residents, as may be determined by the authority, a prior criminal record shall not in any way preclude a person from residing in social housing.64937. (a) Subject to the requirements of subdivision (b), the authority shall use a lottery to select social housing residents from all qualifying applicants. The lottery shall be structured by income categories and shall provide separate selection results for each category.(b) If residents of a property who were displaced during the authoritys development of the property as social housing have elected to lease a unit in the social housing, they shall be accommodated prior to offering units to others pursuant to subdivision (a). Article 2. Production of Housing64938. (a) The authority is authorized to contract with qualified entities, in accordance with the authoritys plan to meet its goals, to conduct ground-up construction and rehabilitation of existing structures.(b) The authority is authorized to dedicate building space to commercial use and may lease the space to qualifying entities, pursuant to requirements established by the authority.(c) When appropriate, the state shall gift public lands to the authority for social housing development purposes.(d) In the absence of suitable state-owned parcels, the authority is authorized to purchase municipal, county, other local jurisdiction, and private lands.64939. (a) The authority shall accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The parcel allows the authority to meet the jurisdictions regional housing needs assessments goals.(2) The parcel does not exceed the cost of all suitable alternative sites by more than 2 percent.(3) The parcel offers comparable community amenities to all suitable alternatives.(b) The authority shall seek input from the local jurisdictions city council, board of supervisors, or planning agency, as applicable, on all of the following dimensions of an authority development:(1) Specific site of development.(2) Number of stories.(3) Number of units.(4) Development timeline. Article 3. Acquisition64941. The authority may acquire, reacquire, or contract to acquire or reacquire by grant or purchase real, personal, or mixed property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, transfer, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.64942. The authority shall prioritize acquiring or reacquiring property with all of the following characteristics:(a) Parcels with affordability covenants or rent control units in danger of losing affordability status, in order to preserve affordable housing stock.(b) Parcels at risk of becoming unaffordable or at the end of their affordability covenants.(c) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels with affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(d) Surplus public properties.(e) Parcels near transit. CHAPTER 4. Funding64943. The activities of the authority shall be conducted with a goal to cover its costs over the long term in accordance with the principle of revenue neutrality.64944. The Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund is hereby established within the State Treasury to be used, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to provide zero-interest loans for the purpose of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes.64945. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds.(b) The authority may, from time to time, issue revenue bonds in the principal amount that the agency determines necessary to provide sufficient funds for financing social housing developments, the payment of interest on these bonds, the establishment of reserves to secure the bonds, and the payment of other expenditures of the agency incident to, and necessary or convenient to, issuance of the bonds.(c) The board shall provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records and shall maintain accounting records and shall report accounting transactions in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles adopted by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation for both public reporting purposes and for reporting of activities to the Controller.64946. The authority may, upon appropriation by the Legislature, utilize funds from other legislation, cities and counties, or other sources, in order to build more low-, very low, and extremely low income housing.
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33 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2881Introduced by Assembly Member Lee(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bennett, Wendy Carrillo, Haney, Jackson, McCarty, and Rendon)(Coauthors: Senators Menjivar and Smallwood-Cuevas)February 15, 2024An act to add Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) to the Government Code, relating to housing.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2881, as introduced, Lee. The Social Housing Act.Existing law establishes the Department of Housing and Community Development and sets forth its powers and duties. Existing law creates a housing authority in each county or city, which functions upon the adoption of a specified resolution by the relevant governing body. Existing law authorizes these housing authorities, within their jurisdictions, to construct, reconstruct, improve, alter, or repair all or part of any housing project. Existing law establishes various programs that provide housing assistance.This bill would enact the Social Housing Act and would create the California Housing Authority as an independent state body, the mission of which would be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets and preserving affordable housing. The bill would prescribe a definition of social housing that would describe, in addition to housing owned by the authority, housing owned by other entities, as specified, provided that all social housing developed or authorized by the authority would be owned by the authority.This bill would prescribe the composition of the California Housing Authority Board, which would govern the authority, and which would be composed of appointed members and members who would be elected by residents of social housing developments, as specified. The bill would set forth the powers and duties of the authority and the board. The bill would require the authority to seek to achieve revenue neutrality, as defined, and would require the authority to seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden.This bill would require the authority to prioritize the development of specified property, including vacant parcels and parcels near transit, and would establish a process for the annual determination of required social housing units. Under the bill, social housing would accommodate a mix of household income ranges and would provide specified protections for residents, who would participate in the operation and management of the units in which they reside.This bill would require the California Housing Authority to employ 2 leasing models in social housing developments, referred to as the rental model and the ownership model, and would set forth the characteristics of both models. Under the ownership model, the authority would extend a 99-year lease, in the form of a limited equity arrangement, as defined, to individuals who commit to a minimum 5-year term of residence, and would authorize the authority to act as a lender for residents. The bill would specify how the units may be sold and transferred. The bill would establish eligibility requirements for social housing residents and would provide for the selection of residents by lottery, as specified, providing that people who may have been displaced from a property as part of its development would be granted a preference for occupancy. The bill, among other things, would require the authority to accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if specified conditions are met. This bill would establish the Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund within the State Treasury to provide, upon appropriation by the Legislature, zero-interest loans for the purposes of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes. The bill would declare the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds. The bill would authorize the authority to issue revenue bonds, as specified. The bill would require the board to provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records, as specified. The bill would also require the authority to prepare and submit specified reporting information regarding its business plan and progress to the Legislature on an annual basis.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
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99 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1010
1111 Assembly Bill
1212
1313 No. 2881
1414
1515 Introduced by Assembly Member Lee(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bennett, Wendy Carrillo, Haney, Jackson, McCarty, and Rendon)(Coauthors: Senators Menjivar and Smallwood-Cuevas)February 15, 2024
1616
1717 Introduced by Assembly Member Lee(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bennett, Wendy Carrillo, Haney, Jackson, McCarty, and Rendon)(Coauthors: Senators Menjivar and Smallwood-Cuevas)
1818 February 15, 2024
1919
2020 An act to add Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) to the Government Code, relating to housing.
2121
2222 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2323
2424 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2525
2626 AB 2881, as introduced, Lee. The Social Housing Act.
2727
2828 Existing law establishes the Department of Housing and Community Development and sets forth its powers and duties. Existing law creates a housing authority in each county or city, which functions upon the adoption of a specified resolution by the relevant governing body. Existing law authorizes these housing authorities, within their jurisdictions, to construct, reconstruct, improve, alter, or repair all or part of any housing project. Existing law establishes various programs that provide housing assistance.This bill would enact the Social Housing Act and would create the California Housing Authority as an independent state body, the mission of which would be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets and preserving affordable housing. The bill would prescribe a definition of social housing that would describe, in addition to housing owned by the authority, housing owned by other entities, as specified, provided that all social housing developed or authorized by the authority would be owned by the authority.This bill would prescribe the composition of the California Housing Authority Board, which would govern the authority, and which would be composed of appointed members and members who would be elected by residents of social housing developments, as specified. The bill would set forth the powers and duties of the authority and the board. The bill would require the authority to seek to achieve revenue neutrality, as defined, and would require the authority to seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden.This bill would require the authority to prioritize the development of specified property, including vacant parcels and parcels near transit, and would establish a process for the annual determination of required social housing units. Under the bill, social housing would accommodate a mix of household income ranges and would provide specified protections for residents, who would participate in the operation and management of the units in which they reside.This bill would require the California Housing Authority to employ 2 leasing models in social housing developments, referred to as the rental model and the ownership model, and would set forth the characteristics of both models. Under the ownership model, the authority would extend a 99-year lease, in the form of a limited equity arrangement, as defined, to individuals who commit to a minimum 5-year term of residence, and would authorize the authority to act as a lender for residents. The bill would specify how the units may be sold and transferred. The bill would establish eligibility requirements for social housing residents and would provide for the selection of residents by lottery, as specified, providing that people who may have been displaced from a property as part of its development would be granted a preference for occupancy. The bill, among other things, would require the authority to accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if specified conditions are met. This bill would establish the Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund within the State Treasury to provide, upon appropriation by the Legislature, zero-interest loans for the purposes of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes. The bill would declare the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds. The bill would authorize the authority to issue revenue bonds, as specified. The bill would require the board to provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records, as specified. The bill would also require the authority to prepare and submit specified reporting information regarding its business plan and progress to the Legislature on an annual basis.
2929
3030 Existing law establishes the Department of Housing and Community Development and sets forth its powers and duties. Existing law creates a housing authority in each county or city, which functions upon the adoption of a specified resolution by the relevant governing body. Existing law authorizes these housing authorities, within their jurisdictions, to construct, reconstruct, improve, alter, or repair all or part of any housing project. Existing law establishes various programs that provide housing assistance.
3131
3232 This bill would enact the Social Housing Act and would create the California Housing Authority as an independent state body, the mission of which would be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets and preserving affordable housing. The bill would prescribe a definition of social housing that would describe, in addition to housing owned by the authority, housing owned by other entities, as specified, provided that all social housing developed or authorized by the authority would be owned by the authority.
3333
3434 This bill would prescribe the composition of the California Housing Authority Board, which would govern the authority, and which would be composed of appointed members and members who would be elected by residents of social housing developments, as specified. The bill would set forth the powers and duties of the authority and the board. The bill would require the authority to seek to achieve revenue neutrality, as defined, and would require the authority to seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden.
3535
3636 This bill would require the authority to prioritize the development of specified property, including vacant parcels and parcels near transit, and would establish a process for the annual determination of required social housing units. Under the bill, social housing would accommodate a mix of household income ranges and would provide specified protections for residents, who would participate in the operation and management of the units in which they reside.
3737
3838 This bill would require the California Housing Authority to employ 2 leasing models in social housing developments, referred to as the rental model and the ownership model, and would set forth the characteristics of both models. Under the ownership model, the authority would extend a 99-year lease, in the form of a limited equity arrangement, as defined, to individuals who commit to a minimum 5-year term of residence, and would authorize the authority to act as a lender for residents. The bill would specify how the units may be sold and transferred. The bill would establish eligibility requirements for social housing residents and would provide for the selection of residents by lottery, as specified, providing that people who may have been displaced from a property as part of its development would be granted a preference for occupancy. The bill, among other things, would require the authority to accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if specified conditions are met.
3939
4040 This bill would establish the Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund within the State Treasury to provide, upon appropriation by the Legislature, zero-interest loans for the purposes of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes. The bill would declare the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds. The bill would authorize the authority to issue revenue bonds, as specified. The bill would require the board to provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records, as specified. The bill would also require the authority to prepare and submit specified reporting information regarding its business plan and progress to the Legislature on an annual basis.
4141
4242 ## Digest Key
4343
4444 ## Bill Text
4545
4646 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The housing crisis has reached unprecedented and unacceptable proportions in the State of California, where more than two in five households spend greater than 30 percent of their income on housing and more than one in five households spend greater than 50 percent of their income on housing.(b) The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development defines cost-burdened families as those who pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing and may have difficulty affording necessities such as food, clothing, transportation, and medical care. Severe rent burden is defined as paying more than 50 percent of ones income on rent.(c) Housing burden creates severe financial, physical, and emotional impacts on households.(d) The affordable housing crisis has imposed a significant toll on the California economy, as overpriced rents depress the California gross domestic product by approximately 2 percent and more than 600,000 people leave the state annually in search of lower rent.(e) Current efforts, while laudable, have proven insufficient in resolving the states affordable housing crisis, since 97 percent of cities and counties have been unable to meet the regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, and moderate-income housing.(f) With such a great failure to meet the housing needs of California residents, the state has a duty to act and help localities fill the gap by financing publicly owned, affordable housing built sustainably, based on the widely successful Vienna and Singapore models and many other successful models of mixed-income rental and ownership housing.(g) It is the intent of the Legislature to establish the California Housing Authority, an independent public entity, to offer the necessary social housing to help eliminate the gaps between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets in all jurisdictions throughout the state. The authority shall be responsible for developing, owning, and maintaining social housing in California. Social housing is publicly owned, mixed-income housing, removed from market forces and speculation, and built with the express aim of housing people equitably and affordably. Under public control and oversight, social housing is sustainable and remains affordable in perpetuity.(h) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this title to set an ambitious goal for creating social housing, through both new production and preservation of existing units, and to establish the means for achieving that goal.(i) It is further the intent of the Legislature for the California Housing Authority to ensure that no Californian pays more than 30 percent of their income on housing by the year 2050.SEC. 2. Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) is added to the Government Code, to read:TITLE 6.91. THE SOCIAL HOUSING ACTPART 1. General Provisions CHAPTER 1. Title64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act. CHAPTER 2. Definitions64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title. 64902. Above moderate income means income for households that exceeds the moderate-income level, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64903. Area median income means area median income as published by the Department of Housing and Community Development pursuant to Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64904. Authority or CHA means the California Housing Authority, an independent state body established by this title for the purpose of developing social housing for all California residents. 64905. Board means the California Housing Authority Board.64906. Cost rent means a system in which the rent of a dwelling is calculated on the cost of providing for and maintaining the dwelling, only allowing for limited or no proceeds.64907. Extremely low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for extremely low income households, as described in Section 50106 of the Health and Safety Code.64908. Limited equity arrangement means an ownership model in which residents are extended a long-term lease of a unit, take out a subsidized leasehold mortgage on the property from the authority, make monthly mortgage payments, and commit to resell at a price determined by a formula designed to balance ongoing affordability and resident wealth generation.64909. Low income means income for households that does not exceed the qualifying limits for lower income households, as described in Section 50079.5 of the Health and Safety Code.64910. Moderate income means income for households of low or moderate income whose income exceeds the income limit for lower income households, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64911. Multifamily property means a collection of units featuring extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income units. A multifamily property may be a single building, multiple buildings on the same or adjacent parcels, or multiple buildings across several blocks within a single jurisdiction, or as may be defined by the authority.64912. Regional housing needs assessment or RHNA means a representation of housing needs for all income levels in a jurisdiction pursuant to Article 10.6 (commencing with Section 65580) of Chapter 3 of Division 1 of Title 7.64913. Rent and mortgage cross-subsidization means a system in which the below-cost rents and leasehold mortgages of certain units are balanced by above-cost payments on other units within the same multiunit property so as to ensure the propertys overall revenue meets development and operational costs.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the authority are returned to the authority through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64915. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics: (a) (1) The housing units are owned by a government entity such as the California Housing Authority, a public entity, or a local housing authority.(2) For the purposes of this act, all social housing developed or authorized by the authority shall be owned by the authority.(b) If a housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges, including extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.(c) Residents of housing units are afforded, at a minimum, all protections granted to tenants with tenancies in private property under Section 1946.2 of the Civil Code, including protection against termination without just cause or for any discriminatory, retaliatory, or other arbitrary reason, and shall be afforded due process prior to being subject to eviction procedures, in addition to other protections provided by this title.(d) The housing units shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private for-profit entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.(e) Residents of the housing units have the right to participate directly and meaningfully in decisionmaking affecting the operation and management of their housing units. 64916. Very low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for very low income households, as described in Section 50105 of the Health and Safety Code.64917. Underutilized parcel means a parcel of property upon which is built a structure that contains fewer units than the maximum number of units permissible under local zoning regulations.PART 2. California Housing Authority CHAPTER 1. Creation, Powers, and Duties Article 1. Creation64920. (a) The California Housing Authority is hereby created. The authority shall be governed by the California Housing Authority Board.(b) The core mission of the authority shall be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets, and preserving affordable housing. Article 2. Powers64921. The authority shall have the following general powers:(a) Sue and be sued.(b) Have a seal and alter the same at its pleasure.(c) Enter into contracts and execute other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers to perform its mission.(d) Make rules with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.(e) Through its executive officer, appoint officers, agents, and employees; prescribe their duties and qualifications; set their employment descriptions and salaries subject to civil service rules; provide for participation in health care and retirement benefits available to similar state employees; and delegate to one or more of its agents or employees the powers and duties it deems proper.(f) Acquire, by grant or purchase, property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, lease, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.(g) Enter into development partnerships with municipalities, joint powers of authority, and other public and private entities in order to further its social housing development goals.(h) Arrange for the planning, opening, grading, or closing of roads or other places, for the furnishing of facilities, or for the furnishing of property or services in connection with a project.(i) Prepare project plans for any project, and from time to time modify those plans.(j) Provide advisory, consultative, training, and educational services, technical assistance, and advice to any person, partnership, or corporation, either public or private, to carry out its mission, and to contract with consultants provision of professional and technical assistance and advice.(k) Accept funding in any form from any source.(l) Call upon the Attorney General for legal services as it may require. Article 3. Duties64922. (a) The authority shall implement and advise on the social housing program, as prescribed by Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 64933), and is hereby granted all powers necessary for this purpose.(b) The authority may contract with property managers to manage its properties according to the following requirements:(1) Property managers shall abide by standards of responsiveness to resident needs prescribed by the authority.(2) Property managers shall abide by rules regarding resident rights and protections or be subject to termination of employment.64923. (a) The authority shall prepare, publish, adopt, and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual business plan. At least 60 days prior to the publication of the plan, the authority shall publish a draft business plan for public review and comment. The draft plan shall also be submitted to the Governor and the Legislature.(b) The business plan shall include, but need not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) A description of the type of projects the authority is producing or acquiring and the proposed timeline, estimated costs, and funding sources.(2) A projection of the expected residents, income levels, and other demographic data.(3) An estimate and description of the anticipated funds the authority intends to leverage to fund the construction and operation activities, and the authoritys level of confidence for obtaining each type of funding.(4) Any written agreements with public or private entities, such as technical assistance agreements.(c) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide and submit to the Legislature an analysis on the effect of its developments on gentrification. The report of the analysis shall be subject to public comment and shall be considered by the board for future decisionmaking.(d) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide an annual update to the Legislature on its progress, which shall include relevant resident statistics once social housing developments owned by the authority are occupied.(e) The reports and annual updates that this section requires the authority to provide to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795. CHAPTER 2. California Housing Authority Governance Article 1. Formation and Structure of Governing Board 64924. (a) The board shall be composed of all of the following:(1) An expert in housing development and finance.(2) An expert in housing construction.(3) An expert in property maintenance.(4) An appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly.(5) An appointee of the Senate Committee on Rules.(6) An appointee of the Governor.(7) Three representatives of the residents, to be appointed initially as described in subdivision (c).(b) All appointees shall serve at the pleasure of their respective appointing authorities. The Governor shall appoint the experts in housing development and finance, housing construction, and property management, whose appointments shall be subject to confirmation by Senate approval by majority vote.(c) Prior to the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, the resident representatives shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor, respectively. The Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor shall consult with advocates for tenants rights in the course of making their respective selections.(d) Following the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, resident representatives shall be elected according to the following procedure:(1) Any resident may nominate another resident to sit on the board, who shall be elected by a vote of all social housing residents who reside in units owned by the authority.(2) Each resident may vote for up to three nominees to sit on the board. The three nominees who receive the most votes shall have the right to sit on the board for terms of one year.(3) Resident elections for board seats shall take place annually and the elections shall be coordinated by the board and its executive officer. 64925. All board decisions shall be approved by majority vote. 64926. The board shall select a board chair, who may hold special powers as determined by members of the board.64927. The board is a state body for purposes of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2). Article 2. Board Powers and Duties64928. The duties of the board include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(a) Establish a strategy to achieve the core goal of elimination of the gap between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets.(b) Set objectives and performance targets designed to achieve the strategy required by subdivision (a).(c) Monitor and assess the degree of the authoritys success in achieving its objectives and performance targets.(d) Exercise exclusive hiring and firing power over an executive officer.(e) Establish and monitor performance measures for the executive officer and an associated succession plan.(f) Approve the annual budget prepared by the executive officer.(g) Foster a culture and set of values consistent with the short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals of the authority.(h) Integrate risk management into the authoritys strategic planning process.(i) Notify the Governor and the Legislature of unanticipated and sizable risks facing CHA in meeting its objectives.(j) Adopt and amend regulations, which shall include election procedures for resident board positions.(k) Following an initial trial period, create and make public an annual business plan as described in Section 64923.(l) Hold biannual meetings with resident governance councils.64929. The executive officer of the board shall have all of the following powers and duties:(a) Manage the day-to-day operations of the authority in accordance with the strategy, delegations, business plans, and policies of the board and this title.(b) Employ and manage staff, including establishing, promoting, and maintaining a positive organizational culture that effectively aligns with the values and employment principles of the authority.(c) Transform the strategic plans of the board into action.(d) Ensure the effectiveness of the authoritys operational systems, including financial management, human resource management, information systems management, risk management, communications, marketing, fund raising, asset management, and reporting.(e) Ensure the board is kept informed of changes to gubernatorial directives, relevant legislation and changes in law, and other critical information relating to the boards functions and powers.(f) Ensure compliance with applicable law and governmental policies.(g) Maintain effective communication and cooperation with external stakeholders in collaboration with the chair of the board.(h) Provide advice and information to the board on any material issues concerning strategy, finance, reporting obligations, or other important matters that arise.(i) Prepare the annual business plan, including organizational performance targets, for board approval.(j) Interact with and, where appropriate, report to the Governor and the Legislature.(k) Additional responsibilities as determined by the board. Article 3. Resident Governance Councils64930. Each multifamily social housing development owned by the authority shall form a governance council, which shall include residents in both rental and ownership model properties. The governance council shall be made up of no more than 10 percent of the overall population of the multifamily development. The authority shall establish appropriate size limitations for governance councils based on the size of the developments that they represent.64931. An authority multifamily social housing development governance council shall have the following powers and responsibilities:(a) Host regular meetings to gather feedback and perspective of residents.(b) Provide the resident perspective to property management.(c) Represent the interests of the development in biannual meetings with the board.(d) Determine how to spend the developments allotted annual budget for common room amenities and social events.(e) Participate in the approval of renovation projects.(f) Other responsibilities as determined by the board.64932. A multifamily social housing development governance council and the board may consult with outside parties with appropriate experience for the purpose of establishing managerial policies and practices that align with the requirements of affordable housing and the need to provide suitable tenant protections. CHAPTER 3. Social Housing Program Article 1. Program Design64933. (a) In all its operations, the authority shall seek to achieve revenue neutrality over the long term. The authority shall seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through the mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden, such as rent cross-subsidization or cost rent.(b) (1) The authority shall develop regional target percentages for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income housing that seek to maximize low-income housing within the constraints of long-term revenue neutrality and maintaining sufficient operational, maintenance, and capital reserves. The methodology for low-income housing maximization in each development region shall be explained at a board meeting and shall be subject to public comment.(2) Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(c) The authority shall prioritize development of property with all of the following characteristics:(1) Vacant parcels.(2) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels without affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(3) Surplus public properties.(4) Parcels near transit.(d) (1) If the development of a property requires the rehabilitation or demolition of covenanted affordable units, the new development shall include a greater number of affordable units by income group than the previous property.(2) Each multiunit property shall include a variety of mixed-income units according to area median income levels.(e) If the development of a property requires the removal of residents from the property, the authority shall cover the temporary relocation costs of these residents, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(1) Costs of searching for a new residence.(2) Moving costs.(3) Any differences between the residents previous rent at the property and their rent during the authority development period.(f) Residents who are displaced during the authoritys development of the property shall have the right to live in the new social housing property for their previous rent for the period of one year, or the authoritys established rent for the residents income level, whichever is lower.(g) If a displaced resident chooses not to occupy the new social housing development, the authority is not obligated to pay the difference between new and old rents, as described in subdivision (e), after the displaced resident could otherwise have begun occupying the property.64934. The authority shall make an annual determination of the required amount of social housing units to be produced in the following manner:(a) Annual regional housing needs assessment targets shall be calculated as the total RHNA cycle targets for each jurisdiction divided by the length of the RHNA cycle. The authority shall update its calculations each year based on housing construction data submitted by jurisdictions to the Department of Housing and Community Development.(b) On or before January 1, 2028, and each year thereafter, the authority shall determine the gap between the previous years regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development and local councils of government, and actual housing construction, as determined by official local statistics.(c) The authority shall split the very low income RHNA allocation into extremely low income and very low income allocations based on the latest available census or official survey data for the relevant jurisdiction.(d) Within a given year, the authority is authorized at least to construct the required number of units to meet the gap between the previous years extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing unit construction and regional housing needs assessment targets.64935. (a) In creating social housing, the authority shall employ two different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, consistent with the requirements of this title.(b) In the rental model, the authority shall extend a one-year lease for a social housing unit to eligible individuals who commit to a minimum of one year of residence, barring extraordinary circumstances.(c) The rents or the rates on a leasehold mortgage in a multifamily property shall be set according to all of the following requirements:(1) The authority shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) Any rental adjustments applied shall be applied in a manner that does not discourage the residents pursuit of higher income.(3) Subject to the directive of paragraph (2), if a residents income changes, upon the next vacancy, the property manager shall rent to an appropriate income group to abide by revenue neutrality and meet other requirements.(4) For cost rentals, the authority will determine a reasonable proceeds cap on rental units. Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(d) In the ownership model, the authority shall extend a 99-year lease to individuals who commit to a minimum of five years of residence in the social housing unit. This lease shall be in the form of a limited equity arrangement.(e) Under the ownership model, upon the death of the owner of the social housing unit, the unit may be transferred to the deceaseds heir by devise or as any other real property may pass. If a transferee is not eligible to be a resident, the transferee shall sell the unit to the authority.(f) Under the ownership model, all of the following conditions shall apply:(1) The estates land and common areas will be owned by the authority.(2) The authority may operate as a lender for residents.(3) Buyers shall pay at least a 15-percent down payment.(4) Housing units may only be sold after meeting all of the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The authority shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the authority does not exercise its right to purchase the unit, the unit may be sold by the owner to an eligible buyer subject to requirements established by the authority.(5) Properties shall be sold at a price that allows the owner to have a reasonable return on investment, which may include documented capital improvements and adjustments for inflation.(g) Residents may be evicted for either of the following reasons:(1) Failure to meet social housing community standards, as determined by the authority or governance council.(2) Failure to pay rent for more than two months.(h) Residents shall enjoy all of the following protections:(1) Property managers shall provide a 24-hour notice before entering the residents unit.(2) Termination for nonpayment of rent requires a 14-day notice prior to eviction.(3) Residents may recover abandoned properties within 60 days of receiving an eviction notice.64936. Applicants to be residents and continuing residents shall meet all of the following eligibility requirements, as may be applicable to them:(a) Except in the case of above moderate-income units, social housing units shall be the residents sole residence.(b) A potential resident shall prove that they have been living or working in California at the time of their application. The authority shall promulgate rules and criteria to determine the necessary residency or work qualifications solely for eligibility purposes, and these shall include sufficient qualifying criteria that do not discriminate against applicants based on their belonging to any protected class.(c) Upon approval by the authority, or the applicable governance council if authorized by the authority, residents whose units are part of the ownership model may rent their units. The authority shall prescribe the conditions pursuant to which a governance council may regulate renting.(d) Residents under the rental model shall commit to one year of residence in the rental unit, after which a month-to-month tenancy may take effect. Residents under the ownership model shall commit to at least five years of primary residence in their unit.(e) Under certain circumstances, a resident shall be allowed to interrupt residence requirements without penalty, including:(1) Job relocation.(2) Change in the household structure.(3) Serious physical or mental illness.(4) A mutually agreed-upon unit swap with another social housing resident within the same property pursuant to authority requirements.(5) Other circumstances authorized by the authority or the governance council, to the extent authorized by the authority.(f) If a resident interrupting their tenancy or leasehold mortgage does not satisfy the requirements for an exception, the resident may be subject to one of the following penalties:(1) Obligation to pay rent or make payments on a leasehold mortgage until a new resident is located.(2) In the case of a resident leasing under the ownership model, forfeiture of proceeds from resale of the property.(3) Ineligibility to reside in authority units for a period of five years, or as determined by the authority.(g) Except in cases that evidence a clear and manifest danger to the development or its residents, as may be determined by the authority, a prior criminal record shall not in any way preclude a person from residing in social housing.64937. (a) Subject to the requirements of subdivision (b), the authority shall use a lottery to select social housing residents from all qualifying applicants. The lottery shall be structured by income categories and shall provide separate selection results for each category.(b) If residents of a property who were displaced during the authoritys development of the property as social housing have elected to lease a unit in the social housing, they shall be accommodated prior to offering units to others pursuant to subdivision (a). Article 2. Production of Housing64938. (a) The authority is authorized to contract with qualified entities, in accordance with the authoritys plan to meet its goals, to conduct ground-up construction and rehabilitation of existing structures.(b) The authority is authorized to dedicate building space to commercial use and may lease the space to qualifying entities, pursuant to requirements established by the authority.(c) When appropriate, the state shall gift public lands to the authority for social housing development purposes.(d) In the absence of suitable state-owned parcels, the authority is authorized to purchase municipal, county, other local jurisdiction, and private lands.64939. (a) The authority shall accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The parcel allows the authority to meet the jurisdictions regional housing needs assessments goals.(2) The parcel does not exceed the cost of all suitable alternative sites by more than 2 percent.(3) The parcel offers comparable community amenities to all suitable alternatives.(b) The authority shall seek input from the local jurisdictions city council, board of supervisors, or planning agency, as applicable, on all of the following dimensions of an authority development:(1) Specific site of development.(2) Number of stories.(3) Number of units.(4) Development timeline. Article 3. Acquisition64941. The authority may acquire, reacquire, or contract to acquire or reacquire by grant or purchase real, personal, or mixed property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, transfer, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.64942. The authority shall prioritize acquiring or reacquiring property with all of the following characteristics:(a) Parcels with affordability covenants or rent control units in danger of losing affordability status, in order to preserve affordable housing stock.(b) Parcels at risk of becoming unaffordable or at the end of their affordability covenants.(c) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels with affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(d) Surplus public properties.(e) Parcels near transit. CHAPTER 4. Funding64943. The activities of the authority shall be conducted with a goal to cover its costs over the long term in accordance with the principle of revenue neutrality.64944. The Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund is hereby established within the State Treasury to be used, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to provide zero-interest loans for the purpose of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes.64945. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds.(b) The authority may, from time to time, issue revenue bonds in the principal amount that the agency determines necessary to provide sufficient funds for financing social housing developments, the payment of interest on these bonds, the establishment of reserves to secure the bonds, and the payment of other expenditures of the agency incident to, and necessary or convenient to, issuance of the bonds.(c) The board shall provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records and shall maintain accounting records and shall report accounting transactions in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles adopted by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation for both public reporting purposes and for reporting of activities to the Controller.64946. The authority may, upon appropriation by the Legislature, utilize funds from other legislation, cities and counties, or other sources, in order to build more low-, very low, and extremely low income housing.
4747
4848 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4949
5050 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5151
5252 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The housing crisis has reached unprecedented and unacceptable proportions in the State of California, where more than two in five households spend greater than 30 percent of their income on housing and more than one in five households spend greater than 50 percent of their income on housing.(b) The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development defines cost-burdened families as those who pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing and may have difficulty affording necessities such as food, clothing, transportation, and medical care. Severe rent burden is defined as paying more than 50 percent of ones income on rent.(c) Housing burden creates severe financial, physical, and emotional impacts on households.(d) The affordable housing crisis has imposed a significant toll on the California economy, as overpriced rents depress the California gross domestic product by approximately 2 percent and more than 600,000 people leave the state annually in search of lower rent.(e) Current efforts, while laudable, have proven insufficient in resolving the states affordable housing crisis, since 97 percent of cities and counties have been unable to meet the regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, and moderate-income housing.(f) With such a great failure to meet the housing needs of California residents, the state has a duty to act and help localities fill the gap by financing publicly owned, affordable housing built sustainably, based on the widely successful Vienna and Singapore models and many other successful models of mixed-income rental and ownership housing.(g) It is the intent of the Legislature to establish the California Housing Authority, an independent public entity, to offer the necessary social housing to help eliminate the gaps between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets in all jurisdictions throughout the state. The authority shall be responsible for developing, owning, and maintaining social housing in California. Social housing is publicly owned, mixed-income housing, removed from market forces and speculation, and built with the express aim of housing people equitably and affordably. Under public control and oversight, social housing is sustainable and remains affordable in perpetuity.(h) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this title to set an ambitious goal for creating social housing, through both new production and preservation of existing units, and to establish the means for achieving that goal.(i) It is further the intent of the Legislature for the California Housing Authority to ensure that no Californian pays more than 30 percent of their income on housing by the year 2050.
5353
5454 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) The housing crisis has reached unprecedented and unacceptable proportions in the State of California, where more than two in five households spend greater than 30 percent of their income on housing and more than one in five households spend greater than 50 percent of their income on housing.(b) The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development defines cost-burdened families as those who pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing and may have difficulty affording necessities such as food, clothing, transportation, and medical care. Severe rent burden is defined as paying more than 50 percent of ones income on rent.(c) Housing burden creates severe financial, physical, and emotional impacts on households.(d) The affordable housing crisis has imposed a significant toll on the California economy, as overpriced rents depress the California gross domestic product by approximately 2 percent and more than 600,000 people leave the state annually in search of lower rent.(e) Current efforts, while laudable, have proven insufficient in resolving the states affordable housing crisis, since 97 percent of cities and counties have been unable to meet the regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, and moderate-income housing.(f) With such a great failure to meet the housing needs of California residents, the state has a duty to act and help localities fill the gap by financing publicly owned, affordable housing built sustainably, based on the widely successful Vienna and Singapore models and many other successful models of mixed-income rental and ownership housing.(g) It is the intent of the Legislature to establish the California Housing Authority, an independent public entity, to offer the necessary social housing to help eliminate the gaps between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets in all jurisdictions throughout the state. The authority shall be responsible for developing, owning, and maintaining social housing in California. Social housing is publicly owned, mixed-income housing, removed from market forces and speculation, and built with the express aim of housing people equitably and affordably. Under public control and oversight, social housing is sustainable and remains affordable in perpetuity.(h) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this title to set an ambitious goal for creating social housing, through both new production and preservation of existing units, and to establish the means for achieving that goal.(i) It is further the intent of the Legislature for the California Housing Authority to ensure that no Californian pays more than 30 percent of their income on housing by the year 2050.
5555
5656 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5757
5858 ### SECTION 1.
5959
6060 (a) The housing crisis has reached unprecedented and unacceptable proportions in the State of California, where more than two in five households spend greater than 30 percent of their income on housing and more than one in five households spend greater than 50 percent of their income on housing.
6161
6262 (b) The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development defines cost-burdened families as those who pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing and may have difficulty affording necessities such as food, clothing, transportation, and medical care. Severe rent burden is defined as paying more than 50 percent of ones income on rent.
6363
6464 (c) Housing burden creates severe financial, physical, and emotional impacts on households.
6565
6666 (d) The affordable housing crisis has imposed a significant toll on the California economy, as overpriced rents depress the California gross domestic product by approximately 2 percent and more than 600,000 people leave the state annually in search of lower rent.
6767
6868 (e) Current efforts, while laudable, have proven insufficient in resolving the states affordable housing crisis, since 97 percent of cities and counties have been unable to meet the regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, and moderate-income housing.
6969
7070 (f) With such a great failure to meet the housing needs of California residents, the state has a duty to act and help localities fill the gap by financing publicly owned, affordable housing built sustainably, based on the widely successful Vienna and Singapore models and many other successful models of mixed-income rental and ownership housing.
7171
7272 (g) It is the intent of the Legislature to establish the California Housing Authority, an independent public entity, to offer the necessary social housing to help eliminate the gaps between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets in all jurisdictions throughout the state. The authority shall be responsible for developing, owning, and maintaining social housing in California. Social housing is publicly owned, mixed-income housing, removed from market forces and speculation, and built with the express aim of housing people equitably and affordably. Under public control and oversight, social housing is sustainable and remains affordable in perpetuity.
7373
7474 (h) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this title to set an ambitious goal for creating social housing, through both new production and preservation of existing units, and to establish the means for achieving that goal.
7575
7676 (i) It is further the intent of the Legislature for the California Housing Authority to ensure that no Californian pays more than 30 percent of their income on housing by the year 2050.
7777
7878 SEC. 2. Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) is added to the Government Code, to read:TITLE 6.91. THE SOCIAL HOUSING ACTPART 1. General Provisions CHAPTER 1. Title64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act. CHAPTER 2. Definitions64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title. 64902. Above moderate income means income for households that exceeds the moderate-income level, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64903. Area median income means area median income as published by the Department of Housing and Community Development pursuant to Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64904. Authority or CHA means the California Housing Authority, an independent state body established by this title for the purpose of developing social housing for all California residents. 64905. Board means the California Housing Authority Board.64906. Cost rent means a system in which the rent of a dwelling is calculated on the cost of providing for and maintaining the dwelling, only allowing for limited or no proceeds.64907. Extremely low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for extremely low income households, as described in Section 50106 of the Health and Safety Code.64908. Limited equity arrangement means an ownership model in which residents are extended a long-term lease of a unit, take out a subsidized leasehold mortgage on the property from the authority, make monthly mortgage payments, and commit to resell at a price determined by a formula designed to balance ongoing affordability and resident wealth generation.64909. Low income means income for households that does not exceed the qualifying limits for lower income households, as described in Section 50079.5 of the Health and Safety Code.64910. Moderate income means income for households of low or moderate income whose income exceeds the income limit for lower income households, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64911. Multifamily property means a collection of units featuring extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income units. A multifamily property may be a single building, multiple buildings on the same or adjacent parcels, or multiple buildings across several blocks within a single jurisdiction, or as may be defined by the authority.64912. Regional housing needs assessment or RHNA means a representation of housing needs for all income levels in a jurisdiction pursuant to Article 10.6 (commencing with Section 65580) of Chapter 3 of Division 1 of Title 7.64913. Rent and mortgage cross-subsidization means a system in which the below-cost rents and leasehold mortgages of certain units are balanced by above-cost payments on other units within the same multiunit property so as to ensure the propertys overall revenue meets development and operational costs.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the authority are returned to the authority through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64915. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics: (a) (1) The housing units are owned by a government entity such as the California Housing Authority, a public entity, or a local housing authority.(2) For the purposes of this act, all social housing developed or authorized by the authority shall be owned by the authority.(b) If a housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges, including extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.(c) Residents of housing units are afforded, at a minimum, all protections granted to tenants with tenancies in private property under Section 1946.2 of the Civil Code, including protection against termination without just cause or for any discriminatory, retaliatory, or other arbitrary reason, and shall be afforded due process prior to being subject to eviction procedures, in addition to other protections provided by this title.(d) The housing units shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private for-profit entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.(e) Residents of the housing units have the right to participate directly and meaningfully in decisionmaking affecting the operation and management of their housing units. 64916. Very low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for very low income households, as described in Section 50105 of the Health and Safety Code.64917. Underutilized parcel means a parcel of property upon which is built a structure that contains fewer units than the maximum number of units permissible under local zoning regulations.PART 2. California Housing Authority CHAPTER 1. Creation, Powers, and Duties Article 1. Creation64920. (a) The California Housing Authority is hereby created. The authority shall be governed by the California Housing Authority Board.(b) The core mission of the authority shall be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets, and preserving affordable housing. Article 2. Powers64921. The authority shall have the following general powers:(a) Sue and be sued.(b) Have a seal and alter the same at its pleasure.(c) Enter into contracts and execute other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers to perform its mission.(d) Make rules with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.(e) Through its executive officer, appoint officers, agents, and employees; prescribe their duties and qualifications; set their employment descriptions and salaries subject to civil service rules; provide for participation in health care and retirement benefits available to similar state employees; and delegate to one or more of its agents or employees the powers and duties it deems proper.(f) Acquire, by grant or purchase, property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, lease, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.(g) Enter into development partnerships with municipalities, joint powers of authority, and other public and private entities in order to further its social housing development goals.(h) Arrange for the planning, opening, grading, or closing of roads or other places, for the furnishing of facilities, or for the furnishing of property or services in connection with a project.(i) Prepare project plans for any project, and from time to time modify those plans.(j) Provide advisory, consultative, training, and educational services, technical assistance, and advice to any person, partnership, or corporation, either public or private, to carry out its mission, and to contract with consultants provision of professional and technical assistance and advice.(k) Accept funding in any form from any source.(l) Call upon the Attorney General for legal services as it may require. Article 3. Duties64922. (a) The authority shall implement and advise on the social housing program, as prescribed by Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 64933), and is hereby granted all powers necessary for this purpose.(b) The authority may contract with property managers to manage its properties according to the following requirements:(1) Property managers shall abide by standards of responsiveness to resident needs prescribed by the authority.(2) Property managers shall abide by rules regarding resident rights and protections or be subject to termination of employment.64923. (a) The authority shall prepare, publish, adopt, and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual business plan. At least 60 days prior to the publication of the plan, the authority shall publish a draft business plan for public review and comment. The draft plan shall also be submitted to the Governor and the Legislature.(b) The business plan shall include, but need not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) A description of the type of projects the authority is producing or acquiring and the proposed timeline, estimated costs, and funding sources.(2) A projection of the expected residents, income levels, and other demographic data.(3) An estimate and description of the anticipated funds the authority intends to leverage to fund the construction and operation activities, and the authoritys level of confidence for obtaining each type of funding.(4) Any written agreements with public or private entities, such as technical assistance agreements.(c) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide and submit to the Legislature an analysis on the effect of its developments on gentrification. The report of the analysis shall be subject to public comment and shall be considered by the board for future decisionmaking.(d) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide an annual update to the Legislature on its progress, which shall include relevant resident statistics once social housing developments owned by the authority are occupied.(e) The reports and annual updates that this section requires the authority to provide to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795. CHAPTER 2. California Housing Authority Governance Article 1. Formation and Structure of Governing Board 64924. (a) The board shall be composed of all of the following:(1) An expert in housing development and finance.(2) An expert in housing construction.(3) An expert in property maintenance.(4) An appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly.(5) An appointee of the Senate Committee on Rules.(6) An appointee of the Governor.(7) Three representatives of the residents, to be appointed initially as described in subdivision (c).(b) All appointees shall serve at the pleasure of their respective appointing authorities. The Governor shall appoint the experts in housing development and finance, housing construction, and property management, whose appointments shall be subject to confirmation by Senate approval by majority vote.(c) Prior to the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, the resident representatives shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor, respectively. The Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor shall consult with advocates for tenants rights in the course of making their respective selections.(d) Following the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, resident representatives shall be elected according to the following procedure:(1) Any resident may nominate another resident to sit on the board, who shall be elected by a vote of all social housing residents who reside in units owned by the authority.(2) Each resident may vote for up to three nominees to sit on the board. The three nominees who receive the most votes shall have the right to sit on the board for terms of one year.(3) Resident elections for board seats shall take place annually and the elections shall be coordinated by the board and its executive officer. 64925. All board decisions shall be approved by majority vote. 64926. The board shall select a board chair, who may hold special powers as determined by members of the board.64927. The board is a state body for purposes of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2). Article 2. Board Powers and Duties64928. The duties of the board include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(a) Establish a strategy to achieve the core goal of elimination of the gap between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets.(b) Set objectives and performance targets designed to achieve the strategy required by subdivision (a).(c) Monitor and assess the degree of the authoritys success in achieving its objectives and performance targets.(d) Exercise exclusive hiring and firing power over an executive officer.(e) Establish and monitor performance measures for the executive officer and an associated succession plan.(f) Approve the annual budget prepared by the executive officer.(g) Foster a culture and set of values consistent with the short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals of the authority.(h) Integrate risk management into the authoritys strategic planning process.(i) Notify the Governor and the Legislature of unanticipated and sizable risks facing CHA in meeting its objectives.(j) Adopt and amend regulations, which shall include election procedures for resident board positions.(k) Following an initial trial period, create and make public an annual business plan as described in Section 64923.(l) Hold biannual meetings with resident governance councils.64929. The executive officer of the board shall have all of the following powers and duties:(a) Manage the day-to-day operations of the authority in accordance with the strategy, delegations, business plans, and policies of the board and this title.(b) Employ and manage staff, including establishing, promoting, and maintaining a positive organizational culture that effectively aligns with the values and employment principles of the authority.(c) Transform the strategic plans of the board into action.(d) Ensure the effectiveness of the authoritys operational systems, including financial management, human resource management, information systems management, risk management, communications, marketing, fund raising, asset management, and reporting.(e) Ensure the board is kept informed of changes to gubernatorial directives, relevant legislation and changes in law, and other critical information relating to the boards functions and powers.(f) Ensure compliance with applicable law and governmental policies.(g) Maintain effective communication and cooperation with external stakeholders in collaboration with the chair of the board.(h) Provide advice and information to the board on any material issues concerning strategy, finance, reporting obligations, or other important matters that arise.(i) Prepare the annual business plan, including organizational performance targets, for board approval.(j) Interact with and, where appropriate, report to the Governor and the Legislature.(k) Additional responsibilities as determined by the board. Article 3. Resident Governance Councils64930. Each multifamily social housing development owned by the authority shall form a governance council, which shall include residents in both rental and ownership model properties. The governance council shall be made up of no more than 10 percent of the overall population of the multifamily development. The authority shall establish appropriate size limitations for governance councils based on the size of the developments that they represent.64931. An authority multifamily social housing development governance council shall have the following powers and responsibilities:(a) Host regular meetings to gather feedback and perspective of residents.(b) Provide the resident perspective to property management.(c) Represent the interests of the development in biannual meetings with the board.(d) Determine how to spend the developments allotted annual budget for common room amenities and social events.(e) Participate in the approval of renovation projects.(f) Other responsibilities as determined by the board.64932. A multifamily social housing development governance council and the board may consult with outside parties with appropriate experience for the purpose of establishing managerial policies and practices that align with the requirements of affordable housing and the need to provide suitable tenant protections. CHAPTER 3. Social Housing Program Article 1. Program Design64933. (a) In all its operations, the authority shall seek to achieve revenue neutrality over the long term. The authority shall seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through the mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden, such as rent cross-subsidization or cost rent.(b) (1) The authority shall develop regional target percentages for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income housing that seek to maximize low-income housing within the constraints of long-term revenue neutrality and maintaining sufficient operational, maintenance, and capital reserves. The methodology for low-income housing maximization in each development region shall be explained at a board meeting and shall be subject to public comment.(2) Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(c) The authority shall prioritize development of property with all of the following characteristics:(1) Vacant parcels.(2) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels without affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(3) Surplus public properties.(4) Parcels near transit.(d) (1) If the development of a property requires the rehabilitation or demolition of covenanted affordable units, the new development shall include a greater number of affordable units by income group than the previous property.(2) Each multiunit property shall include a variety of mixed-income units according to area median income levels.(e) If the development of a property requires the removal of residents from the property, the authority shall cover the temporary relocation costs of these residents, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(1) Costs of searching for a new residence.(2) Moving costs.(3) Any differences between the residents previous rent at the property and their rent during the authority development period.(f) Residents who are displaced during the authoritys development of the property shall have the right to live in the new social housing property for their previous rent for the period of one year, or the authoritys established rent for the residents income level, whichever is lower.(g) If a displaced resident chooses not to occupy the new social housing development, the authority is not obligated to pay the difference between new and old rents, as described in subdivision (e), after the displaced resident could otherwise have begun occupying the property.64934. The authority shall make an annual determination of the required amount of social housing units to be produced in the following manner:(a) Annual regional housing needs assessment targets shall be calculated as the total RHNA cycle targets for each jurisdiction divided by the length of the RHNA cycle. The authority shall update its calculations each year based on housing construction data submitted by jurisdictions to the Department of Housing and Community Development.(b) On or before January 1, 2028, and each year thereafter, the authority shall determine the gap between the previous years regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development and local councils of government, and actual housing construction, as determined by official local statistics.(c) The authority shall split the very low income RHNA allocation into extremely low income and very low income allocations based on the latest available census or official survey data for the relevant jurisdiction.(d) Within a given year, the authority is authorized at least to construct the required number of units to meet the gap between the previous years extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing unit construction and regional housing needs assessment targets.64935. (a) In creating social housing, the authority shall employ two different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, consistent with the requirements of this title.(b) In the rental model, the authority shall extend a one-year lease for a social housing unit to eligible individuals who commit to a minimum of one year of residence, barring extraordinary circumstances.(c) The rents or the rates on a leasehold mortgage in a multifamily property shall be set according to all of the following requirements:(1) The authority shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) Any rental adjustments applied shall be applied in a manner that does not discourage the residents pursuit of higher income.(3) Subject to the directive of paragraph (2), if a residents income changes, upon the next vacancy, the property manager shall rent to an appropriate income group to abide by revenue neutrality and meet other requirements.(4) For cost rentals, the authority will determine a reasonable proceeds cap on rental units. Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(d) In the ownership model, the authority shall extend a 99-year lease to individuals who commit to a minimum of five years of residence in the social housing unit. This lease shall be in the form of a limited equity arrangement.(e) Under the ownership model, upon the death of the owner of the social housing unit, the unit may be transferred to the deceaseds heir by devise or as any other real property may pass. If a transferee is not eligible to be a resident, the transferee shall sell the unit to the authority.(f) Under the ownership model, all of the following conditions shall apply:(1) The estates land and common areas will be owned by the authority.(2) The authority may operate as a lender for residents.(3) Buyers shall pay at least a 15-percent down payment.(4) Housing units may only be sold after meeting all of the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The authority shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the authority does not exercise its right to purchase the unit, the unit may be sold by the owner to an eligible buyer subject to requirements established by the authority.(5) Properties shall be sold at a price that allows the owner to have a reasonable return on investment, which may include documented capital improvements and adjustments for inflation.(g) Residents may be evicted for either of the following reasons:(1) Failure to meet social housing community standards, as determined by the authority or governance council.(2) Failure to pay rent for more than two months.(h) Residents shall enjoy all of the following protections:(1) Property managers shall provide a 24-hour notice before entering the residents unit.(2) Termination for nonpayment of rent requires a 14-day notice prior to eviction.(3) Residents may recover abandoned properties within 60 days of receiving an eviction notice.64936. Applicants to be residents and continuing residents shall meet all of the following eligibility requirements, as may be applicable to them:(a) Except in the case of above moderate-income units, social housing units shall be the residents sole residence.(b) A potential resident shall prove that they have been living or working in California at the time of their application. The authority shall promulgate rules and criteria to determine the necessary residency or work qualifications solely for eligibility purposes, and these shall include sufficient qualifying criteria that do not discriminate against applicants based on their belonging to any protected class.(c) Upon approval by the authority, or the applicable governance council if authorized by the authority, residents whose units are part of the ownership model may rent their units. The authority shall prescribe the conditions pursuant to which a governance council may regulate renting.(d) Residents under the rental model shall commit to one year of residence in the rental unit, after which a month-to-month tenancy may take effect. Residents under the ownership model shall commit to at least five years of primary residence in their unit.(e) Under certain circumstances, a resident shall be allowed to interrupt residence requirements without penalty, including:(1) Job relocation.(2) Change in the household structure.(3) Serious physical or mental illness.(4) A mutually agreed-upon unit swap with another social housing resident within the same property pursuant to authority requirements.(5) Other circumstances authorized by the authority or the governance council, to the extent authorized by the authority.(f) If a resident interrupting their tenancy or leasehold mortgage does not satisfy the requirements for an exception, the resident may be subject to one of the following penalties:(1) Obligation to pay rent or make payments on a leasehold mortgage until a new resident is located.(2) In the case of a resident leasing under the ownership model, forfeiture of proceeds from resale of the property.(3) Ineligibility to reside in authority units for a period of five years, or as determined by the authority.(g) Except in cases that evidence a clear and manifest danger to the development or its residents, as may be determined by the authority, a prior criminal record shall not in any way preclude a person from residing in social housing.64937. (a) Subject to the requirements of subdivision (b), the authority shall use a lottery to select social housing residents from all qualifying applicants. The lottery shall be structured by income categories and shall provide separate selection results for each category.(b) If residents of a property who were displaced during the authoritys development of the property as social housing have elected to lease a unit in the social housing, they shall be accommodated prior to offering units to others pursuant to subdivision (a). Article 2. Production of Housing64938. (a) The authority is authorized to contract with qualified entities, in accordance with the authoritys plan to meet its goals, to conduct ground-up construction and rehabilitation of existing structures.(b) The authority is authorized to dedicate building space to commercial use and may lease the space to qualifying entities, pursuant to requirements established by the authority.(c) When appropriate, the state shall gift public lands to the authority for social housing development purposes.(d) In the absence of suitable state-owned parcels, the authority is authorized to purchase municipal, county, other local jurisdiction, and private lands.64939. (a) The authority shall accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The parcel allows the authority to meet the jurisdictions regional housing needs assessments goals.(2) The parcel does not exceed the cost of all suitable alternative sites by more than 2 percent.(3) The parcel offers comparable community amenities to all suitable alternatives.(b) The authority shall seek input from the local jurisdictions city council, board of supervisors, or planning agency, as applicable, on all of the following dimensions of an authority development:(1) Specific site of development.(2) Number of stories.(3) Number of units.(4) Development timeline. Article 3. Acquisition64941. The authority may acquire, reacquire, or contract to acquire or reacquire by grant or purchase real, personal, or mixed property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, transfer, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.64942. The authority shall prioritize acquiring or reacquiring property with all of the following characteristics:(a) Parcels with affordability covenants or rent control units in danger of losing affordability status, in order to preserve affordable housing stock.(b) Parcels at risk of becoming unaffordable or at the end of their affordability covenants.(c) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels with affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(d) Surplus public properties.(e) Parcels near transit. CHAPTER 4. Funding64943. The activities of the authority shall be conducted with a goal to cover its costs over the long term in accordance with the principle of revenue neutrality.64944. The Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund is hereby established within the State Treasury to be used, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to provide zero-interest loans for the purpose of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes.64945. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds.(b) The authority may, from time to time, issue revenue bonds in the principal amount that the agency determines necessary to provide sufficient funds for financing social housing developments, the payment of interest on these bonds, the establishment of reserves to secure the bonds, and the payment of other expenditures of the agency incident to, and necessary or convenient to, issuance of the bonds.(c) The board shall provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records and shall maintain accounting records and shall report accounting transactions in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles adopted by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation for both public reporting purposes and for reporting of activities to the Controller.64946. The authority may, upon appropriation by the Legislature, utilize funds from other legislation, cities and counties, or other sources, in order to build more low-, very low, and extremely low income housing.
7979
8080 SEC. 2. Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) is added to the Government Code, to read:
8181
8282 ### SEC. 2.
8383
8484 TITLE 6.91. THE SOCIAL HOUSING ACTPART 1. General Provisions CHAPTER 1. Title64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act. CHAPTER 2. Definitions64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title. 64902. Above moderate income means income for households that exceeds the moderate-income level, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64903. Area median income means area median income as published by the Department of Housing and Community Development pursuant to Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64904. Authority or CHA means the California Housing Authority, an independent state body established by this title for the purpose of developing social housing for all California residents. 64905. Board means the California Housing Authority Board.64906. Cost rent means a system in which the rent of a dwelling is calculated on the cost of providing for and maintaining the dwelling, only allowing for limited or no proceeds.64907. Extremely low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for extremely low income households, as described in Section 50106 of the Health and Safety Code.64908. Limited equity arrangement means an ownership model in which residents are extended a long-term lease of a unit, take out a subsidized leasehold mortgage on the property from the authority, make monthly mortgage payments, and commit to resell at a price determined by a formula designed to balance ongoing affordability and resident wealth generation.64909. Low income means income for households that does not exceed the qualifying limits for lower income households, as described in Section 50079.5 of the Health and Safety Code.64910. Moderate income means income for households of low or moderate income whose income exceeds the income limit for lower income households, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64911. Multifamily property means a collection of units featuring extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income units. A multifamily property may be a single building, multiple buildings on the same or adjacent parcels, or multiple buildings across several blocks within a single jurisdiction, or as may be defined by the authority.64912. Regional housing needs assessment or RHNA means a representation of housing needs for all income levels in a jurisdiction pursuant to Article 10.6 (commencing with Section 65580) of Chapter 3 of Division 1 of Title 7.64913. Rent and mortgage cross-subsidization means a system in which the below-cost rents and leasehold mortgages of certain units are balanced by above-cost payments on other units within the same multiunit property so as to ensure the propertys overall revenue meets development and operational costs.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the authority are returned to the authority through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64915. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics: (a) (1) The housing units are owned by a government entity such as the California Housing Authority, a public entity, or a local housing authority.(2) For the purposes of this act, all social housing developed or authorized by the authority shall be owned by the authority.(b) If a housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges, including extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.(c) Residents of housing units are afforded, at a minimum, all protections granted to tenants with tenancies in private property under Section 1946.2 of the Civil Code, including protection against termination without just cause or for any discriminatory, retaliatory, or other arbitrary reason, and shall be afforded due process prior to being subject to eviction procedures, in addition to other protections provided by this title.(d) The housing units shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private for-profit entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.(e) Residents of the housing units have the right to participate directly and meaningfully in decisionmaking affecting the operation and management of their housing units. 64916. Very low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for very low income households, as described in Section 50105 of the Health and Safety Code.64917. Underutilized parcel means a parcel of property upon which is built a structure that contains fewer units than the maximum number of units permissible under local zoning regulations.PART 2. California Housing Authority CHAPTER 1. Creation, Powers, and Duties Article 1. Creation64920. (a) The California Housing Authority is hereby created. The authority shall be governed by the California Housing Authority Board.(b) The core mission of the authority shall be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets, and preserving affordable housing. Article 2. Powers64921. The authority shall have the following general powers:(a) Sue and be sued.(b) Have a seal and alter the same at its pleasure.(c) Enter into contracts and execute other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers to perform its mission.(d) Make rules with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.(e) Through its executive officer, appoint officers, agents, and employees; prescribe their duties and qualifications; set their employment descriptions and salaries subject to civil service rules; provide for participation in health care and retirement benefits available to similar state employees; and delegate to one or more of its agents or employees the powers and duties it deems proper.(f) Acquire, by grant or purchase, property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, lease, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.(g) Enter into development partnerships with municipalities, joint powers of authority, and other public and private entities in order to further its social housing development goals.(h) Arrange for the planning, opening, grading, or closing of roads or other places, for the furnishing of facilities, or for the furnishing of property or services in connection with a project.(i) Prepare project plans for any project, and from time to time modify those plans.(j) Provide advisory, consultative, training, and educational services, technical assistance, and advice to any person, partnership, or corporation, either public or private, to carry out its mission, and to contract with consultants provision of professional and technical assistance and advice.(k) Accept funding in any form from any source.(l) Call upon the Attorney General for legal services as it may require. Article 3. Duties64922. (a) The authority shall implement and advise on the social housing program, as prescribed by Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 64933), and is hereby granted all powers necessary for this purpose.(b) The authority may contract with property managers to manage its properties according to the following requirements:(1) Property managers shall abide by standards of responsiveness to resident needs prescribed by the authority.(2) Property managers shall abide by rules regarding resident rights and protections or be subject to termination of employment.64923. (a) The authority shall prepare, publish, adopt, and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual business plan. At least 60 days prior to the publication of the plan, the authority shall publish a draft business plan for public review and comment. The draft plan shall also be submitted to the Governor and the Legislature.(b) The business plan shall include, but need not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) A description of the type of projects the authority is producing or acquiring and the proposed timeline, estimated costs, and funding sources.(2) A projection of the expected residents, income levels, and other demographic data.(3) An estimate and description of the anticipated funds the authority intends to leverage to fund the construction and operation activities, and the authoritys level of confidence for obtaining each type of funding.(4) Any written agreements with public or private entities, such as technical assistance agreements.(c) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide and submit to the Legislature an analysis on the effect of its developments on gentrification. The report of the analysis shall be subject to public comment and shall be considered by the board for future decisionmaking.(d) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide an annual update to the Legislature on its progress, which shall include relevant resident statistics once social housing developments owned by the authority are occupied.(e) The reports and annual updates that this section requires the authority to provide to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795. CHAPTER 2. California Housing Authority Governance Article 1. Formation and Structure of Governing Board 64924. (a) The board shall be composed of all of the following:(1) An expert in housing development and finance.(2) An expert in housing construction.(3) An expert in property maintenance.(4) An appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly.(5) An appointee of the Senate Committee on Rules.(6) An appointee of the Governor.(7) Three representatives of the residents, to be appointed initially as described in subdivision (c).(b) All appointees shall serve at the pleasure of their respective appointing authorities. The Governor shall appoint the experts in housing development and finance, housing construction, and property management, whose appointments shall be subject to confirmation by Senate approval by majority vote.(c) Prior to the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, the resident representatives shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor, respectively. The Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor shall consult with advocates for tenants rights in the course of making their respective selections.(d) Following the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, resident representatives shall be elected according to the following procedure:(1) Any resident may nominate another resident to sit on the board, who shall be elected by a vote of all social housing residents who reside in units owned by the authority.(2) Each resident may vote for up to three nominees to sit on the board. The three nominees who receive the most votes shall have the right to sit on the board for terms of one year.(3) Resident elections for board seats shall take place annually and the elections shall be coordinated by the board and its executive officer. 64925. All board decisions shall be approved by majority vote. 64926. The board shall select a board chair, who may hold special powers as determined by members of the board.64927. The board is a state body for purposes of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2). Article 2. Board Powers and Duties64928. The duties of the board include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(a) Establish a strategy to achieve the core goal of elimination of the gap between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets.(b) Set objectives and performance targets designed to achieve the strategy required by subdivision (a).(c) Monitor and assess the degree of the authoritys success in achieving its objectives and performance targets.(d) Exercise exclusive hiring and firing power over an executive officer.(e) Establish and monitor performance measures for the executive officer and an associated succession plan.(f) Approve the annual budget prepared by the executive officer.(g) Foster a culture and set of values consistent with the short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals of the authority.(h) Integrate risk management into the authoritys strategic planning process.(i) Notify the Governor and the Legislature of unanticipated and sizable risks facing CHA in meeting its objectives.(j) Adopt and amend regulations, which shall include election procedures for resident board positions.(k) Following an initial trial period, create and make public an annual business plan as described in Section 64923.(l) Hold biannual meetings with resident governance councils.64929. The executive officer of the board shall have all of the following powers and duties:(a) Manage the day-to-day operations of the authority in accordance with the strategy, delegations, business plans, and policies of the board and this title.(b) Employ and manage staff, including establishing, promoting, and maintaining a positive organizational culture that effectively aligns with the values and employment principles of the authority.(c) Transform the strategic plans of the board into action.(d) Ensure the effectiveness of the authoritys operational systems, including financial management, human resource management, information systems management, risk management, communications, marketing, fund raising, asset management, and reporting.(e) Ensure the board is kept informed of changes to gubernatorial directives, relevant legislation and changes in law, and other critical information relating to the boards functions and powers.(f) Ensure compliance with applicable law and governmental policies.(g) Maintain effective communication and cooperation with external stakeholders in collaboration with the chair of the board.(h) Provide advice and information to the board on any material issues concerning strategy, finance, reporting obligations, or other important matters that arise.(i) Prepare the annual business plan, including organizational performance targets, for board approval.(j) Interact with and, where appropriate, report to the Governor and the Legislature.(k) Additional responsibilities as determined by the board. Article 3. Resident Governance Councils64930. Each multifamily social housing development owned by the authority shall form a governance council, which shall include residents in both rental and ownership model properties. The governance council shall be made up of no more than 10 percent of the overall population of the multifamily development. The authority shall establish appropriate size limitations for governance councils based on the size of the developments that they represent.64931. An authority multifamily social housing development governance council shall have the following powers and responsibilities:(a) Host regular meetings to gather feedback and perspective of residents.(b) Provide the resident perspective to property management.(c) Represent the interests of the development in biannual meetings with the board.(d) Determine how to spend the developments allotted annual budget for common room amenities and social events.(e) Participate in the approval of renovation projects.(f) Other responsibilities as determined by the board.64932. A multifamily social housing development governance council and the board may consult with outside parties with appropriate experience for the purpose of establishing managerial policies and practices that align with the requirements of affordable housing and the need to provide suitable tenant protections. CHAPTER 3. Social Housing Program Article 1. Program Design64933. (a) In all its operations, the authority shall seek to achieve revenue neutrality over the long term. The authority shall seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through the mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden, such as rent cross-subsidization or cost rent.(b) (1) The authority shall develop regional target percentages for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income housing that seek to maximize low-income housing within the constraints of long-term revenue neutrality and maintaining sufficient operational, maintenance, and capital reserves. The methodology for low-income housing maximization in each development region shall be explained at a board meeting and shall be subject to public comment.(2) Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(c) The authority shall prioritize development of property with all of the following characteristics:(1) Vacant parcels.(2) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels without affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(3) Surplus public properties.(4) Parcels near transit.(d) (1) If the development of a property requires the rehabilitation or demolition of covenanted affordable units, the new development shall include a greater number of affordable units by income group than the previous property.(2) Each multiunit property shall include a variety of mixed-income units according to area median income levels.(e) If the development of a property requires the removal of residents from the property, the authority shall cover the temporary relocation costs of these residents, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(1) Costs of searching for a new residence.(2) Moving costs.(3) Any differences between the residents previous rent at the property and their rent during the authority development period.(f) Residents who are displaced during the authoritys development of the property shall have the right to live in the new social housing property for their previous rent for the period of one year, or the authoritys established rent for the residents income level, whichever is lower.(g) If a displaced resident chooses not to occupy the new social housing development, the authority is not obligated to pay the difference between new and old rents, as described in subdivision (e), after the displaced resident could otherwise have begun occupying the property.64934. The authority shall make an annual determination of the required amount of social housing units to be produced in the following manner:(a) Annual regional housing needs assessment targets shall be calculated as the total RHNA cycle targets for each jurisdiction divided by the length of the RHNA cycle. The authority shall update its calculations each year based on housing construction data submitted by jurisdictions to the Department of Housing and Community Development.(b) On or before January 1, 2028, and each year thereafter, the authority shall determine the gap between the previous years regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development and local councils of government, and actual housing construction, as determined by official local statistics.(c) The authority shall split the very low income RHNA allocation into extremely low income and very low income allocations based on the latest available census or official survey data for the relevant jurisdiction.(d) Within a given year, the authority is authorized at least to construct the required number of units to meet the gap between the previous years extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing unit construction and regional housing needs assessment targets.64935. (a) In creating social housing, the authority shall employ two different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, consistent with the requirements of this title.(b) In the rental model, the authority shall extend a one-year lease for a social housing unit to eligible individuals who commit to a minimum of one year of residence, barring extraordinary circumstances.(c) The rents or the rates on a leasehold mortgage in a multifamily property shall be set according to all of the following requirements:(1) The authority shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) Any rental adjustments applied shall be applied in a manner that does not discourage the residents pursuit of higher income.(3) Subject to the directive of paragraph (2), if a residents income changes, upon the next vacancy, the property manager shall rent to an appropriate income group to abide by revenue neutrality and meet other requirements.(4) For cost rentals, the authority will determine a reasonable proceeds cap on rental units. Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(d) In the ownership model, the authority shall extend a 99-year lease to individuals who commit to a minimum of five years of residence in the social housing unit. This lease shall be in the form of a limited equity arrangement.(e) Under the ownership model, upon the death of the owner of the social housing unit, the unit may be transferred to the deceaseds heir by devise or as any other real property may pass. If a transferee is not eligible to be a resident, the transferee shall sell the unit to the authority.(f) Under the ownership model, all of the following conditions shall apply:(1) The estates land and common areas will be owned by the authority.(2) The authority may operate as a lender for residents.(3) Buyers shall pay at least a 15-percent down payment.(4) Housing units may only be sold after meeting all of the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The authority shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the authority does not exercise its right to purchase the unit, the unit may be sold by the owner to an eligible buyer subject to requirements established by the authority.(5) Properties shall be sold at a price that allows the owner to have a reasonable return on investment, which may include documented capital improvements and adjustments for inflation.(g) Residents may be evicted for either of the following reasons:(1) Failure to meet social housing community standards, as determined by the authority or governance council.(2) Failure to pay rent for more than two months.(h) Residents shall enjoy all of the following protections:(1) Property managers shall provide a 24-hour notice before entering the residents unit.(2) Termination for nonpayment of rent requires a 14-day notice prior to eviction.(3) Residents may recover abandoned properties within 60 days of receiving an eviction notice.64936. Applicants to be residents and continuing residents shall meet all of the following eligibility requirements, as may be applicable to them:(a) Except in the case of above moderate-income units, social housing units shall be the residents sole residence.(b) A potential resident shall prove that they have been living or working in California at the time of their application. The authority shall promulgate rules and criteria to determine the necessary residency or work qualifications solely for eligibility purposes, and these shall include sufficient qualifying criteria that do not discriminate against applicants based on their belonging to any protected class.(c) Upon approval by the authority, or the applicable governance council if authorized by the authority, residents whose units are part of the ownership model may rent their units. The authority shall prescribe the conditions pursuant to which a governance council may regulate renting.(d) Residents under the rental model shall commit to one year of residence in the rental unit, after which a month-to-month tenancy may take effect. Residents under the ownership model shall commit to at least five years of primary residence in their unit.(e) Under certain circumstances, a resident shall be allowed to interrupt residence requirements without penalty, including:(1) Job relocation.(2) Change in the household structure.(3) Serious physical or mental illness.(4) A mutually agreed-upon unit swap with another social housing resident within the same property pursuant to authority requirements.(5) Other circumstances authorized by the authority or the governance council, to the extent authorized by the authority.(f) If a resident interrupting their tenancy or leasehold mortgage does not satisfy the requirements for an exception, the resident may be subject to one of the following penalties:(1) Obligation to pay rent or make payments on a leasehold mortgage until a new resident is located.(2) In the case of a resident leasing under the ownership model, forfeiture of proceeds from resale of the property.(3) Ineligibility to reside in authority units for a period of five years, or as determined by the authority.(g) Except in cases that evidence a clear and manifest danger to the development or its residents, as may be determined by the authority, a prior criminal record shall not in any way preclude a person from residing in social housing.64937. (a) Subject to the requirements of subdivision (b), the authority shall use a lottery to select social housing residents from all qualifying applicants. The lottery shall be structured by income categories and shall provide separate selection results for each category.(b) If residents of a property who were displaced during the authoritys development of the property as social housing have elected to lease a unit in the social housing, they shall be accommodated prior to offering units to others pursuant to subdivision (a). Article 2. Production of Housing64938. (a) The authority is authorized to contract with qualified entities, in accordance with the authoritys plan to meet its goals, to conduct ground-up construction and rehabilitation of existing structures.(b) The authority is authorized to dedicate building space to commercial use and may lease the space to qualifying entities, pursuant to requirements established by the authority.(c) When appropriate, the state shall gift public lands to the authority for social housing development purposes.(d) In the absence of suitable state-owned parcels, the authority is authorized to purchase municipal, county, other local jurisdiction, and private lands.64939. (a) The authority shall accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The parcel allows the authority to meet the jurisdictions regional housing needs assessments goals.(2) The parcel does not exceed the cost of all suitable alternative sites by more than 2 percent.(3) The parcel offers comparable community amenities to all suitable alternatives.(b) The authority shall seek input from the local jurisdictions city council, board of supervisors, or planning agency, as applicable, on all of the following dimensions of an authority development:(1) Specific site of development.(2) Number of stories.(3) Number of units.(4) Development timeline. Article 3. Acquisition64941. The authority may acquire, reacquire, or contract to acquire or reacquire by grant or purchase real, personal, or mixed property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, transfer, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.64942. The authority shall prioritize acquiring or reacquiring property with all of the following characteristics:(a) Parcels with affordability covenants or rent control units in danger of losing affordability status, in order to preserve affordable housing stock.(b) Parcels at risk of becoming unaffordable or at the end of their affordability covenants.(c) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels with affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(d) Surplus public properties.(e) Parcels near transit. CHAPTER 4. Funding64943. The activities of the authority shall be conducted with a goal to cover its costs over the long term in accordance with the principle of revenue neutrality.64944. The Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund is hereby established within the State Treasury to be used, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to provide zero-interest loans for the purpose of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes.64945. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds.(b) The authority may, from time to time, issue revenue bonds in the principal amount that the agency determines necessary to provide sufficient funds for financing social housing developments, the payment of interest on these bonds, the establishment of reserves to secure the bonds, and the payment of other expenditures of the agency incident to, and necessary or convenient to, issuance of the bonds.(c) The board shall provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records and shall maintain accounting records and shall report accounting transactions in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles adopted by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation for both public reporting purposes and for reporting of activities to the Controller.64946. The authority may, upon appropriation by the Legislature, utilize funds from other legislation, cities and counties, or other sources, in order to build more low-, very low, and extremely low income housing.
8585
8686 TITLE 6.91. THE SOCIAL HOUSING ACTPART 1. General Provisions CHAPTER 1. Title64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act. CHAPTER 2. Definitions64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title. 64902. Above moderate income means income for households that exceeds the moderate-income level, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64903. Area median income means area median income as published by the Department of Housing and Community Development pursuant to Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64904. Authority or CHA means the California Housing Authority, an independent state body established by this title for the purpose of developing social housing for all California residents. 64905. Board means the California Housing Authority Board.64906. Cost rent means a system in which the rent of a dwelling is calculated on the cost of providing for and maintaining the dwelling, only allowing for limited or no proceeds.64907. Extremely low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for extremely low income households, as described in Section 50106 of the Health and Safety Code.64908. Limited equity arrangement means an ownership model in which residents are extended a long-term lease of a unit, take out a subsidized leasehold mortgage on the property from the authority, make monthly mortgage payments, and commit to resell at a price determined by a formula designed to balance ongoing affordability and resident wealth generation.64909. Low income means income for households that does not exceed the qualifying limits for lower income households, as described in Section 50079.5 of the Health and Safety Code.64910. Moderate income means income for households of low or moderate income whose income exceeds the income limit for lower income households, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64911. Multifamily property means a collection of units featuring extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income units. A multifamily property may be a single building, multiple buildings on the same or adjacent parcels, or multiple buildings across several blocks within a single jurisdiction, or as may be defined by the authority.64912. Regional housing needs assessment or RHNA means a representation of housing needs for all income levels in a jurisdiction pursuant to Article 10.6 (commencing with Section 65580) of Chapter 3 of Division 1 of Title 7.64913. Rent and mortgage cross-subsidization means a system in which the below-cost rents and leasehold mortgages of certain units are balanced by above-cost payments on other units within the same multiunit property so as to ensure the propertys overall revenue meets development and operational costs.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the authority are returned to the authority through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64915. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics: (a) (1) The housing units are owned by a government entity such as the California Housing Authority, a public entity, or a local housing authority.(2) For the purposes of this act, all social housing developed or authorized by the authority shall be owned by the authority.(b) If a housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges, including extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.(c) Residents of housing units are afforded, at a minimum, all protections granted to tenants with tenancies in private property under Section 1946.2 of the Civil Code, including protection against termination without just cause or for any discriminatory, retaliatory, or other arbitrary reason, and shall be afforded due process prior to being subject to eviction procedures, in addition to other protections provided by this title.(d) The housing units shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private for-profit entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.(e) Residents of the housing units have the right to participate directly and meaningfully in decisionmaking affecting the operation and management of their housing units. 64916. Very low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for very low income households, as described in Section 50105 of the Health and Safety Code.64917. Underutilized parcel means a parcel of property upon which is built a structure that contains fewer units than the maximum number of units permissible under local zoning regulations.PART 2. California Housing Authority CHAPTER 1. Creation, Powers, and Duties Article 1. Creation64920. (a) The California Housing Authority is hereby created. The authority shall be governed by the California Housing Authority Board.(b) The core mission of the authority shall be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets, and preserving affordable housing. Article 2. Powers64921. The authority shall have the following general powers:(a) Sue and be sued.(b) Have a seal and alter the same at its pleasure.(c) Enter into contracts and execute other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers to perform its mission.(d) Make rules with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.(e) Through its executive officer, appoint officers, agents, and employees; prescribe their duties and qualifications; set their employment descriptions and salaries subject to civil service rules; provide for participation in health care and retirement benefits available to similar state employees; and delegate to one or more of its agents or employees the powers and duties it deems proper.(f) Acquire, by grant or purchase, property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, lease, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.(g) Enter into development partnerships with municipalities, joint powers of authority, and other public and private entities in order to further its social housing development goals.(h) Arrange for the planning, opening, grading, or closing of roads or other places, for the furnishing of facilities, or for the furnishing of property or services in connection with a project.(i) Prepare project plans for any project, and from time to time modify those plans.(j) Provide advisory, consultative, training, and educational services, technical assistance, and advice to any person, partnership, or corporation, either public or private, to carry out its mission, and to contract with consultants provision of professional and technical assistance and advice.(k) Accept funding in any form from any source.(l) Call upon the Attorney General for legal services as it may require. Article 3. Duties64922. (a) The authority shall implement and advise on the social housing program, as prescribed by Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 64933), and is hereby granted all powers necessary for this purpose.(b) The authority may contract with property managers to manage its properties according to the following requirements:(1) Property managers shall abide by standards of responsiveness to resident needs prescribed by the authority.(2) Property managers shall abide by rules regarding resident rights and protections or be subject to termination of employment.64923. (a) The authority shall prepare, publish, adopt, and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual business plan. At least 60 days prior to the publication of the plan, the authority shall publish a draft business plan for public review and comment. The draft plan shall also be submitted to the Governor and the Legislature.(b) The business plan shall include, but need not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) A description of the type of projects the authority is producing or acquiring and the proposed timeline, estimated costs, and funding sources.(2) A projection of the expected residents, income levels, and other demographic data.(3) An estimate and description of the anticipated funds the authority intends to leverage to fund the construction and operation activities, and the authoritys level of confidence for obtaining each type of funding.(4) Any written agreements with public or private entities, such as technical assistance agreements.(c) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide and submit to the Legislature an analysis on the effect of its developments on gentrification. The report of the analysis shall be subject to public comment and shall be considered by the board for future decisionmaking.(d) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide an annual update to the Legislature on its progress, which shall include relevant resident statistics once social housing developments owned by the authority are occupied.(e) The reports and annual updates that this section requires the authority to provide to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795. CHAPTER 2. California Housing Authority Governance Article 1. Formation and Structure of Governing Board 64924. (a) The board shall be composed of all of the following:(1) An expert in housing development and finance.(2) An expert in housing construction.(3) An expert in property maintenance.(4) An appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly.(5) An appointee of the Senate Committee on Rules.(6) An appointee of the Governor.(7) Three representatives of the residents, to be appointed initially as described in subdivision (c).(b) All appointees shall serve at the pleasure of their respective appointing authorities. The Governor shall appoint the experts in housing development and finance, housing construction, and property management, whose appointments shall be subject to confirmation by Senate approval by majority vote.(c) Prior to the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, the resident representatives shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor, respectively. The Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor shall consult with advocates for tenants rights in the course of making their respective selections.(d) Following the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, resident representatives shall be elected according to the following procedure:(1) Any resident may nominate another resident to sit on the board, who shall be elected by a vote of all social housing residents who reside in units owned by the authority.(2) Each resident may vote for up to three nominees to sit on the board. The three nominees who receive the most votes shall have the right to sit on the board for terms of one year.(3) Resident elections for board seats shall take place annually and the elections shall be coordinated by the board and its executive officer. 64925. All board decisions shall be approved by majority vote. 64926. The board shall select a board chair, who may hold special powers as determined by members of the board.64927. The board is a state body for purposes of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2). Article 2. Board Powers and Duties64928. The duties of the board include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(a) Establish a strategy to achieve the core goal of elimination of the gap between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets.(b) Set objectives and performance targets designed to achieve the strategy required by subdivision (a).(c) Monitor and assess the degree of the authoritys success in achieving its objectives and performance targets.(d) Exercise exclusive hiring and firing power over an executive officer.(e) Establish and monitor performance measures for the executive officer and an associated succession plan.(f) Approve the annual budget prepared by the executive officer.(g) Foster a culture and set of values consistent with the short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals of the authority.(h) Integrate risk management into the authoritys strategic planning process.(i) Notify the Governor and the Legislature of unanticipated and sizable risks facing CHA in meeting its objectives.(j) Adopt and amend regulations, which shall include election procedures for resident board positions.(k) Following an initial trial period, create and make public an annual business plan as described in Section 64923.(l) Hold biannual meetings with resident governance councils.64929. The executive officer of the board shall have all of the following powers and duties:(a) Manage the day-to-day operations of the authority in accordance with the strategy, delegations, business plans, and policies of the board and this title.(b) Employ and manage staff, including establishing, promoting, and maintaining a positive organizational culture that effectively aligns with the values and employment principles of the authority.(c) Transform the strategic plans of the board into action.(d) Ensure the effectiveness of the authoritys operational systems, including financial management, human resource management, information systems management, risk management, communications, marketing, fund raising, asset management, and reporting.(e) Ensure the board is kept informed of changes to gubernatorial directives, relevant legislation and changes in law, and other critical information relating to the boards functions and powers.(f) Ensure compliance with applicable law and governmental policies.(g) Maintain effective communication and cooperation with external stakeholders in collaboration with the chair of the board.(h) Provide advice and information to the board on any material issues concerning strategy, finance, reporting obligations, or other important matters that arise.(i) Prepare the annual business plan, including organizational performance targets, for board approval.(j) Interact with and, where appropriate, report to the Governor and the Legislature.(k) Additional responsibilities as determined by the board. Article 3. Resident Governance Councils64930. Each multifamily social housing development owned by the authority shall form a governance council, which shall include residents in both rental and ownership model properties. The governance council shall be made up of no more than 10 percent of the overall population of the multifamily development. The authority shall establish appropriate size limitations for governance councils based on the size of the developments that they represent.64931. An authority multifamily social housing development governance council shall have the following powers and responsibilities:(a) Host regular meetings to gather feedback and perspective of residents.(b) Provide the resident perspective to property management.(c) Represent the interests of the development in biannual meetings with the board.(d) Determine how to spend the developments allotted annual budget for common room amenities and social events.(e) Participate in the approval of renovation projects.(f) Other responsibilities as determined by the board.64932. A multifamily social housing development governance council and the board may consult with outside parties with appropriate experience for the purpose of establishing managerial policies and practices that align with the requirements of affordable housing and the need to provide suitable tenant protections. CHAPTER 3. Social Housing Program Article 1. Program Design64933. (a) In all its operations, the authority shall seek to achieve revenue neutrality over the long term. The authority shall seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through the mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden, such as rent cross-subsidization or cost rent.(b) (1) The authority shall develop regional target percentages for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income housing that seek to maximize low-income housing within the constraints of long-term revenue neutrality and maintaining sufficient operational, maintenance, and capital reserves. The methodology for low-income housing maximization in each development region shall be explained at a board meeting and shall be subject to public comment.(2) Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(c) The authority shall prioritize development of property with all of the following characteristics:(1) Vacant parcels.(2) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels without affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(3) Surplus public properties.(4) Parcels near transit.(d) (1) If the development of a property requires the rehabilitation or demolition of covenanted affordable units, the new development shall include a greater number of affordable units by income group than the previous property.(2) Each multiunit property shall include a variety of mixed-income units according to area median income levels.(e) If the development of a property requires the removal of residents from the property, the authority shall cover the temporary relocation costs of these residents, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(1) Costs of searching for a new residence.(2) Moving costs.(3) Any differences between the residents previous rent at the property and their rent during the authority development period.(f) Residents who are displaced during the authoritys development of the property shall have the right to live in the new social housing property for their previous rent for the period of one year, or the authoritys established rent for the residents income level, whichever is lower.(g) If a displaced resident chooses not to occupy the new social housing development, the authority is not obligated to pay the difference between new and old rents, as described in subdivision (e), after the displaced resident could otherwise have begun occupying the property.64934. The authority shall make an annual determination of the required amount of social housing units to be produced in the following manner:(a) Annual regional housing needs assessment targets shall be calculated as the total RHNA cycle targets for each jurisdiction divided by the length of the RHNA cycle. The authority shall update its calculations each year based on housing construction data submitted by jurisdictions to the Department of Housing and Community Development.(b) On or before January 1, 2028, and each year thereafter, the authority shall determine the gap between the previous years regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development and local councils of government, and actual housing construction, as determined by official local statistics.(c) The authority shall split the very low income RHNA allocation into extremely low income and very low income allocations based on the latest available census or official survey data for the relevant jurisdiction.(d) Within a given year, the authority is authorized at least to construct the required number of units to meet the gap between the previous years extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing unit construction and regional housing needs assessment targets.64935. (a) In creating social housing, the authority shall employ two different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, consistent with the requirements of this title.(b) In the rental model, the authority shall extend a one-year lease for a social housing unit to eligible individuals who commit to a minimum of one year of residence, barring extraordinary circumstances.(c) The rents or the rates on a leasehold mortgage in a multifamily property shall be set according to all of the following requirements:(1) The authority shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) Any rental adjustments applied shall be applied in a manner that does not discourage the residents pursuit of higher income.(3) Subject to the directive of paragraph (2), if a residents income changes, upon the next vacancy, the property manager shall rent to an appropriate income group to abide by revenue neutrality and meet other requirements.(4) For cost rentals, the authority will determine a reasonable proceeds cap on rental units. Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(d) In the ownership model, the authority shall extend a 99-year lease to individuals who commit to a minimum of five years of residence in the social housing unit. This lease shall be in the form of a limited equity arrangement.(e) Under the ownership model, upon the death of the owner of the social housing unit, the unit may be transferred to the deceaseds heir by devise or as any other real property may pass. If a transferee is not eligible to be a resident, the transferee shall sell the unit to the authority.(f) Under the ownership model, all of the following conditions shall apply:(1) The estates land and common areas will be owned by the authority.(2) The authority may operate as a lender for residents.(3) Buyers shall pay at least a 15-percent down payment.(4) Housing units may only be sold after meeting all of the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The authority shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the authority does not exercise its right to purchase the unit, the unit may be sold by the owner to an eligible buyer subject to requirements established by the authority.(5) Properties shall be sold at a price that allows the owner to have a reasonable return on investment, which may include documented capital improvements and adjustments for inflation.(g) Residents may be evicted for either of the following reasons:(1) Failure to meet social housing community standards, as determined by the authority or governance council.(2) Failure to pay rent for more than two months.(h) Residents shall enjoy all of the following protections:(1) Property managers shall provide a 24-hour notice before entering the residents unit.(2) Termination for nonpayment of rent requires a 14-day notice prior to eviction.(3) Residents may recover abandoned properties within 60 days of receiving an eviction notice.64936. Applicants to be residents and continuing residents shall meet all of the following eligibility requirements, as may be applicable to them:(a) Except in the case of above moderate-income units, social housing units shall be the residents sole residence.(b) A potential resident shall prove that they have been living or working in California at the time of their application. The authority shall promulgate rules and criteria to determine the necessary residency or work qualifications solely for eligibility purposes, and these shall include sufficient qualifying criteria that do not discriminate against applicants based on their belonging to any protected class.(c) Upon approval by the authority, or the applicable governance council if authorized by the authority, residents whose units are part of the ownership model may rent their units. The authority shall prescribe the conditions pursuant to which a governance council may regulate renting.(d) Residents under the rental model shall commit to one year of residence in the rental unit, after which a month-to-month tenancy may take effect. Residents under the ownership model shall commit to at least five years of primary residence in their unit.(e) Under certain circumstances, a resident shall be allowed to interrupt residence requirements without penalty, including:(1) Job relocation.(2) Change in the household structure.(3) Serious physical or mental illness.(4) A mutually agreed-upon unit swap with another social housing resident within the same property pursuant to authority requirements.(5) Other circumstances authorized by the authority or the governance council, to the extent authorized by the authority.(f) If a resident interrupting their tenancy or leasehold mortgage does not satisfy the requirements for an exception, the resident may be subject to one of the following penalties:(1) Obligation to pay rent or make payments on a leasehold mortgage until a new resident is located.(2) In the case of a resident leasing under the ownership model, forfeiture of proceeds from resale of the property.(3) Ineligibility to reside in authority units for a period of five years, or as determined by the authority.(g) Except in cases that evidence a clear and manifest danger to the development or its residents, as may be determined by the authority, a prior criminal record shall not in any way preclude a person from residing in social housing.64937. (a) Subject to the requirements of subdivision (b), the authority shall use a lottery to select social housing residents from all qualifying applicants. The lottery shall be structured by income categories and shall provide separate selection results for each category.(b) If residents of a property who were displaced during the authoritys development of the property as social housing have elected to lease a unit in the social housing, they shall be accommodated prior to offering units to others pursuant to subdivision (a). Article 2. Production of Housing64938. (a) The authority is authorized to contract with qualified entities, in accordance with the authoritys plan to meet its goals, to conduct ground-up construction and rehabilitation of existing structures.(b) The authority is authorized to dedicate building space to commercial use and may lease the space to qualifying entities, pursuant to requirements established by the authority.(c) When appropriate, the state shall gift public lands to the authority for social housing development purposes.(d) In the absence of suitable state-owned parcels, the authority is authorized to purchase municipal, county, other local jurisdiction, and private lands.64939. (a) The authority shall accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The parcel allows the authority to meet the jurisdictions regional housing needs assessments goals.(2) The parcel does not exceed the cost of all suitable alternative sites by more than 2 percent.(3) The parcel offers comparable community amenities to all suitable alternatives.(b) The authority shall seek input from the local jurisdictions city council, board of supervisors, or planning agency, as applicable, on all of the following dimensions of an authority development:(1) Specific site of development.(2) Number of stories.(3) Number of units.(4) Development timeline. Article 3. Acquisition64941. The authority may acquire, reacquire, or contract to acquire or reacquire by grant or purchase real, personal, or mixed property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, transfer, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.64942. The authority shall prioritize acquiring or reacquiring property with all of the following characteristics:(a) Parcels with affordability covenants or rent control units in danger of losing affordability status, in order to preserve affordable housing stock.(b) Parcels at risk of becoming unaffordable or at the end of their affordability covenants.(c) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels with affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(d) Surplus public properties.(e) Parcels near transit. CHAPTER 4. Funding64943. The activities of the authority shall be conducted with a goal to cover its costs over the long term in accordance with the principle of revenue neutrality.64944. The Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund is hereby established within the State Treasury to be used, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to provide zero-interest loans for the purpose of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes.64945. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds.(b) The authority may, from time to time, issue revenue bonds in the principal amount that the agency determines necessary to provide sufficient funds for financing social housing developments, the payment of interest on these bonds, the establishment of reserves to secure the bonds, and the payment of other expenditures of the agency incident to, and necessary or convenient to, issuance of the bonds.(c) The board shall provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records and shall maintain accounting records and shall report accounting transactions in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles adopted by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation for both public reporting purposes and for reporting of activities to the Controller.64946. The authority may, upon appropriation by the Legislature, utilize funds from other legislation, cities and counties, or other sources, in order to build more low-, very low, and extremely low income housing.
8787
8888 TITLE 6.91. THE SOCIAL HOUSING ACT
8989
9090 TITLE 6.91. THE SOCIAL HOUSING ACT
9191
9292 PART 1. General Provisions CHAPTER 1. Title64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act. CHAPTER 2. Definitions64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title. 64902. Above moderate income means income for households that exceeds the moderate-income level, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64903. Area median income means area median income as published by the Department of Housing and Community Development pursuant to Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64904. Authority or CHA means the California Housing Authority, an independent state body established by this title for the purpose of developing social housing for all California residents. 64905. Board means the California Housing Authority Board.64906. Cost rent means a system in which the rent of a dwelling is calculated on the cost of providing for and maintaining the dwelling, only allowing for limited or no proceeds.64907. Extremely low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for extremely low income households, as described in Section 50106 of the Health and Safety Code.64908. Limited equity arrangement means an ownership model in which residents are extended a long-term lease of a unit, take out a subsidized leasehold mortgage on the property from the authority, make monthly mortgage payments, and commit to resell at a price determined by a formula designed to balance ongoing affordability and resident wealth generation.64909. Low income means income for households that does not exceed the qualifying limits for lower income households, as described in Section 50079.5 of the Health and Safety Code.64910. Moderate income means income for households of low or moderate income whose income exceeds the income limit for lower income households, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64911. Multifamily property means a collection of units featuring extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income units. A multifamily property may be a single building, multiple buildings on the same or adjacent parcels, or multiple buildings across several blocks within a single jurisdiction, or as may be defined by the authority.64912. Regional housing needs assessment or RHNA means a representation of housing needs for all income levels in a jurisdiction pursuant to Article 10.6 (commencing with Section 65580) of Chapter 3 of Division 1 of Title 7.64913. Rent and mortgage cross-subsidization means a system in which the below-cost rents and leasehold mortgages of certain units are balanced by above-cost payments on other units within the same multiunit property so as to ensure the propertys overall revenue meets development and operational costs.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the authority are returned to the authority through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64915. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics: (a) (1) The housing units are owned by a government entity such as the California Housing Authority, a public entity, or a local housing authority.(2) For the purposes of this act, all social housing developed or authorized by the authority shall be owned by the authority.(b) If a housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges, including extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.(c) Residents of housing units are afforded, at a minimum, all protections granted to tenants with tenancies in private property under Section 1946.2 of the Civil Code, including protection against termination without just cause or for any discriminatory, retaliatory, or other arbitrary reason, and shall be afforded due process prior to being subject to eviction procedures, in addition to other protections provided by this title.(d) The housing units shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private for-profit entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.(e) Residents of the housing units have the right to participate directly and meaningfully in decisionmaking affecting the operation and management of their housing units. 64916. Very low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for very low income households, as described in Section 50105 of the Health and Safety Code.64917. Underutilized parcel means a parcel of property upon which is built a structure that contains fewer units than the maximum number of units permissible under local zoning regulations.
9393
9494 PART 1. General Provisions
9595
9696 PART 1. General Provisions
9797
9898 CHAPTER 1. Title64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act.
9999
100100 CHAPTER 1. Title
101101
102102 CHAPTER 1. Title
103103
104104 64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act.
105105
106106
107107
108108 64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act.
109109
110110 CHAPTER 2. Definitions64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title. 64902. Above moderate income means income for households that exceeds the moderate-income level, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64903. Area median income means area median income as published by the Department of Housing and Community Development pursuant to Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64904. Authority or CHA means the California Housing Authority, an independent state body established by this title for the purpose of developing social housing for all California residents. 64905. Board means the California Housing Authority Board.64906. Cost rent means a system in which the rent of a dwelling is calculated on the cost of providing for and maintaining the dwelling, only allowing for limited or no proceeds.64907. Extremely low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for extremely low income households, as described in Section 50106 of the Health and Safety Code.64908. Limited equity arrangement means an ownership model in which residents are extended a long-term lease of a unit, take out a subsidized leasehold mortgage on the property from the authority, make monthly mortgage payments, and commit to resell at a price determined by a formula designed to balance ongoing affordability and resident wealth generation.64909. Low income means income for households that does not exceed the qualifying limits for lower income households, as described in Section 50079.5 of the Health and Safety Code.64910. Moderate income means income for households of low or moderate income whose income exceeds the income limit for lower income households, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.64911. Multifamily property means a collection of units featuring extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income units. A multifamily property may be a single building, multiple buildings on the same or adjacent parcels, or multiple buildings across several blocks within a single jurisdiction, or as may be defined by the authority.64912. Regional housing needs assessment or RHNA means a representation of housing needs for all income levels in a jurisdiction pursuant to Article 10.6 (commencing with Section 65580) of Chapter 3 of Division 1 of Title 7.64913. Rent and mortgage cross-subsidization means a system in which the below-cost rents and leasehold mortgages of certain units are balanced by above-cost payments on other units within the same multiunit property so as to ensure the propertys overall revenue meets development and operational costs.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the authority are returned to the authority through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64915. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics: (a) (1) The housing units are owned by a government entity such as the California Housing Authority, a public entity, or a local housing authority.(2) For the purposes of this act, all social housing developed or authorized by the authority shall be owned by the authority.(b) If a housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges, including extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.(c) Residents of housing units are afforded, at a minimum, all protections granted to tenants with tenancies in private property under Section 1946.2 of the Civil Code, including protection against termination without just cause or for any discriminatory, retaliatory, or other arbitrary reason, and shall be afforded due process prior to being subject to eviction procedures, in addition to other protections provided by this title.(d) The housing units shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private for-profit entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.(e) Residents of the housing units have the right to participate directly and meaningfully in decisionmaking affecting the operation and management of their housing units. 64916. Very low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for very low income households, as described in Section 50105 of the Health and Safety Code.64917. Underutilized parcel means a parcel of property upon which is built a structure that contains fewer units than the maximum number of units permissible under local zoning regulations.
111111
112112 CHAPTER 2. Definitions
113113
114114 CHAPTER 2. Definitions
115115
116116 64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title.
117117
118118
119119
120120 64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title.
121121
122122 64902. Above moderate income means income for households that exceeds the moderate-income level, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.
123123
124124
125125
126126 64902. Above moderate income means income for households that exceeds the moderate-income level, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.
127127
128128 64903. Area median income means area median income as published by the Department of Housing and Community Development pursuant to Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.
129129
130130
131131
132132 64903. Area median income means area median income as published by the Department of Housing and Community Development pursuant to Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.
133133
134134 64904. Authority or CHA means the California Housing Authority, an independent state body established by this title for the purpose of developing social housing for all California residents.
135135
136136
137137
138138 64904. Authority or CHA means the California Housing Authority, an independent state body established by this title for the purpose of developing social housing for all California residents.
139139
140140 64905. Board means the California Housing Authority Board.
141141
142142
143143
144144 64905. Board means the California Housing Authority Board.
145145
146146 64906. Cost rent means a system in which the rent of a dwelling is calculated on the cost of providing for and maintaining the dwelling, only allowing for limited or no proceeds.
147147
148148
149149
150150 64906. Cost rent means a system in which the rent of a dwelling is calculated on the cost of providing for and maintaining the dwelling, only allowing for limited or no proceeds.
151151
152152 64907. Extremely low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for extremely low income households, as described in Section 50106 of the Health and Safety Code.
153153
154154
155155
156156 64907. Extremely low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for extremely low income households, as described in Section 50106 of the Health and Safety Code.
157157
158158 64908. Limited equity arrangement means an ownership model in which residents are extended a long-term lease of a unit, take out a subsidized leasehold mortgage on the property from the authority, make monthly mortgage payments, and commit to resell at a price determined by a formula designed to balance ongoing affordability and resident wealth generation.
159159
160160
161161
162162 64908. Limited equity arrangement means an ownership model in which residents are extended a long-term lease of a unit, take out a subsidized leasehold mortgage on the property from the authority, make monthly mortgage payments, and commit to resell at a price determined by a formula designed to balance ongoing affordability and resident wealth generation.
163163
164164 64909. Low income means income for households that does not exceed the qualifying limits for lower income households, as described in Section 50079.5 of the Health and Safety Code.
165165
166166
167167
168168 64909. Low income means income for households that does not exceed the qualifying limits for lower income households, as described in Section 50079.5 of the Health and Safety Code.
169169
170170 64910. Moderate income means income for households of low or moderate income whose income exceeds the income limit for lower income households, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.
171171
172172
173173
174174 64910. Moderate income means income for households of low or moderate income whose income exceeds the income limit for lower income households, as described in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.
175175
176176 64911. Multifamily property means a collection of units featuring extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income units. A multifamily property may be a single building, multiple buildings on the same or adjacent parcels, or multiple buildings across several blocks within a single jurisdiction, or as may be defined by the authority.
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178178
179179
180180 64911. Multifamily property means a collection of units featuring extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income units. A multifamily property may be a single building, multiple buildings on the same or adjacent parcels, or multiple buildings across several blocks within a single jurisdiction, or as may be defined by the authority.
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182182 64912. Regional housing needs assessment or RHNA means a representation of housing needs for all income levels in a jurisdiction pursuant to Article 10.6 (commencing with Section 65580) of Chapter 3 of Division 1 of Title 7.
183183
184184
185185
186186 64912. Regional housing needs assessment or RHNA means a representation of housing needs for all income levels in a jurisdiction pursuant to Article 10.6 (commencing with Section 65580) of Chapter 3 of Division 1 of Title 7.
187187
188188 64913. Rent and mortgage cross-subsidization means a system in which the below-cost rents and leasehold mortgages of certain units are balanced by above-cost payments on other units within the same multiunit property so as to ensure the propertys overall revenue meets development and operational costs.
189189
190190
191191
192192 64913. Rent and mortgage cross-subsidization means a system in which the below-cost rents and leasehold mortgages of certain units are balanced by above-cost payments on other units within the same multiunit property so as to ensure the propertys overall revenue meets development and operational costs.
193193
194194 64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the authority are returned to the authority through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.
195195
196196
197197
198198 64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the authority are returned to the authority through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.
199199
200200 64915. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics: (a) (1) The housing units are owned by a government entity such as the California Housing Authority, a public entity, or a local housing authority.(2) For the purposes of this act, all social housing developed or authorized by the authority shall be owned by the authority.(b) If a housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges, including extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.(c) Residents of housing units are afforded, at a minimum, all protections granted to tenants with tenancies in private property under Section 1946.2 of the Civil Code, including protection against termination without just cause or for any discriminatory, retaliatory, or other arbitrary reason, and shall be afforded due process prior to being subject to eviction procedures, in addition to other protections provided by this title.(d) The housing units shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private for-profit entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.(e) Residents of the housing units have the right to participate directly and meaningfully in decisionmaking affecting the operation and management of their housing units.
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202202
203203
204204 64915. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:
205205
206206 (a) (1) The housing units are owned by a government entity such as the California Housing Authority, a public entity, or a local housing authority.
207207
208208 (2) For the purposes of this act, all social housing developed or authorized by the authority shall be owned by the authority.
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210210 (b) If a housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges, including extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.
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212212 (c) Residents of housing units are afforded, at a minimum, all protections granted to tenants with tenancies in private property under Section 1946.2 of the Civil Code, including protection against termination without just cause or for any discriminatory, retaliatory, or other arbitrary reason, and shall be afforded due process prior to being subject to eviction procedures, in addition to other protections provided by this title.
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214214 (d) The housing units shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private for-profit entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.
215215
216216 (e) Residents of the housing units have the right to participate directly and meaningfully in decisionmaking affecting the operation and management of their housing units.
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218218 64916. Very low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for very low income households, as described in Section 50105 of the Health and Safety Code.
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220220
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222222 64916. Very low income means income that does not exceed the qualifying limits for very low income households, as described in Section 50105 of the Health and Safety Code.
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224224 64917. Underutilized parcel means a parcel of property upon which is built a structure that contains fewer units than the maximum number of units permissible under local zoning regulations.
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228228 64917. Underutilized parcel means a parcel of property upon which is built a structure that contains fewer units than the maximum number of units permissible under local zoning regulations.
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230230 PART 2. California Housing Authority CHAPTER 1. Creation, Powers, and Duties Article 1. Creation64920. (a) The California Housing Authority is hereby created. The authority shall be governed by the California Housing Authority Board.(b) The core mission of the authority shall be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets, and preserving affordable housing. Article 2. Powers64921. The authority shall have the following general powers:(a) Sue and be sued.(b) Have a seal and alter the same at its pleasure.(c) Enter into contracts and execute other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers to perform its mission.(d) Make rules with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.(e) Through its executive officer, appoint officers, agents, and employees; prescribe their duties and qualifications; set their employment descriptions and salaries subject to civil service rules; provide for participation in health care and retirement benefits available to similar state employees; and delegate to one or more of its agents or employees the powers and duties it deems proper.(f) Acquire, by grant or purchase, property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, lease, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.(g) Enter into development partnerships with municipalities, joint powers of authority, and other public and private entities in order to further its social housing development goals.(h) Arrange for the planning, opening, grading, or closing of roads or other places, for the furnishing of facilities, or for the furnishing of property or services in connection with a project.(i) Prepare project plans for any project, and from time to time modify those plans.(j) Provide advisory, consultative, training, and educational services, technical assistance, and advice to any person, partnership, or corporation, either public or private, to carry out its mission, and to contract with consultants provision of professional and technical assistance and advice.(k) Accept funding in any form from any source.(l) Call upon the Attorney General for legal services as it may require. Article 3. Duties64922. (a) The authority shall implement and advise on the social housing program, as prescribed by Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 64933), and is hereby granted all powers necessary for this purpose.(b) The authority may contract with property managers to manage its properties according to the following requirements:(1) Property managers shall abide by standards of responsiveness to resident needs prescribed by the authority.(2) Property managers shall abide by rules regarding resident rights and protections or be subject to termination of employment.64923. (a) The authority shall prepare, publish, adopt, and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual business plan. At least 60 days prior to the publication of the plan, the authority shall publish a draft business plan for public review and comment. The draft plan shall also be submitted to the Governor and the Legislature.(b) The business plan shall include, but need not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) A description of the type of projects the authority is producing or acquiring and the proposed timeline, estimated costs, and funding sources.(2) A projection of the expected residents, income levels, and other demographic data.(3) An estimate and description of the anticipated funds the authority intends to leverage to fund the construction and operation activities, and the authoritys level of confidence for obtaining each type of funding.(4) Any written agreements with public or private entities, such as technical assistance agreements.(c) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide and submit to the Legislature an analysis on the effect of its developments on gentrification. The report of the analysis shall be subject to public comment and shall be considered by the board for future decisionmaking.(d) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide an annual update to the Legislature on its progress, which shall include relevant resident statistics once social housing developments owned by the authority are occupied.(e) The reports and annual updates that this section requires the authority to provide to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795. CHAPTER 2. California Housing Authority Governance Article 1. Formation and Structure of Governing Board 64924. (a) The board shall be composed of all of the following:(1) An expert in housing development and finance.(2) An expert in housing construction.(3) An expert in property maintenance.(4) An appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly.(5) An appointee of the Senate Committee on Rules.(6) An appointee of the Governor.(7) Three representatives of the residents, to be appointed initially as described in subdivision (c).(b) All appointees shall serve at the pleasure of their respective appointing authorities. The Governor shall appoint the experts in housing development and finance, housing construction, and property management, whose appointments shall be subject to confirmation by Senate approval by majority vote.(c) Prior to the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, the resident representatives shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor, respectively. The Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor shall consult with advocates for tenants rights in the course of making their respective selections.(d) Following the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, resident representatives shall be elected according to the following procedure:(1) Any resident may nominate another resident to sit on the board, who shall be elected by a vote of all social housing residents who reside in units owned by the authority.(2) Each resident may vote for up to three nominees to sit on the board. The three nominees who receive the most votes shall have the right to sit on the board for terms of one year.(3) Resident elections for board seats shall take place annually and the elections shall be coordinated by the board and its executive officer. 64925. All board decisions shall be approved by majority vote. 64926. The board shall select a board chair, who may hold special powers as determined by members of the board.64927. The board is a state body for purposes of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2). Article 2. Board Powers and Duties64928. The duties of the board include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(a) Establish a strategy to achieve the core goal of elimination of the gap between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets.(b) Set objectives and performance targets designed to achieve the strategy required by subdivision (a).(c) Monitor and assess the degree of the authoritys success in achieving its objectives and performance targets.(d) Exercise exclusive hiring and firing power over an executive officer.(e) Establish and monitor performance measures for the executive officer and an associated succession plan.(f) Approve the annual budget prepared by the executive officer.(g) Foster a culture and set of values consistent with the short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals of the authority.(h) Integrate risk management into the authoritys strategic planning process.(i) Notify the Governor and the Legislature of unanticipated and sizable risks facing CHA in meeting its objectives.(j) Adopt and amend regulations, which shall include election procedures for resident board positions.(k) Following an initial trial period, create and make public an annual business plan as described in Section 64923.(l) Hold biannual meetings with resident governance councils.64929. The executive officer of the board shall have all of the following powers and duties:(a) Manage the day-to-day operations of the authority in accordance with the strategy, delegations, business plans, and policies of the board and this title.(b) Employ and manage staff, including establishing, promoting, and maintaining a positive organizational culture that effectively aligns with the values and employment principles of the authority.(c) Transform the strategic plans of the board into action.(d) Ensure the effectiveness of the authoritys operational systems, including financial management, human resource management, information systems management, risk management, communications, marketing, fund raising, asset management, and reporting.(e) Ensure the board is kept informed of changes to gubernatorial directives, relevant legislation and changes in law, and other critical information relating to the boards functions and powers.(f) Ensure compliance with applicable law and governmental policies.(g) Maintain effective communication and cooperation with external stakeholders in collaboration with the chair of the board.(h) Provide advice and information to the board on any material issues concerning strategy, finance, reporting obligations, or other important matters that arise.(i) Prepare the annual business plan, including organizational performance targets, for board approval.(j) Interact with and, where appropriate, report to the Governor and the Legislature.(k) Additional responsibilities as determined by the board. Article 3. Resident Governance Councils64930. Each multifamily social housing development owned by the authority shall form a governance council, which shall include residents in both rental and ownership model properties. The governance council shall be made up of no more than 10 percent of the overall population of the multifamily development. The authority shall establish appropriate size limitations for governance councils based on the size of the developments that they represent.64931. An authority multifamily social housing development governance council shall have the following powers and responsibilities:(a) Host regular meetings to gather feedback and perspective of residents.(b) Provide the resident perspective to property management.(c) Represent the interests of the development in biannual meetings with the board.(d) Determine how to spend the developments allotted annual budget for common room amenities and social events.(e) Participate in the approval of renovation projects.(f) Other responsibilities as determined by the board.64932. A multifamily social housing development governance council and the board may consult with outside parties with appropriate experience for the purpose of establishing managerial policies and practices that align with the requirements of affordable housing and the need to provide suitable tenant protections. CHAPTER 3. Social Housing Program Article 1. Program Design64933. (a) In all its operations, the authority shall seek to achieve revenue neutrality over the long term. The authority shall seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through the mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden, such as rent cross-subsidization or cost rent.(b) (1) The authority shall develop regional target percentages for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income housing that seek to maximize low-income housing within the constraints of long-term revenue neutrality and maintaining sufficient operational, maintenance, and capital reserves. The methodology for low-income housing maximization in each development region shall be explained at a board meeting and shall be subject to public comment.(2) Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(c) The authority shall prioritize development of property with all of the following characteristics:(1) Vacant parcels.(2) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels without affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(3) Surplus public properties.(4) Parcels near transit.(d) (1) If the development of a property requires the rehabilitation or demolition of covenanted affordable units, the new development shall include a greater number of affordable units by income group than the previous property.(2) Each multiunit property shall include a variety of mixed-income units according to area median income levels.(e) If the development of a property requires the removal of residents from the property, the authority shall cover the temporary relocation costs of these residents, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(1) Costs of searching for a new residence.(2) Moving costs.(3) Any differences between the residents previous rent at the property and their rent during the authority development period.(f) Residents who are displaced during the authoritys development of the property shall have the right to live in the new social housing property for their previous rent for the period of one year, or the authoritys established rent for the residents income level, whichever is lower.(g) If a displaced resident chooses not to occupy the new social housing development, the authority is not obligated to pay the difference between new and old rents, as described in subdivision (e), after the displaced resident could otherwise have begun occupying the property.64934. The authority shall make an annual determination of the required amount of social housing units to be produced in the following manner:(a) Annual regional housing needs assessment targets shall be calculated as the total RHNA cycle targets for each jurisdiction divided by the length of the RHNA cycle. The authority shall update its calculations each year based on housing construction data submitted by jurisdictions to the Department of Housing and Community Development.(b) On or before January 1, 2028, and each year thereafter, the authority shall determine the gap between the previous years regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development and local councils of government, and actual housing construction, as determined by official local statistics.(c) The authority shall split the very low income RHNA allocation into extremely low income and very low income allocations based on the latest available census or official survey data for the relevant jurisdiction.(d) Within a given year, the authority is authorized at least to construct the required number of units to meet the gap between the previous years extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing unit construction and regional housing needs assessment targets.64935. (a) In creating social housing, the authority shall employ two different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, consistent with the requirements of this title.(b) In the rental model, the authority shall extend a one-year lease for a social housing unit to eligible individuals who commit to a minimum of one year of residence, barring extraordinary circumstances.(c) The rents or the rates on a leasehold mortgage in a multifamily property shall be set according to all of the following requirements:(1) The authority shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) Any rental adjustments applied shall be applied in a manner that does not discourage the residents pursuit of higher income.(3) Subject to the directive of paragraph (2), if a residents income changes, upon the next vacancy, the property manager shall rent to an appropriate income group to abide by revenue neutrality and meet other requirements.(4) For cost rentals, the authority will determine a reasonable proceeds cap on rental units. Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(d) In the ownership model, the authority shall extend a 99-year lease to individuals who commit to a minimum of five years of residence in the social housing unit. This lease shall be in the form of a limited equity arrangement.(e) Under the ownership model, upon the death of the owner of the social housing unit, the unit may be transferred to the deceaseds heir by devise or as any other real property may pass. If a transferee is not eligible to be a resident, the transferee shall sell the unit to the authority.(f) Under the ownership model, all of the following conditions shall apply:(1) The estates land and common areas will be owned by the authority.(2) The authority may operate as a lender for residents.(3) Buyers shall pay at least a 15-percent down payment.(4) Housing units may only be sold after meeting all of the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The authority shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the authority does not exercise its right to purchase the unit, the unit may be sold by the owner to an eligible buyer subject to requirements established by the authority.(5) Properties shall be sold at a price that allows the owner to have a reasonable return on investment, which may include documented capital improvements and adjustments for inflation.(g) Residents may be evicted for either of the following reasons:(1) Failure to meet social housing community standards, as determined by the authority or governance council.(2) Failure to pay rent for more than two months.(h) Residents shall enjoy all of the following protections:(1) Property managers shall provide a 24-hour notice before entering the residents unit.(2) Termination for nonpayment of rent requires a 14-day notice prior to eviction.(3) Residents may recover abandoned properties within 60 days of receiving an eviction notice.64936. Applicants to be residents and continuing residents shall meet all of the following eligibility requirements, as may be applicable to them:(a) Except in the case of above moderate-income units, social housing units shall be the residents sole residence.(b) A potential resident shall prove that they have been living or working in California at the time of their application. The authority shall promulgate rules and criteria to determine the necessary residency or work qualifications solely for eligibility purposes, and these shall include sufficient qualifying criteria that do not discriminate against applicants based on their belonging to any protected class.(c) Upon approval by the authority, or the applicable governance council if authorized by the authority, residents whose units are part of the ownership model may rent their units. The authority shall prescribe the conditions pursuant to which a governance council may regulate renting.(d) Residents under the rental model shall commit to one year of residence in the rental unit, after which a month-to-month tenancy may take effect. Residents under the ownership model shall commit to at least five years of primary residence in their unit.(e) Under certain circumstances, a resident shall be allowed to interrupt residence requirements without penalty, including:(1) Job relocation.(2) Change in the household structure.(3) Serious physical or mental illness.(4) A mutually agreed-upon unit swap with another social housing resident within the same property pursuant to authority requirements.(5) Other circumstances authorized by the authority or the governance council, to the extent authorized by the authority.(f) If a resident interrupting their tenancy or leasehold mortgage does not satisfy the requirements for an exception, the resident may be subject to one of the following penalties:(1) Obligation to pay rent or make payments on a leasehold mortgage until a new resident is located.(2) In the case of a resident leasing under the ownership model, forfeiture of proceeds from resale of the property.(3) Ineligibility to reside in authority units for a period of five years, or as determined by the authority.(g) Except in cases that evidence a clear and manifest danger to the development or its residents, as may be determined by the authority, a prior criminal record shall not in any way preclude a person from residing in social housing.64937. (a) Subject to the requirements of subdivision (b), the authority shall use a lottery to select social housing residents from all qualifying applicants. The lottery shall be structured by income categories and shall provide separate selection results for each category.(b) If residents of a property who were displaced during the authoritys development of the property as social housing have elected to lease a unit in the social housing, they shall be accommodated prior to offering units to others pursuant to subdivision (a). Article 2. Production of Housing64938. (a) The authority is authorized to contract with qualified entities, in accordance with the authoritys plan to meet its goals, to conduct ground-up construction and rehabilitation of existing structures.(b) The authority is authorized to dedicate building space to commercial use and may lease the space to qualifying entities, pursuant to requirements established by the authority.(c) When appropriate, the state shall gift public lands to the authority for social housing development purposes.(d) In the absence of suitable state-owned parcels, the authority is authorized to purchase municipal, county, other local jurisdiction, and private lands.64939. (a) The authority shall accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The parcel allows the authority to meet the jurisdictions regional housing needs assessments goals.(2) The parcel does not exceed the cost of all suitable alternative sites by more than 2 percent.(3) The parcel offers comparable community amenities to all suitable alternatives.(b) The authority shall seek input from the local jurisdictions city council, board of supervisors, or planning agency, as applicable, on all of the following dimensions of an authority development:(1) Specific site of development.(2) Number of stories.(3) Number of units.(4) Development timeline. Article 3. Acquisition64941. The authority may acquire, reacquire, or contract to acquire or reacquire by grant or purchase real, personal, or mixed property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, transfer, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.64942. The authority shall prioritize acquiring or reacquiring property with all of the following characteristics:(a) Parcels with affordability covenants or rent control units in danger of losing affordability status, in order to preserve affordable housing stock.(b) Parcels at risk of becoming unaffordable or at the end of their affordability covenants.(c) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels with affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(d) Surplus public properties.(e) Parcels near transit. CHAPTER 4. Funding64943. The activities of the authority shall be conducted with a goal to cover its costs over the long term in accordance with the principle of revenue neutrality.64944. The Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund is hereby established within the State Treasury to be used, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to provide zero-interest loans for the purpose of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes.64945. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds.(b) The authority may, from time to time, issue revenue bonds in the principal amount that the agency determines necessary to provide sufficient funds for financing social housing developments, the payment of interest on these bonds, the establishment of reserves to secure the bonds, and the payment of other expenditures of the agency incident to, and necessary or convenient to, issuance of the bonds.(c) The board shall provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records and shall maintain accounting records and shall report accounting transactions in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles adopted by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation for both public reporting purposes and for reporting of activities to the Controller.64946. The authority may, upon appropriation by the Legislature, utilize funds from other legislation, cities and counties, or other sources, in order to build more low-, very low, and extremely low income housing.
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232232 PART 2. California Housing Authority
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234234 PART 2. California Housing Authority
235235
236236 CHAPTER 1. Creation, Powers, and Duties Article 1. Creation64920. (a) The California Housing Authority is hereby created. The authority shall be governed by the California Housing Authority Board.(b) The core mission of the authority shall be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets, and preserving affordable housing. Article 2. Powers64921. The authority shall have the following general powers:(a) Sue and be sued.(b) Have a seal and alter the same at its pleasure.(c) Enter into contracts and execute other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers to perform its mission.(d) Make rules with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.(e) Through its executive officer, appoint officers, agents, and employees; prescribe their duties and qualifications; set their employment descriptions and salaries subject to civil service rules; provide for participation in health care and retirement benefits available to similar state employees; and delegate to one or more of its agents or employees the powers and duties it deems proper.(f) Acquire, by grant or purchase, property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, lease, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.(g) Enter into development partnerships with municipalities, joint powers of authority, and other public and private entities in order to further its social housing development goals.(h) Arrange for the planning, opening, grading, or closing of roads or other places, for the furnishing of facilities, or for the furnishing of property or services in connection with a project.(i) Prepare project plans for any project, and from time to time modify those plans.(j) Provide advisory, consultative, training, and educational services, technical assistance, and advice to any person, partnership, or corporation, either public or private, to carry out its mission, and to contract with consultants provision of professional and technical assistance and advice.(k) Accept funding in any form from any source.(l) Call upon the Attorney General for legal services as it may require. Article 3. Duties64922. (a) The authority shall implement and advise on the social housing program, as prescribed by Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 64933), and is hereby granted all powers necessary for this purpose.(b) The authority may contract with property managers to manage its properties according to the following requirements:(1) Property managers shall abide by standards of responsiveness to resident needs prescribed by the authority.(2) Property managers shall abide by rules regarding resident rights and protections or be subject to termination of employment.64923. (a) The authority shall prepare, publish, adopt, and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual business plan. At least 60 days prior to the publication of the plan, the authority shall publish a draft business plan for public review and comment. The draft plan shall also be submitted to the Governor and the Legislature.(b) The business plan shall include, but need not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) A description of the type of projects the authority is producing or acquiring and the proposed timeline, estimated costs, and funding sources.(2) A projection of the expected residents, income levels, and other demographic data.(3) An estimate and description of the anticipated funds the authority intends to leverage to fund the construction and operation activities, and the authoritys level of confidence for obtaining each type of funding.(4) Any written agreements with public or private entities, such as technical assistance agreements.(c) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide and submit to the Legislature an analysis on the effect of its developments on gentrification. The report of the analysis shall be subject to public comment and shall be considered by the board for future decisionmaking.(d) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide an annual update to the Legislature on its progress, which shall include relevant resident statistics once social housing developments owned by the authority are occupied.(e) The reports and annual updates that this section requires the authority to provide to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795.
237237
238238 CHAPTER 1. Creation, Powers, and Duties
239239
240240 CHAPTER 1. Creation, Powers, and Duties
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242242 Article 1. Creation64920. (a) The California Housing Authority is hereby created. The authority shall be governed by the California Housing Authority Board.(b) The core mission of the authority shall be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets, and preserving affordable housing.
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244244 Article 1. Creation
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246246 Article 1. Creation
247247
248248 64920. (a) The California Housing Authority is hereby created. The authority shall be governed by the California Housing Authority Board.(b) The core mission of the authority shall be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets, and preserving affordable housing.
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252252 64920. (a) The California Housing Authority is hereby created. The authority shall be governed by the California Housing Authority Board.
253253
254254 (b) The core mission of the authority shall be to ensure that social housing developments that are produced and acquired align with the goals of eliminating the gap between housing production and regional housing needs assessment targets, and preserving affordable housing.
255255
256256 Article 2. Powers64921. The authority shall have the following general powers:(a) Sue and be sued.(b) Have a seal and alter the same at its pleasure.(c) Enter into contracts and execute other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers to perform its mission.(d) Make rules with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.(e) Through its executive officer, appoint officers, agents, and employees; prescribe their duties and qualifications; set their employment descriptions and salaries subject to civil service rules; provide for participation in health care and retirement benefits available to similar state employees; and delegate to one or more of its agents or employees the powers and duties it deems proper.(f) Acquire, by grant or purchase, property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, lease, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.(g) Enter into development partnerships with municipalities, joint powers of authority, and other public and private entities in order to further its social housing development goals.(h) Arrange for the planning, opening, grading, or closing of roads or other places, for the furnishing of facilities, or for the furnishing of property or services in connection with a project.(i) Prepare project plans for any project, and from time to time modify those plans.(j) Provide advisory, consultative, training, and educational services, technical assistance, and advice to any person, partnership, or corporation, either public or private, to carry out its mission, and to contract with consultants provision of professional and technical assistance and advice.(k) Accept funding in any form from any source.(l) Call upon the Attorney General for legal services as it may require.
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258258 Article 2. Powers
259259
260260 Article 2. Powers
261261
262262 64921. The authority shall have the following general powers:(a) Sue and be sued.(b) Have a seal and alter the same at its pleasure.(c) Enter into contracts and execute other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers to perform its mission.(d) Make rules with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.(e) Through its executive officer, appoint officers, agents, and employees; prescribe their duties and qualifications; set their employment descriptions and salaries subject to civil service rules; provide for participation in health care and retirement benefits available to similar state employees; and delegate to one or more of its agents or employees the powers and duties it deems proper.(f) Acquire, by grant or purchase, property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, lease, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.(g) Enter into development partnerships with municipalities, joint powers of authority, and other public and private entities in order to further its social housing development goals.(h) Arrange for the planning, opening, grading, or closing of roads or other places, for the furnishing of facilities, or for the furnishing of property or services in connection with a project.(i) Prepare project plans for any project, and from time to time modify those plans.(j) Provide advisory, consultative, training, and educational services, technical assistance, and advice to any person, partnership, or corporation, either public or private, to carry out its mission, and to contract with consultants provision of professional and technical assistance and advice.(k) Accept funding in any form from any source.(l) Call upon the Attorney General for legal services as it may require.
263263
264264
265265
266266 64921. The authority shall have the following general powers:
267267
268268 (a) Sue and be sued.
269269
270270 (b) Have a seal and alter the same at its pleasure.
271271
272272 (c) Enter into contracts and execute other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers to perform its mission.
273273
274274 (d) Make rules with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.
275275
276276 (e) Through its executive officer, appoint officers, agents, and employees; prescribe their duties and qualifications; set their employment descriptions and salaries subject to civil service rules; provide for participation in health care and retirement benefits available to similar state employees; and delegate to one or more of its agents or employees the powers and duties it deems proper.
277277
278278 (f) Acquire, by grant or purchase, property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, lease, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.
279279
280280 (g) Enter into development partnerships with municipalities, joint powers of authority, and other public and private entities in order to further its social housing development goals.
281281
282282 (h) Arrange for the planning, opening, grading, or closing of roads or other places, for the furnishing of facilities, or for the furnishing of property or services in connection with a project.
283283
284284 (i) Prepare project plans for any project, and from time to time modify those plans.
285285
286286 (j) Provide advisory, consultative, training, and educational services, technical assistance, and advice to any person, partnership, or corporation, either public or private, to carry out its mission, and to contract with consultants provision of professional and technical assistance and advice.
287287
288288 (k) Accept funding in any form from any source.
289289
290290 (l) Call upon the Attorney General for legal services as it may require.
291291
292292 Article 3. Duties64922. (a) The authority shall implement and advise on the social housing program, as prescribed by Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 64933), and is hereby granted all powers necessary for this purpose.(b) The authority may contract with property managers to manage its properties according to the following requirements:(1) Property managers shall abide by standards of responsiveness to resident needs prescribed by the authority.(2) Property managers shall abide by rules regarding resident rights and protections or be subject to termination of employment.64923. (a) The authority shall prepare, publish, adopt, and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual business plan. At least 60 days prior to the publication of the plan, the authority shall publish a draft business plan for public review and comment. The draft plan shall also be submitted to the Governor and the Legislature.(b) The business plan shall include, but need not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) A description of the type of projects the authority is producing or acquiring and the proposed timeline, estimated costs, and funding sources.(2) A projection of the expected residents, income levels, and other demographic data.(3) An estimate and description of the anticipated funds the authority intends to leverage to fund the construction and operation activities, and the authoritys level of confidence for obtaining each type of funding.(4) Any written agreements with public or private entities, such as technical assistance agreements.(c) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide and submit to the Legislature an analysis on the effect of its developments on gentrification. The report of the analysis shall be subject to public comment and shall be considered by the board for future decisionmaking.(d) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide an annual update to the Legislature on its progress, which shall include relevant resident statistics once social housing developments owned by the authority are occupied.(e) The reports and annual updates that this section requires the authority to provide to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795.
293293
294294 Article 3. Duties
295295
296296 Article 3. Duties
297297
298298 64922. (a) The authority shall implement and advise on the social housing program, as prescribed by Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 64933), and is hereby granted all powers necessary for this purpose.(b) The authority may contract with property managers to manage its properties according to the following requirements:(1) Property managers shall abide by standards of responsiveness to resident needs prescribed by the authority.(2) Property managers shall abide by rules regarding resident rights and protections or be subject to termination of employment.
299299
300300
301301
302302 64922. (a) The authority shall implement and advise on the social housing program, as prescribed by Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 64933), and is hereby granted all powers necessary for this purpose.
303303
304304 (b) The authority may contract with property managers to manage its properties according to the following requirements:
305305
306306 (1) Property managers shall abide by standards of responsiveness to resident needs prescribed by the authority.
307307
308308 (2) Property managers shall abide by rules regarding resident rights and protections or be subject to termination of employment.
309309
310310 64923. (a) The authority shall prepare, publish, adopt, and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual business plan. At least 60 days prior to the publication of the plan, the authority shall publish a draft business plan for public review and comment. The draft plan shall also be submitted to the Governor and the Legislature.(b) The business plan shall include, but need not be limited to, all of the following elements:(1) A description of the type of projects the authority is producing or acquiring and the proposed timeline, estimated costs, and funding sources.(2) A projection of the expected residents, income levels, and other demographic data.(3) An estimate and description of the anticipated funds the authority intends to leverage to fund the construction and operation activities, and the authoritys level of confidence for obtaining each type of funding.(4) Any written agreements with public or private entities, such as technical assistance agreements.(c) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide and submit to the Legislature an analysis on the effect of its developments on gentrification. The report of the analysis shall be subject to public comment and shall be considered by the board for future decisionmaking.(d) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide an annual update to the Legislature on its progress, which shall include relevant resident statistics once social housing developments owned by the authority are occupied.(e) The reports and annual updates that this section requires the authority to provide to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795.
311311
312312
313313
314314 64923. (a) The authority shall prepare, publish, adopt, and submit to the Governor and the Legislature an annual business plan. At least 60 days prior to the publication of the plan, the authority shall publish a draft business plan for public review and comment. The draft plan shall also be submitted to the Governor and the Legislature.
315315
316316 (b) The business plan shall include, but need not be limited to, all of the following elements:
317317
318318 (1) A description of the type of projects the authority is producing or acquiring and the proposed timeline, estimated costs, and funding sources.
319319
320320 (2) A projection of the expected residents, income levels, and other demographic data.
321321
322322 (3) An estimate and description of the anticipated funds the authority intends to leverage to fund the construction and operation activities, and the authoritys level of confidence for obtaining each type of funding.
323323
324324 (4) Any written agreements with public or private entities, such as technical assistance agreements.
325325
326326 (c) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide and submit to the Legislature an analysis on the effect of its developments on gentrification. The report of the analysis shall be subject to public comment and shall be considered by the board for future decisionmaking.
327327
328328 (d) On or before December 31 of each year, the authority shall provide an annual update to the Legislature on its progress, which shall include relevant resident statistics once social housing developments owned by the authority are occupied.
329329
330330 (e) The reports and annual updates that this section requires the authority to provide to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795.
331331
332332 CHAPTER 2. California Housing Authority Governance Article 1. Formation and Structure of Governing Board 64924. (a) The board shall be composed of all of the following:(1) An expert in housing development and finance.(2) An expert in housing construction.(3) An expert in property maintenance.(4) An appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly.(5) An appointee of the Senate Committee on Rules.(6) An appointee of the Governor.(7) Three representatives of the residents, to be appointed initially as described in subdivision (c).(b) All appointees shall serve at the pleasure of their respective appointing authorities. The Governor shall appoint the experts in housing development and finance, housing construction, and property management, whose appointments shall be subject to confirmation by Senate approval by majority vote.(c) Prior to the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, the resident representatives shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor, respectively. The Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor shall consult with advocates for tenants rights in the course of making their respective selections.(d) Following the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, resident representatives shall be elected according to the following procedure:(1) Any resident may nominate another resident to sit on the board, who shall be elected by a vote of all social housing residents who reside in units owned by the authority.(2) Each resident may vote for up to three nominees to sit on the board. The three nominees who receive the most votes shall have the right to sit on the board for terms of one year.(3) Resident elections for board seats shall take place annually and the elections shall be coordinated by the board and its executive officer. 64925. All board decisions shall be approved by majority vote. 64926. The board shall select a board chair, who may hold special powers as determined by members of the board.64927. The board is a state body for purposes of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2). Article 2. Board Powers and Duties64928. The duties of the board include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(a) Establish a strategy to achieve the core goal of elimination of the gap between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets.(b) Set objectives and performance targets designed to achieve the strategy required by subdivision (a).(c) Monitor and assess the degree of the authoritys success in achieving its objectives and performance targets.(d) Exercise exclusive hiring and firing power over an executive officer.(e) Establish and monitor performance measures for the executive officer and an associated succession plan.(f) Approve the annual budget prepared by the executive officer.(g) Foster a culture and set of values consistent with the short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals of the authority.(h) Integrate risk management into the authoritys strategic planning process.(i) Notify the Governor and the Legislature of unanticipated and sizable risks facing CHA in meeting its objectives.(j) Adopt and amend regulations, which shall include election procedures for resident board positions.(k) Following an initial trial period, create and make public an annual business plan as described in Section 64923.(l) Hold biannual meetings with resident governance councils.64929. The executive officer of the board shall have all of the following powers and duties:(a) Manage the day-to-day operations of the authority in accordance with the strategy, delegations, business plans, and policies of the board and this title.(b) Employ and manage staff, including establishing, promoting, and maintaining a positive organizational culture that effectively aligns with the values and employment principles of the authority.(c) Transform the strategic plans of the board into action.(d) Ensure the effectiveness of the authoritys operational systems, including financial management, human resource management, information systems management, risk management, communications, marketing, fund raising, asset management, and reporting.(e) Ensure the board is kept informed of changes to gubernatorial directives, relevant legislation and changes in law, and other critical information relating to the boards functions and powers.(f) Ensure compliance with applicable law and governmental policies.(g) Maintain effective communication and cooperation with external stakeholders in collaboration with the chair of the board.(h) Provide advice and information to the board on any material issues concerning strategy, finance, reporting obligations, or other important matters that arise.(i) Prepare the annual business plan, including organizational performance targets, for board approval.(j) Interact with and, where appropriate, report to the Governor and the Legislature.(k) Additional responsibilities as determined by the board. Article 3. Resident Governance Councils64930. Each multifamily social housing development owned by the authority shall form a governance council, which shall include residents in both rental and ownership model properties. The governance council shall be made up of no more than 10 percent of the overall population of the multifamily development. The authority shall establish appropriate size limitations for governance councils based on the size of the developments that they represent.64931. An authority multifamily social housing development governance council shall have the following powers and responsibilities:(a) Host regular meetings to gather feedback and perspective of residents.(b) Provide the resident perspective to property management.(c) Represent the interests of the development in biannual meetings with the board.(d) Determine how to spend the developments allotted annual budget for common room amenities and social events.(e) Participate in the approval of renovation projects.(f) Other responsibilities as determined by the board.64932. A multifamily social housing development governance council and the board may consult with outside parties with appropriate experience for the purpose of establishing managerial policies and practices that align with the requirements of affordable housing and the need to provide suitable tenant protections.
333333
334334 CHAPTER 2. California Housing Authority Governance
335335
336336 CHAPTER 2. California Housing Authority Governance
337337
338338 Article 1. Formation and Structure of Governing Board 64924. (a) The board shall be composed of all of the following:(1) An expert in housing development and finance.(2) An expert in housing construction.(3) An expert in property maintenance.(4) An appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly.(5) An appointee of the Senate Committee on Rules.(6) An appointee of the Governor.(7) Three representatives of the residents, to be appointed initially as described in subdivision (c).(b) All appointees shall serve at the pleasure of their respective appointing authorities. The Governor shall appoint the experts in housing development and finance, housing construction, and property management, whose appointments shall be subject to confirmation by Senate approval by majority vote.(c) Prior to the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, the resident representatives shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor, respectively. The Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor shall consult with advocates for tenants rights in the course of making their respective selections.(d) Following the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, resident representatives shall be elected according to the following procedure:(1) Any resident may nominate another resident to sit on the board, who shall be elected by a vote of all social housing residents who reside in units owned by the authority.(2) Each resident may vote for up to three nominees to sit on the board. The three nominees who receive the most votes shall have the right to sit on the board for terms of one year.(3) Resident elections for board seats shall take place annually and the elections shall be coordinated by the board and its executive officer. 64925. All board decisions shall be approved by majority vote. 64926. The board shall select a board chair, who may hold special powers as determined by members of the board.64927. The board is a state body for purposes of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2).
339339
340340 Article 1. Formation and Structure of Governing Board
341341
342342 Article 1. Formation and Structure of Governing Board
343343
344344 64924. (a) The board shall be composed of all of the following:(1) An expert in housing development and finance.(2) An expert in housing construction.(3) An expert in property maintenance.(4) An appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly.(5) An appointee of the Senate Committee on Rules.(6) An appointee of the Governor.(7) Three representatives of the residents, to be appointed initially as described in subdivision (c).(b) All appointees shall serve at the pleasure of their respective appointing authorities. The Governor shall appoint the experts in housing development and finance, housing construction, and property management, whose appointments shall be subject to confirmation by Senate approval by majority vote.(c) Prior to the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, the resident representatives shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor, respectively. The Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor shall consult with advocates for tenants rights in the course of making their respective selections.(d) Following the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, resident representatives shall be elected according to the following procedure:(1) Any resident may nominate another resident to sit on the board, who shall be elected by a vote of all social housing residents who reside in units owned by the authority.(2) Each resident may vote for up to three nominees to sit on the board. The three nominees who receive the most votes shall have the right to sit on the board for terms of one year.(3) Resident elections for board seats shall take place annually and the elections shall be coordinated by the board and its executive officer.
345345
346346
347347
348348 64924. (a) The board shall be composed of all of the following:
349349
350350 (1) An expert in housing development and finance.
351351
352352 (2) An expert in housing construction.
353353
354354 (3) An expert in property maintenance.
355355
356356 (4) An appointee of the Speaker of the Assembly.
357357
358358 (5) An appointee of the Senate Committee on Rules.
359359
360360 (6) An appointee of the Governor.
361361
362362 (7) Three representatives of the residents, to be appointed initially as described in subdivision (c).
363363
364364 (b) All appointees shall serve at the pleasure of their respective appointing authorities. The Governor shall appoint the experts in housing development and finance, housing construction, and property management, whose appointments shall be subject to confirmation by Senate approval by majority vote.
365365
366366 (c) Prior to the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, the resident representatives shall be appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor, respectively. The Speaker of the Assembly, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Governor shall consult with advocates for tenants rights in the course of making their respective selections.
367367
368368 (d) Following the occupancy of the first social housing unit developments owned by the authority, resident representatives shall be elected according to the following procedure:
369369
370370 (1) Any resident may nominate another resident to sit on the board, who shall be elected by a vote of all social housing residents who reside in units owned by the authority.
371371
372372 (2) Each resident may vote for up to three nominees to sit on the board. The three nominees who receive the most votes shall have the right to sit on the board for terms of one year.
373373
374374 (3) Resident elections for board seats shall take place annually and the elections shall be coordinated by the board and its executive officer.
375375
376376 64925. All board decisions shall be approved by majority vote.
377377
378378
379379
380380 64925. All board decisions shall be approved by majority vote.
381381
382382 64926. The board shall select a board chair, who may hold special powers as determined by members of the board.
383383
384384
385385
386386 64926. The board shall select a board chair, who may hold special powers as determined by members of the board.
387387
388388 64927. The board is a state body for purposes of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2).
389389
390390
391391
392392 64927. The board is a state body for purposes of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2).
393393
394394 Article 2. Board Powers and Duties64928. The duties of the board include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(a) Establish a strategy to achieve the core goal of elimination of the gap between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets.(b) Set objectives and performance targets designed to achieve the strategy required by subdivision (a).(c) Monitor and assess the degree of the authoritys success in achieving its objectives and performance targets.(d) Exercise exclusive hiring and firing power over an executive officer.(e) Establish and monitor performance measures for the executive officer and an associated succession plan.(f) Approve the annual budget prepared by the executive officer.(g) Foster a culture and set of values consistent with the short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals of the authority.(h) Integrate risk management into the authoritys strategic planning process.(i) Notify the Governor and the Legislature of unanticipated and sizable risks facing CHA in meeting its objectives.(j) Adopt and amend regulations, which shall include election procedures for resident board positions.(k) Following an initial trial period, create and make public an annual business plan as described in Section 64923.(l) Hold biannual meetings with resident governance councils.64929. The executive officer of the board shall have all of the following powers and duties:(a) Manage the day-to-day operations of the authority in accordance with the strategy, delegations, business plans, and policies of the board and this title.(b) Employ and manage staff, including establishing, promoting, and maintaining a positive organizational culture that effectively aligns with the values and employment principles of the authority.(c) Transform the strategic plans of the board into action.(d) Ensure the effectiveness of the authoritys operational systems, including financial management, human resource management, information systems management, risk management, communications, marketing, fund raising, asset management, and reporting.(e) Ensure the board is kept informed of changes to gubernatorial directives, relevant legislation and changes in law, and other critical information relating to the boards functions and powers.(f) Ensure compliance with applicable law and governmental policies.(g) Maintain effective communication and cooperation with external stakeholders in collaboration with the chair of the board.(h) Provide advice and information to the board on any material issues concerning strategy, finance, reporting obligations, or other important matters that arise.(i) Prepare the annual business plan, including organizational performance targets, for board approval.(j) Interact with and, where appropriate, report to the Governor and the Legislature.(k) Additional responsibilities as determined by the board.
395395
396396 Article 2. Board Powers and Duties
397397
398398 Article 2. Board Powers and Duties
399399
400400 64928. The duties of the board include, but are not limited to, all of the following:(a) Establish a strategy to achieve the core goal of elimination of the gap between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets.(b) Set objectives and performance targets designed to achieve the strategy required by subdivision (a).(c) Monitor and assess the degree of the authoritys success in achieving its objectives and performance targets.(d) Exercise exclusive hiring and firing power over an executive officer.(e) Establish and monitor performance measures for the executive officer and an associated succession plan.(f) Approve the annual budget prepared by the executive officer.(g) Foster a culture and set of values consistent with the short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals of the authority.(h) Integrate risk management into the authoritys strategic planning process.(i) Notify the Governor and the Legislature of unanticipated and sizable risks facing CHA in meeting its objectives.(j) Adopt and amend regulations, which shall include election procedures for resident board positions.(k) Following an initial trial period, create and make public an annual business plan as described in Section 64923.(l) Hold biannual meetings with resident governance councils.
401401
402402
403403
404404 64928. The duties of the board include, but are not limited to, all of the following:
405405
406406 (a) Establish a strategy to achieve the core goal of elimination of the gap between housing production and acquisition and regional housing needs assessment targets.
407407
408408 (b) Set objectives and performance targets designed to achieve the strategy required by subdivision (a).
409409
410410 (c) Monitor and assess the degree of the authoritys success in achieving its objectives and performance targets.
411411
412412 (d) Exercise exclusive hiring and firing power over an executive officer.
413413
414414 (e) Establish and monitor performance measures for the executive officer and an associated succession plan.
415415
416416 (f) Approve the annual budget prepared by the executive officer.
417417
418418 (g) Foster a culture and set of values consistent with the short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals of the authority.
419419
420420 (h) Integrate risk management into the authoritys strategic planning process.
421421
422422 (i) Notify the Governor and the Legislature of unanticipated and sizable risks facing CHA in meeting its objectives.
423423
424424 (j) Adopt and amend regulations, which shall include election procedures for resident board positions.
425425
426426 (k) Following an initial trial period, create and make public an annual business plan as described in Section 64923.
427427
428428 (l) Hold biannual meetings with resident governance councils.
429429
430430 64929. The executive officer of the board shall have all of the following powers and duties:(a) Manage the day-to-day operations of the authority in accordance with the strategy, delegations, business plans, and policies of the board and this title.(b) Employ and manage staff, including establishing, promoting, and maintaining a positive organizational culture that effectively aligns with the values and employment principles of the authority.(c) Transform the strategic plans of the board into action.(d) Ensure the effectiveness of the authoritys operational systems, including financial management, human resource management, information systems management, risk management, communications, marketing, fund raising, asset management, and reporting.(e) Ensure the board is kept informed of changes to gubernatorial directives, relevant legislation and changes in law, and other critical information relating to the boards functions and powers.(f) Ensure compliance with applicable law and governmental policies.(g) Maintain effective communication and cooperation with external stakeholders in collaboration with the chair of the board.(h) Provide advice and information to the board on any material issues concerning strategy, finance, reporting obligations, or other important matters that arise.(i) Prepare the annual business plan, including organizational performance targets, for board approval.(j) Interact with and, where appropriate, report to the Governor and the Legislature.(k) Additional responsibilities as determined by the board.
431431
432432
433433
434434 64929. The executive officer of the board shall have all of the following powers and duties:
435435
436436 (a) Manage the day-to-day operations of the authority in accordance with the strategy, delegations, business plans, and policies of the board and this title.
437437
438438 (b) Employ and manage staff, including establishing, promoting, and maintaining a positive organizational culture that effectively aligns with the values and employment principles of the authority.
439439
440440 (c) Transform the strategic plans of the board into action.
441441
442442 (d) Ensure the effectiveness of the authoritys operational systems, including financial management, human resource management, information systems management, risk management, communications, marketing, fund raising, asset management, and reporting.
443443
444444 (e) Ensure the board is kept informed of changes to gubernatorial directives, relevant legislation and changes in law, and other critical information relating to the boards functions and powers.
445445
446446 (f) Ensure compliance with applicable law and governmental policies.
447447
448448 (g) Maintain effective communication and cooperation with external stakeholders in collaboration with the chair of the board.
449449
450450 (h) Provide advice and information to the board on any material issues concerning strategy, finance, reporting obligations, or other important matters that arise.
451451
452452 (i) Prepare the annual business plan, including organizational performance targets, for board approval.
453453
454454 (j) Interact with and, where appropriate, report to the Governor and the Legislature.
455455
456456 (k) Additional responsibilities as determined by the board.
457457
458458 Article 3. Resident Governance Councils64930. Each multifamily social housing development owned by the authority shall form a governance council, which shall include residents in both rental and ownership model properties. The governance council shall be made up of no more than 10 percent of the overall population of the multifamily development. The authority shall establish appropriate size limitations for governance councils based on the size of the developments that they represent.64931. An authority multifamily social housing development governance council shall have the following powers and responsibilities:(a) Host regular meetings to gather feedback and perspective of residents.(b) Provide the resident perspective to property management.(c) Represent the interests of the development in biannual meetings with the board.(d) Determine how to spend the developments allotted annual budget for common room amenities and social events.(e) Participate in the approval of renovation projects.(f) Other responsibilities as determined by the board.64932. A multifamily social housing development governance council and the board may consult with outside parties with appropriate experience for the purpose of establishing managerial policies and practices that align with the requirements of affordable housing and the need to provide suitable tenant protections.
459459
460460 Article 3. Resident Governance Councils
461461
462462 Article 3. Resident Governance Councils
463463
464464 64930. Each multifamily social housing development owned by the authority shall form a governance council, which shall include residents in both rental and ownership model properties. The governance council shall be made up of no more than 10 percent of the overall population of the multifamily development. The authority shall establish appropriate size limitations for governance councils based on the size of the developments that they represent.
465465
466466
467467
468468 64930. Each multifamily social housing development owned by the authority shall form a governance council, which shall include residents in both rental and ownership model properties. The governance council shall be made up of no more than 10 percent of the overall population of the multifamily development. The authority shall establish appropriate size limitations for governance councils based on the size of the developments that they represent.
469469
470470 64931. An authority multifamily social housing development governance council shall have the following powers and responsibilities:(a) Host regular meetings to gather feedback and perspective of residents.(b) Provide the resident perspective to property management.(c) Represent the interests of the development in biannual meetings with the board.(d) Determine how to spend the developments allotted annual budget for common room amenities and social events.(e) Participate in the approval of renovation projects.(f) Other responsibilities as determined by the board.
471471
472472
473473
474474 64931. An authority multifamily social housing development governance council shall have the following powers and responsibilities:
475475
476476 (a) Host regular meetings to gather feedback and perspective of residents.
477477
478478 (b) Provide the resident perspective to property management.
479479
480480 (c) Represent the interests of the development in biannual meetings with the board.
481481
482482 (d) Determine how to spend the developments allotted annual budget for common room amenities and social events.
483483
484484 (e) Participate in the approval of renovation projects.
485485
486486 (f) Other responsibilities as determined by the board.
487487
488488 64932. A multifamily social housing development governance council and the board may consult with outside parties with appropriate experience for the purpose of establishing managerial policies and practices that align with the requirements of affordable housing and the need to provide suitable tenant protections.
489489
490490
491491
492492 64932. A multifamily social housing development governance council and the board may consult with outside parties with appropriate experience for the purpose of establishing managerial policies and practices that align with the requirements of affordable housing and the need to provide suitable tenant protections.
493493
494494 CHAPTER 3. Social Housing Program Article 1. Program Design64933. (a) In all its operations, the authority shall seek to achieve revenue neutrality over the long term. The authority shall seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through the mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden, such as rent cross-subsidization or cost rent.(b) (1) The authority shall develop regional target percentages for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income housing that seek to maximize low-income housing within the constraints of long-term revenue neutrality and maintaining sufficient operational, maintenance, and capital reserves. The methodology for low-income housing maximization in each development region shall be explained at a board meeting and shall be subject to public comment.(2) Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(c) The authority shall prioritize development of property with all of the following characteristics:(1) Vacant parcels.(2) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels without affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(3) Surplus public properties.(4) Parcels near transit.(d) (1) If the development of a property requires the rehabilitation or demolition of covenanted affordable units, the new development shall include a greater number of affordable units by income group than the previous property.(2) Each multiunit property shall include a variety of mixed-income units according to area median income levels.(e) If the development of a property requires the removal of residents from the property, the authority shall cover the temporary relocation costs of these residents, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(1) Costs of searching for a new residence.(2) Moving costs.(3) Any differences between the residents previous rent at the property and their rent during the authority development period.(f) Residents who are displaced during the authoritys development of the property shall have the right to live in the new social housing property for their previous rent for the period of one year, or the authoritys established rent for the residents income level, whichever is lower.(g) If a displaced resident chooses not to occupy the new social housing development, the authority is not obligated to pay the difference between new and old rents, as described in subdivision (e), after the displaced resident could otherwise have begun occupying the property.64934. The authority shall make an annual determination of the required amount of social housing units to be produced in the following manner:(a) Annual regional housing needs assessment targets shall be calculated as the total RHNA cycle targets for each jurisdiction divided by the length of the RHNA cycle. The authority shall update its calculations each year based on housing construction data submitted by jurisdictions to the Department of Housing and Community Development.(b) On or before January 1, 2028, and each year thereafter, the authority shall determine the gap between the previous years regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development and local councils of government, and actual housing construction, as determined by official local statistics.(c) The authority shall split the very low income RHNA allocation into extremely low income and very low income allocations based on the latest available census or official survey data for the relevant jurisdiction.(d) Within a given year, the authority is authorized at least to construct the required number of units to meet the gap between the previous years extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing unit construction and regional housing needs assessment targets.64935. (a) In creating social housing, the authority shall employ two different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, consistent with the requirements of this title.(b) In the rental model, the authority shall extend a one-year lease for a social housing unit to eligible individuals who commit to a minimum of one year of residence, barring extraordinary circumstances.(c) The rents or the rates on a leasehold mortgage in a multifamily property shall be set according to all of the following requirements:(1) The authority shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) Any rental adjustments applied shall be applied in a manner that does not discourage the residents pursuit of higher income.(3) Subject to the directive of paragraph (2), if a residents income changes, upon the next vacancy, the property manager shall rent to an appropriate income group to abide by revenue neutrality and meet other requirements.(4) For cost rentals, the authority will determine a reasonable proceeds cap on rental units. Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(d) In the ownership model, the authority shall extend a 99-year lease to individuals who commit to a minimum of five years of residence in the social housing unit. This lease shall be in the form of a limited equity arrangement.(e) Under the ownership model, upon the death of the owner of the social housing unit, the unit may be transferred to the deceaseds heir by devise or as any other real property may pass. If a transferee is not eligible to be a resident, the transferee shall sell the unit to the authority.(f) Under the ownership model, all of the following conditions shall apply:(1) The estates land and common areas will be owned by the authority.(2) The authority may operate as a lender for residents.(3) Buyers shall pay at least a 15-percent down payment.(4) Housing units may only be sold after meeting all of the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The authority shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the authority does not exercise its right to purchase the unit, the unit may be sold by the owner to an eligible buyer subject to requirements established by the authority.(5) Properties shall be sold at a price that allows the owner to have a reasonable return on investment, which may include documented capital improvements and adjustments for inflation.(g) Residents may be evicted for either of the following reasons:(1) Failure to meet social housing community standards, as determined by the authority or governance council.(2) Failure to pay rent for more than two months.(h) Residents shall enjoy all of the following protections:(1) Property managers shall provide a 24-hour notice before entering the residents unit.(2) Termination for nonpayment of rent requires a 14-day notice prior to eviction.(3) Residents may recover abandoned properties within 60 days of receiving an eviction notice.64936. Applicants to be residents and continuing residents shall meet all of the following eligibility requirements, as may be applicable to them:(a) Except in the case of above moderate-income units, social housing units shall be the residents sole residence.(b) A potential resident shall prove that they have been living or working in California at the time of their application. The authority shall promulgate rules and criteria to determine the necessary residency or work qualifications solely for eligibility purposes, and these shall include sufficient qualifying criteria that do not discriminate against applicants based on their belonging to any protected class.(c) Upon approval by the authority, or the applicable governance council if authorized by the authority, residents whose units are part of the ownership model may rent their units. The authority shall prescribe the conditions pursuant to which a governance council may regulate renting.(d) Residents under the rental model shall commit to one year of residence in the rental unit, after which a month-to-month tenancy may take effect. Residents under the ownership model shall commit to at least five years of primary residence in their unit.(e) Under certain circumstances, a resident shall be allowed to interrupt residence requirements without penalty, including:(1) Job relocation.(2) Change in the household structure.(3) Serious physical or mental illness.(4) A mutually agreed-upon unit swap with another social housing resident within the same property pursuant to authority requirements.(5) Other circumstances authorized by the authority or the governance council, to the extent authorized by the authority.(f) If a resident interrupting their tenancy or leasehold mortgage does not satisfy the requirements for an exception, the resident may be subject to one of the following penalties:(1) Obligation to pay rent or make payments on a leasehold mortgage until a new resident is located.(2) In the case of a resident leasing under the ownership model, forfeiture of proceeds from resale of the property.(3) Ineligibility to reside in authority units for a period of five years, or as determined by the authority.(g) Except in cases that evidence a clear and manifest danger to the development or its residents, as may be determined by the authority, a prior criminal record shall not in any way preclude a person from residing in social housing.64937. (a) Subject to the requirements of subdivision (b), the authority shall use a lottery to select social housing residents from all qualifying applicants. The lottery shall be structured by income categories and shall provide separate selection results for each category.(b) If residents of a property who were displaced during the authoritys development of the property as social housing have elected to lease a unit in the social housing, they shall be accommodated prior to offering units to others pursuant to subdivision (a). Article 2. Production of Housing64938. (a) The authority is authorized to contract with qualified entities, in accordance with the authoritys plan to meet its goals, to conduct ground-up construction and rehabilitation of existing structures.(b) The authority is authorized to dedicate building space to commercial use and may lease the space to qualifying entities, pursuant to requirements established by the authority.(c) When appropriate, the state shall gift public lands to the authority for social housing development purposes.(d) In the absence of suitable state-owned parcels, the authority is authorized to purchase municipal, county, other local jurisdiction, and private lands.64939. (a) The authority shall accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The parcel allows the authority to meet the jurisdictions regional housing needs assessments goals.(2) The parcel does not exceed the cost of all suitable alternative sites by more than 2 percent.(3) The parcel offers comparable community amenities to all suitable alternatives.(b) The authority shall seek input from the local jurisdictions city council, board of supervisors, or planning agency, as applicable, on all of the following dimensions of an authority development:(1) Specific site of development.(2) Number of stories.(3) Number of units.(4) Development timeline. Article 3. Acquisition64941. The authority may acquire, reacquire, or contract to acquire or reacquire by grant or purchase real, personal, or mixed property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, transfer, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.64942. The authority shall prioritize acquiring or reacquiring property with all of the following characteristics:(a) Parcels with affordability covenants or rent control units in danger of losing affordability status, in order to preserve affordable housing stock.(b) Parcels at risk of becoming unaffordable or at the end of their affordability covenants.(c) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels with affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(d) Surplus public properties.(e) Parcels near transit.
495495
496496 CHAPTER 3. Social Housing Program
497497
498498 CHAPTER 3. Social Housing Program
499499
500500 Article 1. Program Design64933. (a) In all its operations, the authority shall seek to achieve revenue neutrality over the long term. The authority shall seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through the mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden, such as rent cross-subsidization or cost rent.(b) (1) The authority shall develop regional target percentages for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income housing that seek to maximize low-income housing within the constraints of long-term revenue neutrality and maintaining sufficient operational, maintenance, and capital reserves. The methodology for low-income housing maximization in each development region shall be explained at a board meeting and shall be subject to public comment.(2) Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(c) The authority shall prioritize development of property with all of the following characteristics:(1) Vacant parcels.(2) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels without affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(3) Surplus public properties.(4) Parcels near transit.(d) (1) If the development of a property requires the rehabilitation or demolition of covenanted affordable units, the new development shall include a greater number of affordable units by income group than the previous property.(2) Each multiunit property shall include a variety of mixed-income units according to area median income levels.(e) If the development of a property requires the removal of residents from the property, the authority shall cover the temporary relocation costs of these residents, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(1) Costs of searching for a new residence.(2) Moving costs.(3) Any differences between the residents previous rent at the property and their rent during the authority development period.(f) Residents who are displaced during the authoritys development of the property shall have the right to live in the new social housing property for their previous rent for the period of one year, or the authoritys established rent for the residents income level, whichever is lower.(g) If a displaced resident chooses not to occupy the new social housing development, the authority is not obligated to pay the difference between new and old rents, as described in subdivision (e), after the displaced resident could otherwise have begun occupying the property.64934. The authority shall make an annual determination of the required amount of social housing units to be produced in the following manner:(a) Annual regional housing needs assessment targets shall be calculated as the total RHNA cycle targets for each jurisdiction divided by the length of the RHNA cycle. The authority shall update its calculations each year based on housing construction data submitted by jurisdictions to the Department of Housing and Community Development.(b) On or before January 1, 2028, and each year thereafter, the authority shall determine the gap between the previous years regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development and local councils of government, and actual housing construction, as determined by official local statistics.(c) The authority shall split the very low income RHNA allocation into extremely low income and very low income allocations based on the latest available census or official survey data for the relevant jurisdiction.(d) Within a given year, the authority is authorized at least to construct the required number of units to meet the gap between the previous years extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing unit construction and regional housing needs assessment targets.64935. (a) In creating social housing, the authority shall employ two different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, consistent with the requirements of this title.(b) In the rental model, the authority shall extend a one-year lease for a social housing unit to eligible individuals who commit to a minimum of one year of residence, barring extraordinary circumstances.(c) The rents or the rates on a leasehold mortgage in a multifamily property shall be set according to all of the following requirements:(1) The authority shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) Any rental adjustments applied shall be applied in a manner that does not discourage the residents pursuit of higher income.(3) Subject to the directive of paragraph (2), if a residents income changes, upon the next vacancy, the property manager shall rent to an appropriate income group to abide by revenue neutrality and meet other requirements.(4) For cost rentals, the authority will determine a reasonable proceeds cap on rental units. Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(d) In the ownership model, the authority shall extend a 99-year lease to individuals who commit to a minimum of five years of residence in the social housing unit. This lease shall be in the form of a limited equity arrangement.(e) Under the ownership model, upon the death of the owner of the social housing unit, the unit may be transferred to the deceaseds heir by devise or as any other real property may pass. If a transferee is not eligible to be a resident, the transferee shall sell the unit to the authority.(f) Under the ownership model, all of the following conditions shall apply:(1) The estates land and common areas will be owned by the authority.(2) The authority may operate as a lender for residents.(3) Buyers shall pay at least a 15-percent down payment.(4) Housing units may only be sold after meeting all of the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The authority shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the authority does not exercise its right to purchase the unit, the unit may be sold by the owner to an eligible buyer subject to requirements established by the authority.(5) Properties shall be sold at a price that allows the owner to have a reasonable return on investment, which may include documented capital improvements and adjustments for inflation.(g) Residents may be evicted for either of the following reasons:(1) Failure to meet social housing community standards, as determined by the authority or governance council.(2) Failure to pay rent for more than two months.(h) Residents shall enjoy all of the following protections:(1) Property managers shall provide a 24-hour notice before entering the residents unit.(2) Termination for nonpayment of rent requires a 14-day notice prior to eviction.(3) Residents may recover abandoned properties within 60 days of receiving an eviction notice.64936. Applicants to be residents and continuing residents shall meet all of the following eligibility requirements, as may be applicable to them:(a) Except in the case of above moderate-income units, social housing units shall be the residents sole residence.(b) A potential resident shall prove that they have been living or working in California at the time of their application. The authority shall promulgate rules and criteria to determine the necessary residency or work qualifications solely for eligibility purposes, and these shall include sufficient qualifying criteria that do not discriminate against applicants based on their belonging to any protected class.(c) Upon approval by the authority, or the applicable governance council if authorized by the authority, residents whose units are part of the ownership model may rent their units. The authority shall prescribe the conditions pursuant to which a governance council may regulate renting.(d) Residents under the rental model shall commit to one year of residence in the rental unit, after which a month-to-month tenancy may take effect. Residents under the ownership model shall commit to at least five years of primary residence in their unit.(e) Under certain circumstances, a resident shall be allowed to interrupt residence requirements without penalty, including:(1) Job relocation.(2) Change in the household structure.(3) Serious physical or mental illness.(4) A mutually agreed-upon unit swap with another social housing resident within the same property pursuant to authority requirements.(5) Other circumstances authorized by the authority or the governance council, to the extent authorized by the authority.(f) If a resident interrupting their tenancy or leasehold mortgage does not satisfy the requirements for an exception, the resident may be subject to one of the following penalties:(1) Obligation to pay rent or make payments on a leasehold mortgage until a new resident is located.(2) In the case of a resident leasing under the ownership model, forfeiture of proceeds from resale of the property.(3) Ineligibility to reside in authority units for a period of five years, or as determined by the authority.(g) Except in cases that evidence a clear and manifest danger to the development or its residents, as may be determined by the authority, a prior criminal record shall not in any way preclude a person from residing in social housing.64937. (a) Subject to the requirements of subdivision (b), the authority shall use a lottery to select social housing residents from all qualifying applicants. The lottery shall be structured by income categories and shall provide separate selection results for each category.(b) If residents of a property who were displaced during the authoritys development of the property as social housing have elected to lease a unit in the social housing, they shall be accommodated prior to offering units to others pursuant to subdivision (a).
501501
502502 Article 1. Program Design
503503
504504 Article 1. Program Design
505505
506506 64933. (a) In all its operations, the authority shall seek to achieve revenue neutrality over the long term. The authority shall seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through the mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden, such as rent cross-subsidization or cost rent.(b) (1) The authority shall develop regional target percentages for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income housing that seek to maximize low-income housing within the constraints of long-term revenue neutrality and maintaining sufficient operational, maintenance, and capital reserves. The methodology for low-income housing maximization in each development region shall be explained at a board meeting and shall be subject to public comment.(2) Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(c) The authority shall prioritize development of property with all of the following characteristics:(1) Vacant parcels.(2) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels without affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(3) Surplus public properties.(4) Parcels near transit.(d) (1) If the development of a property requires the rehabilitation or demolition of covenanted affordable units, the new development shall include a greater number of affordable units by income group than the previous property.(2) Each multiunit property shall include a variety of mixed-income units according to area median income levels.(e) If the development of a property requires the removal of residents from the property, the authority shall cover the temporary relocation costs of these residents, including, but not limited to, all of the following:(1) Costs of searching for a new residence.(2) Moving costs.(3) Any differences between the residents previous rent at the property and their rent during the authority development period.(f) Residents who are displaced during the authoritys development of the property shall have the right to live in the new social housing property for their previous rent for the period of one year, or the authoritys established rent for the residents income level, whichever is lower.(g) If a displaced resident chooses not to occupy the new social housing development, the authority is not obligated to pay the difference between new and old rents, as described in subdivision (e), after the displaced resident could otherwise have begun occupying the property.
507507
508508
509509
510510 64933. (a) In all its operations, the authority shall seek to achieve revenue neutrality over the long term. The authority shall seek to recuperate the cost of development and operations over the life of its properties through the mechanisms that maximize the number of Californians who can be housed without experiencing rent burden, such as rent cross-subsidization or cost rent.
511511
512512 (b) (1) The authority shall develop regional target percentages for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income housing that seek to maximize low-income housing within the constraints of long-term revenue neutrality and maintaining sufficient operational, maintenance, and capital reserves. The methodology for low-income housing maximization in each development region shall be explained at a board meeting and shall be subject to public comment.
513513
514514 (2) Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.
515515
516516 (c) The authority shall prioritize development of property with all of the following characteristics:
517517
518518 (1) Vacant parcels.
519519
520520 (2) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels without affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.
521521
522522 (3) Surplus public properties.
523523
524524 (4) Parcels near transit.
525525
526526 (d) (1) If the development of a property requires the rehabilitation or demolition of covenanted affordable units, the new development shall include a greater number of affordable units by income group than the previous property.
527527
528528 (2) Each multiunit property shall include a variety of mixed-income units according to area median income levels.
529529
530530 (e) If the development of a property requires the removal of residents from the property, the authority shall cover the temporary relocation costs of these residents, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
531531
532532 (1) Costs of searching for a new residence.
533533
534534 (2) Moving costs.
535535
536536 (3) Any differences between the residents previous rent at the property and their rent during the authority development period.
537537
538538 (f) Residents who are displaced during the authoritys development of the property shall have the right to live in the new social housing property for their previous rent for the period of one year, or the authoritys established rent for the residents income level, whichever is lower.
539539
540540 (g) If a displaced resident chooses not to occupy the new social housing development, the authority is not obligated to pay the difference between new and old rents, as described in subdivision (e), after the displaced resident could otherwise have begun occupying the property.
541541
542542 64934. The authority shall make an annual determination of the required amount of social housing units to be produced in the following manner:(a) Annual regional housing needs assessment targets shall be calculated as the total RHNA cycle targets for each jurisdiction divided by the length of the RHNA cycle. The authority shall update its calculations each year based on housing construction data submitted by jurisdictions to the Department of Housing and Community Development.(b) On or before January 1, 2028, and each year thereafter, the authority shall determine the gap between the previous years regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development and local councils of government, and actual housing construction, as determined by official local statistics.(c) The authority shall split the very low income RHNA allocation into extremely low income and very low income allocations based on the latest available census or official survey data for the relevant jurisdiction.(d) Within a given year, the authority is authorized at least to construct the required number of units to meet the gap between the previous years extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing unit construction and regional housing needs assessment targets.
543543
544544
545545
546546 64934. The authority shall make an annual determination of the required amount of social housing units to be produced in the following manner:
547547
548548 (a) Annual regional housing needs assessment targets shall be calculated as the total RHNA cycle targets for each jurisdiction divided by the length of the RHNA cycle. The authority shall update its calculations each year based on housing construction data submitted by jurisdictions to the Department of Housing and Community Development.
549549
550550 (b) On or before January 1, 2028, and each year thereafter, the authority shall determine the gap between the previous years regional housing needs assessment targets for very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development and local councils of government, and actual housing construction, as determined by official local statistics.
551551
552552 (c) The authority shall split the very low income RHNA allocation into extremely low income and very low income allocations based on the latest available census or official survey data for the relevant jurisdiction.
553553
554554 (d) Within a given year, the authority is authorized at least to construct the required number of units to meet the gap between the previous years extremely low income, very low income, low-income, moderate-income, and above moderate-income housing unit construction and regional housing needs assessment targets.
555555
556556 64935. (a) In creating social housing, the authority shall employ two different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, consistent with the requirements of this title.(b) In the rental model, the authority shall extend a one-year lease for a social housing unit to eligible individuals who commit to a minimum of one year of residence, barring extraordinary circumstances.(c) The rents or the rates on a leasehold mortgage in a multifamily property shall be set according to all of the following requirements:(1) The authority shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) Any rental adjustments applied shall be applied in a manner that does not discourage the residents pursuit of higher income.(3) Subject to the directive of paragraph (2), if a residents income changes, upon the next vacancy, the property manager shall rent to an appropriate income group to abide by revenue neutrality and meet other requirements.(4) For cost rentals, the authority will determine a reasonable proceeds cap on rental units. Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.(d) In the ownership model, the authority shall extend a 99-year lease to individuals who commit to a minimum of five years of residence in the social housing unit. This lease shall be in the form of a limited equity arrangement.(e) Under the ownership model, upon the death of the owner of the social housing unit, the unit may be transferred to the deceaseds heir by devise or as any other real property may pass. If a transferee is not eligible to be a resident, the transferee shall sell the unit to the authority.(f) Under the ownership model, all of the following conditions shall apply:(1) The estates land and common areas will be owned by the authority.(2) The authority may operate as a lender for residents.(3) Buyers shall pay at least a 15-percent down payment.(4) Housing units may only be sold after meeting all of the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The authority shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the authority does not exercise its right to purchase the unit, the unit may be sold by the owner to an eligible buyer subject to requirements established by the authority.(5) Properties shall be sold at a price that allows the owner to have a reasonable return on investment, which may include documented capital improvements and adjustments for inflation.(g) Residents may be evicted for either of the following reasons:(1) Failure to meet social housing community standards, as determined by the authority or governance council.(2) Failure to pay rent for more than two months.(h) Residents shall enjoy all of the following protections:(1) Property managers shall provide a 24-hour notice before entering the residents unit.(2) Termination for nonpayment of rent requires a 14-day notice prior to eviction.(3) Residents may recover abandoned properties within 60 days of receiving an eviction notice.
557557
558558
559559
560560 64935. (a) In creating social housing, the authority shall employ two different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, consistent with the requirements of this title.
561561
562562 (b) In the rental model, the authority shall extend a one-year lease for a social housing unit to eligible individuals who commit to a minimum of one year of residence, barring extraordinary circumstances.
563563
564564 (c) The rents or the rates on a leasehold mortgage in a multifamily property shall be set according to all of the following requirements:
565565
566566 (1) The authority shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.
567567
568568 (2) Any rental adjustments applied shall be applied in a manner that does not discourage the residents pursuit of higher income.
569569
570570 (3) Subject to the directive of paragraph (2), if a residents income changes, upon the next vacancy, the property manager shall rent to an appropriate income group to abide by revenue neutrality and meet other requirements.
571571
572572 (4) For cost rentals, the authority will determine a reasonable proceeds cap on rental units. Priority consideration for the use of the authoritys proceeds shall be given to the building and acquiring of social housing units, and subsidies for extremely low income, very low income, and low-income residents in affordable units.
573573
574574 (d) In the ownership model, the authority shall extend a 99-year lease to individuals who commit to a minimum of five years of residence in the social housing unit. This lease shall be in the form of a limited equity arrangement.
575575
576576 (e) Under the ownership model, upon the death of the owner of the social housing unit, the unit may be transferred to the deceaseds heir by devise or as any other real property may pass. If a transferee is not eligible to be a resident, the transferee shall sell the unit to the authority.
577577
578578 (f) Under the ownership model, all of the following conditions shall apply:
579579
580580 (1) The estates land and common areas will be owned by the authority.
581581
582582 (2) The authority may operate as a lender for residents.
583583
584584 (3) Buyers shall pay at least a 15-percent down payment.
585585
586586 (4) Housing units may only be sold after meeting all of the following conditions:
587587
588588 (A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.
589589
590590 (B) The authority shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.
591591
592592 (C) If the authority does not exercise its right to purchase the unit, the unit may be sold by the owner to an eligible buyer subject to requirements established by the authority.
593593
594594 (5) Properties shall be sold at a price that allows the owner to have a reasonable return on investment, which may include documented capital improvements and adjustments for inflation.
595595
596596 (g) Residents may be evicted for either of the following reasons:
597597
598598 (1) Failure to meet social housing community standards, as determined by the authority or governance council.
599599
600600 (2) Failure to pay rent for more than two months.
601601
602602 (h) Residents shall enjoy all of the following protections:
603603
604604 (1) Property managers shall provide a 24-hour notice before entering the residents unit.
605605
606606 (2) Termination for nonpayment of rent requires a 14-day notice prior to eviction.
607607
608608 (3) Residents may recover abandoned properties within 60 days of receiving an eviction notice.
609609
610610 64936. Applicants to be residents and continuing residents shall meet all of the following eligibility requirements, as may be applicable to them:(a) Except in the case of above moderate-income units, social housing units shall be the residents sole residence.(b) A potential resident shall prove that they have been living or working in California at the time of their application. The authority shall promulgate rules and criteria to determine the necessary residency or work qualifications solely for eligibility purposes, and these shall include sufficient qualifying criteria that do not discriminate against applicants based on their belonging to any protected class.(c) Upon approval by the authority, or the applicable governance council if authorized by the authority, residents whose units are part of the ownership model may rent their units. The authority shall prescribe the conditions pursuant to which a governance council may regulate renting.(d) Residents under the rental model shall commit to one year of residence in the rental unit, after which a month-to-month tenancy may take effect. Residents under the ownership model shall commit to at least five years of primary residence in their unit.(e) Under certain circumstances, a resident shall be allowed to interrupt residence requirements without penalty, including:(1) Job relocation.(2) Change in the household structure.(3) Serious physical or mental illness.(4) A mutually agreed-upon unit swap with another social housing resident within the same property pursuant to authority requirements.(5) Other circumstances authorized by the authority or the governance council, to the extent authorized by the authority.(f) If a resident interrupting their tenancy or leasehold mortgage does not satisfy the requirements for an exception, the resident may be subject to one of the following penalties:(1) Obligation to pay rent or make payments on a leasehold mortgage until a new resident is located.(2) In the case of a resident leasing under the ownership model, forfeiture of proceeds from resale of the property.(3) Ineligibility to reside in authority units for a period of five years, or as determined by the authority.(g) Except in cases that evidence a clear and manifest danger to the development or its residents, as may be determined by the authority, a prior criminal record shall not in any way preclude a person from residing in social housing.
611611
612612
613613
614614 64936. Applicants to be residents and continuing residents shall meet all of the following eligibility requirements, as may be applicable to them:
615615
616616 (a) Except in the case of above moderate-income units, social housing units shall be the residents sole residence.
617617
618618 (b) A potential resident shall prove that they have been living or working in California at the time of their application. The authority shall promulgate rules and criteria to determine the necessary residency or work qualifications solely for eligibility purposes, and these shall include sufficient qualifying criteria that do not discriminate against applicants based on their belonging to any protected class.
619619
620620 (c) Upon approval by the authority, or the applicable governance council if authorized by the authority, residents whose units are part of the ownership model may rent their units. The authority shall prescribe the conditions pursuant to which a governance council may regulate renting.
621621
622622 (d) Residents under the rental model shall commit to one year of residence in the rental unit, after which a month-to-month tenancy may take effect. Residents under the ownership model shall commit to at least five years of primary residence in their unit.
623623
624624 (e) Under certain circumstances, a resident shall be allowed to interrupt residence requirements without penalty, including:
625625
626626 (1) Job relocation.
627627
628628 (2) Change in the household structure.
629629
630630 (3) Serious physical or mental illness.
631631
632632 (4) A mutually agreed-upon unit swap with another social housing resident within the same property pursuant to authority requirements.
633633
634634 (5) Other circumstances authorized by the authority or the governance council, to the extent authorized by the authority.
635635
636636 (f) If a resident interrupting their tenancy or leasehold mortgage does not satisfy the requirements for an exception, the resident may be subject to one of the following penalties:
637637
638638 (1) Obligation to pay rent or make payments on a leasehold mortgage until a new resident is located.
639639
640640 (2) In the case of a resident leasing under the ownership model, forfeiture of proceeds from resale of the property.
641641
642642 (3) Ineligibility to reside in authority units for a period of five years, or as determined by the authority.
643643
644644 (g) Except in cases that evidence a clear and manifest danger to the development or its residents, as may be determined by the authority, a prior criminal record shall not in any way preclude a person from residing in social housing.
645645
646646 64937. (a) Subject to the requirements of subdivision (b), the authority shall use a lottery to select social housing residents from all qualifying applicants. The lottery shall be structured by income categories and shall provide separate selection results for each category.(b) If residents of a property who were displaced during the authoritys development of the property as social housing have elected to lease a unit in the social housing, they shall be accommodated prior to offering units to others pursuant to subdivision (a).
647647
648648
649649
650650 64937. (a) Subject to the requirements of subdivision (b), the authority shall use a lottery to select social housing residents from all qualifying applicants. The lottery shall be structured by income categories and shall provide separate selection results for each category.
651651
652652 (b) If residents of a property who were displaced during the authoritys development of the property as social housing have elected to lease a unit in the social housing, they shall be accommodated prior to offering units to others pursuant to subdivision (a).
653653
654654 Article 2. Production of Housing64938. (a) The authority is authorized to contract with qualified entities, in accordance with the authoritys plan to meet its goals, to conduct ground-up construction and rehabilitation of existing structures.(b) The authority is authorized to dedicate building space to commercial use and may lease the space to qualifying entities, pursuant to requirements established by the authority.(c) When appropriate, the state shall gift public lands to the authority for social housing development purposes.(d) In the absence of suitable state-owned parcels, the authority is authorized to purchase municipal, county, other local jurisdiction, and private lands.64939. (a) The authority shall accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The parcel allows the authority to meet the jurisdictions regional housing needs assessments goals.(2) The parcel does not exceed the cost of all suitable alternative sites by more than 2 percent.(3) The parcel offers comparable community amenities to all suitable alternatives.(b) The authority shall seek input from the local jurisdictions city council, board of supervisors, or planning agency, as applicable, on all of the following dimensions of an authority development:(1) Specific site of development.(2) Number of stories.(3) Number of units.(4) Development timeline.
655655
656656 Article 2. Production of Housing
657657
658658 Article 2. Production of Housing
659659
660660 64938. (a) The authority is authorized to contract with qualified entities, in accordance with the authoritys plan to meet its goals, to conduct ground-up construction and rehabilitation of existing structures.(b) The authority is authorized to dedicate building space to commercial use and may lease the space to qualifying entities, pursuant to requirements established by the authority.(c) When appropriate, the state shall gift public lands to the authority for social housing development purposes.(d) In the absence of suitable state-owned parcels, the authority is authorized to purchase municipal, county, other local jurisdiction, and private lands.
661661
662662
663663
664664 64938. (a) The authority is authorized to contract with qualified entities, in accordance with the authoritys plan to meet its goals, to conduct ground-up construction and rehabilitation of existing structures.
665665
666666 (b) The authority is authorized to dedicate building space to commercial use and may lease the space to qualifying entities, pursuant to requirements established by the authority.
667667
668668 (c) When appropriate, the state shall gift public lands to the authority for social housing development purposes.
669669
670670 (d) In the absence of suitable state-owned parcels, the authority is authorized to purchase municipal, county, other local jurisdiction, and private lands.
671671
672672 64939. (a) The authority shall accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The parcel allows the authority to meet the jurisdictions regional housing needs assessments goals.(2) The parcel does not exceed the cost of all suitable alternative sites by more than 2 percent.(3) The parcel offers comparable community amenities to all suitable alternatives.(b) The authority shall seek input from the local jurisdictions city council, board of supervisors, or planning agency, as applicable, on all of the following dimensions of an authority development:(1) Specific site of development.(2) Number of stories.(3) Number of units.(4) Development timeline.
673673
674674
675675
676676 64939. (a) The authority shall accept a local jurisdictions preference for a project parcel if all of the following conditions are met:
677677
678678 (1) The parcel allows the authority to meet the jurisdictions regional housing needs assessments goals.
679679
680680 (2) The parcel does not exceed the cost of all suitable alternative sites by more than 2 percent.
681681
682682 (3) The parcel offers comparable community amenities to all suitable alternatives.
683683
684684 (b) The authority shall seek input from the local jurisdictions city council, board of supervisors, or planning agency, as applicable, on all of the following dimensions of an authority development:
685685
686686 (1) Specific site of development.
687687
688688 (2) Number of stories.
689689
690690 (3) Number of units.
691691
692692 (4) Development timeline.
693693
694694 Article 3. Acquisition64941. The authority may acquire, reacquire, or contract to acquire or reacquire by grant or purchase real, personal, or mixed property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, transfer, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.64942. The authority shall prioritize acquiring or reacquiring property with all of the following characteristics:(a) Parcels with affordability covenants or rent control units in danger of losing affordability status, in order to preserve affordable housing stock.(b) Parcels at risk of becoming unaffordable or at the end of their affordability covenants.(c) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels with affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(d) Surplus public properties.(e) Parcels near transit.
695695
696696 Article 3. Acquisition
697697
698698 Article 3. Acquisition
699699
700700 64941. The authority may acquire, reacquire, or contract to acquire or reacquire by grant or purchase real, personal, or mixed property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, transfer, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.
701701
702702
703703
704704 64941. The authority may acquire, reacquire, or contract to acquire or reacquire by grant or purchase real, personal, or mixed property or any interest therein and own, hold, clear, improve, rehabilitate, sell, assign, exchange, transfer, or otherwise dispose of or encumber the same.
705705
706706 64942. The authority shall prioritize acquiring or reacquiring property with all of the following characteristics:(a) Parcels with affordability covenants or rent control units in danger of losing affordability status, in order to preserve affordable housing stock.(b) Parcels at risk of becoming unaffordable or at the end of their affordability covenants.(c) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels with affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.(d) Surplus public properties.(e) Parcels near transit.
707707
708708
709709
710710 64942. The authority shall prioritize acquiring or reacquiring property with all of the following characteristics:
711711
712712 (a) Parcels with affordability covenants or rent control units in danger of losing affordability status, in order to preserve affordable housing stock.
713713
714714 (b) Parcels at risk of becoming unaffordable or at the end of their affordability covenants.
715715
716716 (c) Underutilized parcels or redevelopment of underutilized parcels with affordability covenants or rent-controlled units.
717717
718718 (d) Surplus public properties.
719719
720720 (e) Parcels near transit.
721721
722722 CHAPTER 4. Funding64943. The activities of the authority shall be conducted with a goal to cover its costs over the long term in accordance with the principle of revenue neutrality.64944. The Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund is hereby established within the State Treasury to be used, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to provide zero-interest loans for the purpose of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes.64945. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds.(b) The authority may, from time to time, issue revenue bonds in the principal amount that the agency determines necessary to provide sufficient funds for financing social housing developments, the payment of interest on these bonds, the establishment of reserves to secure the bonds, and the payment of other expenditures of the agency incident to, and necessary or convenient to, issuance of the bonds.(c) The board shall provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records and shall maintain accounting records and shall report accounting transactions in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles adopted by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation for both public reporting purposes and for reporting of activities to the Controller.64946. The authority may, upon appropriation by the Legislature, utilize funds from other legislation, cities and counties, or other sources, in order to build more low-, very low, and extremely low income housing.
723723
724724 CHAPTER 4. Funding
725725
726726 CHAPTER 4. Funding
727727
728728 64943. The activities of the authority shall be conducted with a goal to cover its costs over the long term in accordance with the principle of revenue neutrality.
729729
730730
731731
732732 64943. The activities of the authority shall be conducted with a goal to cover its costs over the long term in accordance with the principle of revenue neutrality.
733733
734734 64944. The Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund is hereby established within the State Treasury to be used, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to provide zero-interest loans for the purpose of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes.
735735
736736
737737
738738 64944. The Social Housing Revolving Loan Fund is hereby established within the State Treasury to be used, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to provide zero-interest loans for the purpose of constructing housing to accommodate a mix of household incomes.
739739
740740 64945. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds.(b) The authority may, from time to time, issue revenue bonds in the principal amount that the agency determines necessary to provide sufficient funds for financing social housing developments, the payment of interest on these bonds, the establishment of reserves to secure the bonds, and the payment of other expenditures of the agency incident to, and necessary or convenient to, issuance of the bonds.(c) The board shall provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records and shall maintain accounting records and shall report accounting transactions in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles adopted by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation for both public reporting purposes and for reporting of activities to the Controller.
741741
742742
743743
744744 64945. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact subsequent legislation to provide financing for the activities of the authority through the issuance of general obligation bonds.
745745
746746 (b) The authority may, from time to time, issue revenue bonds in the principal amount that the agency determines necessary to provide sufficient funds for financing social housing developments, the payment of interest on these bonds, the establishment of reserves to secure the bonds, and the payment of other expenditures of the agency incident to, and necessary or convenient to, issuance of the bonds.
747747
748748 (c) The board shall provide for regular audits of the authoritys accounts and records and shall maintain accounting records and shall report accounting transactions in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles adopted by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board of the Financial Accounting Foundation for both public reporting purposes and for reporting of activities to the Controller.
749749
750750 64946. The authority may, upon appropriation by the Legislature, utilize funds from other legislation, cities and counties, or other sources, in order to build more low-, very low, and extremely low income housing.
751751
752752
753753
754754 64946. The authority may, upon appropriation by the Legislature, utilize funds from other legislation, cities and counties, or other sources, in order to build more low-, very low, and extremely low income housing.