California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB309 Compare Versions

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1-Enrolled September 18, 2023 Passed IN Senate September 14, 2023 Passed IN Assembly September 14, 2023 Amended IN Senate September 01, 2023 Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly May 01, 2023 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 309Introduced by Assembly Members Lee, Wendy Carrillo, and Kalra(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bennett, Haney, Jackson, McCarty, Ting, Ward, and Rendon)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Menjivar, Smallwood-Cuevas, and Wiener)January 26, 2023An act to add Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) to the Government Code, relating to housing. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 309, Lee. The Social Housing Act.Existing law establishes the Department of General Services to provide centralized services, including, but not limited to, planning, acquisition, construction and maintenance of state buildings and property. Existing law authorizes the Director of General Services, with the consent of the state agency concerned, to lease state-owned real property when the Director of General Services deems that leasing serves a beneficial public purpose limited to the development of housing.This bill would enact the Social Housing Act and would create, in the Department of General Services, the Social Housing Program, the mission of which would be to ensure that qualified social housing developments are produced on leased state property to help address the housing crisis, as specified. The bill would authorize the program to identify and develop up to 3 qualified social housing projects, as specified, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to develop statewide qualified social housing. The bill would require the program to solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model, as those terms are defined. The bill would require the program to employ 2 different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, as specified, in creating social housing. The bill would prohibit a city or county from denying a social housing development authorized under the program. The bill would authorize a city or county to propose objective design review standards, as specified, and authorize a city or county to propose modifications to mitigate any specific, adverse impacts on public health or safety, as specified.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 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 Social Housing Program to offer the necessary social housing to increase housing production and acquisition in all jurisdictions throughout the state, which will inform the future establishment of an independent public entity to develop, own, and maintain social housing in California. The Legislature intends the program to be the first step in creating 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 Social Housing Program 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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) Housing developed or authorized by a public entity that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ both a rental model and an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
1+Amended IN Senate September 01, 2023 Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly May 01, 2023 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 309Introduced by Assembly Members Lee, Wendy Carrillo, and Kalra(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bennett, Haney, Jackson, McCarty, Ting, Ward, and Rendon)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Menjivar, Smallwood-Cuevas, and Wiener)January 26, 2023An act to add Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) to the Government Code, relating to housing. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 309, as amended, Lee. The Social Housing Act.Existing law establishes the Department of General Services to provide centralized services, including, but not limited to, planning, acquisition, construction and maintenance of state buildings and property. Existing law authorizes the Director of General Services, with the consent of the state agency concerned, to lease state-owned real property when the Director of General Services deems that leasing serves a beneficial public purpose limited to the development of housing.This bill would enact the Social Housing Act and would create, in the Department of General Services, the Social Housing Program, the mission of which would be to ensure that qualified social housing developments are produced on leased state property to help address the housing crisis, as specified. The bill would authorize the program to identify and develop up to 3 qualified social housing projects, as specified, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to develop statewide qualified social housing. The bill would require the program to solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model, as those terms are defined. The bill would require the program to employ 2 different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, as specified, in creating social housing. The bill would prohibit a city or county from denying a social housing development authorized under the program. The bill would authorize a city or county to propose objective design review standards, as specified, and authorize a city or county to propose modifications to mitigate any specific, adverse impacts on public health or safety, as specified.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 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 Social Housing Program to offer the necessary social housing to increase housing production and acquisition in all jurisdictions throughout the state, which will inform the future establishment of an independent public entity to develop, own, and maintain social housing in California. The Legislature intends the program to be the first step in creating 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 Social Housing Program 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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) For the purposes of this title, all social housing Housing developed or authorized by the a public entity shall that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If a the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a government public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913.Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64914.Notwithstanding Section 64904, social64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1)The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(2)For the purposes of this part, all social housing(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program shall be is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.(b)The development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges.(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.(d)The land on which the housing units are built 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.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on leased state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ two different leasing models, the both a rental model and the an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
22
3- Enrolled September 18, 2023 Passed IN Senate September 14, 2023 Passed IN Assembly September 14, 2023 Amended IN Senate September 01, 2023 Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly May 01, 2023 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 309Introduced by Assembly Members Lee, Wendy Carrillo, and Kalra(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bennett, Haney, Jackson, McCarty, Ting, Ward, and Rendon)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Menjivar, Smallwood-Cuevas, and Wiener)January 26, 2023An act to add Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) to the Government Code, relating to housing. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 309, Lee. The Social Housing Act.Existing law establishes the Department of General Services to provide centralized services, including, but not limited to, planning, acquisition, construction and maintenance of state buildings and property. Existing law authorizes the Director of General Services, with the consent of the state agency concerned, to lease state-owned real property when the Director of General Services deems that leasing serves a beneficial public purpose limited to the development of housing.This bill would enact the Social Housing Act and would create, in the Department of General Services, the Social Housing Program, the mission of which would be to ensure that qualified social housing developments are produced on leased state property to help address the housing crisis, as specified. The bill would authorize the program to identify and develop up to 3 qualified social housing projects, as specified, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to develop statewide qualified social housing. The bill would require the program to solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model, as those terms are defined. The bill would require the program to employ 2 different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, as specified, in creating social housing. The bill would prohibit a city or county from denying a social housing development authorized under the program. The bill would authorize a city or county to propose objective design review standards, as specified, and authorize a city or county to propose modifications to mitigate any specific, adverse impacts on public health or safety, as specified.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate September 01, 2023 Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly May 01, 2023 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 309Introduced by Assembly Members Lee, Wendy Carrillo, and Kalra(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bennett, Haney, Jackson, McCarty, Ting, Ward, and Rendon)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Menjivar, Smallwood-Cuevas, and Wiener)January 26, 2023An act to add Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) to the Government Code, relating to housing. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 309, as amended, Lee. The Social Housing Act.Existing law establishes the Department of General Services to provide centralized services, including, but not limited to, planning, acquisition, construction and maintenance of state buildings and property. Existing law authorizes the Director of General Services, with the consent of the state agency concerned, to lease state-owned real property when the Director of General Services deems that leasing serves a beneficial public purpose limited to the development of housing.This bill would enact the Social Housing Act and would create, in the Department of General Services, the Social Housing Program, the mission of which would be to ensure that qualified social housing developments are produced on leased state property to help address the housing crisis, as specified. The bill would authorize the program to identify and develop up to 3 qualified social housing projects, as specified, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to develop statewide qualified social housing. The bill would require the program to solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model, as those terms are defined. The bill would require the program to employ 2 different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, as specified, in creating social housing. The bill would prohibit a city or county from denying a social housing development authorized under the program. The bill would authorize a city or county to propose objective design review standards, as specified, and authorize a city or county to propose modifications to mitigate any specific, adverse impacts on public health or safety, as specified.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Enrolled September 18, 2023 Passed IN Senate September 14, 2023 Passed IN Assembly September 14, 2023 Amended IN Senate September 01, 2023 Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly May 01, 2023 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2023
5+ Amended IN Senate September 01, 2023 Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023 Amended IN Assembly May 01, 2023 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2023
66
7-Enrolled September 18, 2023
8-Passed IN Senate September 14, 2023
9-Passed IN Assembly September 14, 2023
107 Amended IN Senate September 01, 2023
118 Amended IN Senate July 13, 2023
129 Amended IN Assembly May 01, 2023
1310 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2023
1411
1512 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1613
1714 Assembly Bill
1815
1916 No. 309
2017
2118 Introduced by Assembly Members Lee, Wendy Carrillo, and Kalra(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bennett, Haney, Jackson, McCarty, Ting, Ward, and Rendon)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Menjivar, Smallwood-Cuevas, and Wiener)January 26, 2023
2219
2320 Introduced by Assembly Members Lee, Wendy Carrillo, and Kalra(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bennett, Haney, Jackson, McCarty, Ting, Ward, and Rendon)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Menjivar, Smallwood-Cuevas, and Wiener)
2421 January 26, 2023
2522
2623 An act to add Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) to the Government Code, relating to housing.
2724
2825 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2926
3027 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3128
32-AB 309, Lee. The Social Housing Act.
29+AB 309, as amended, Lee. The Social Housing Act.
3330
3431 Existing law establishes the Department of General Services to provide centralized services, including, but not limited to, planning, acquisition, construction and maintenance of state buildings and property. Existing law authorizes the Director of General Services, with the consent of the state agency concerned, to lease state-owned real property when the Director of General Services deems that leasing serves a beneficial public purpose limited to the development of housing.This bill would enact the Social Housing Act and would create, in the Department of General Services, the Social Housing Program, the mission of which would be to ensure that qualified social housing developments are produced on leased state property to help address the housing crisis, as specified. The bill would authorize the program to identify and develop up to 3 qualified social housing projects, as specified, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to develop statewide qualified social housing. The bill would require the program to solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model, as those terms are defined. The bill would require the program to employ 2 different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, as specified, in creating social housing. The bill would prohibit a city or county from denying a social housing development authorized under the program. The bill would authorize a city or county to propose objective design review standards, as specified, and authorize a city or county to propose modifications to mitigate any specific, adverse impacts on public health or safety, as specified.
3532
3633 Existing law establishes the Department of General Services to provide centralized services, including, but not limited to, planning, acquisition, construction and maintenance of state buildings and property. Existing law authorizes the Director of General Services, with the consent of the state agency concerned, to lease state-owned real property when the Director of General Services deems that leasing serves a beneficial public purpose limited to the development of housing.
3734
3835 This bill would enact the Social Housing Act and would create, in the Department of General Services, the Social Housing Program, the mission of which would be to ensure that qualified social housing developments are produced on leased state property to help address the housing crisis, as specified. The bill would authorize the program to identify and develop up to 3 qualified social housing projects, as specified, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to develop statewide qualified social housing. The bill would require the program to solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model, as those terms are defined. The bill would require the program to employ 2 different leasing models, the rental model and the ownership model, as specified, in creating social housing. The bill would prohibit a city or county from denying a social housing development authorized under the program. The bill would authorize a city or county to propose objective design review standards, as specified, and authorize a city or county to propose modifications to mitigate any specific, adverse impacts on public health or safety, as specified.
3936
4037 ## Digest Key
4138
4239 ## Bill Text
4340
44-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 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 Social Housing Program to offer the necessary social housing to increase housing production and acquisition in all jurisdictions throughout the state, which will inform the future establishment of an independent public entity to develop, own, and maintain social housing in California. The Legislature intends the program to be the first step in creating 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 Social Housing Program 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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) Housing developed or authorized by a public entity that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ both a rental model and an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
41+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 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 Social Housing Program to offer the necessary social housing to increase housing production and acquisition in all jurisdictions throughout the state, which will inform the future establishment of an independent public entity to develop, own, and maintain social housing in California. The Legislature intends the program to be the first step in creating 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 Social Housing Program 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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) For the purposes of this title, all social housing Housing developed or authorized by the a public entity shall that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If a the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a government public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913.Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64914.Notwithstanding Section 64904, social64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1)The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(2)For the purposes of this part, all social housing(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program shall be is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.(b)The development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges.(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.(d)The land on which the housing units are built 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.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on leased state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ two different leasing models, the both a rental model and the an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
4542
4643 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4744
4845 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4946
5047 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 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 Social Housing Program to offer the necessary social housing to increase housing production and acquisition in all jurisdictions throughout the state, which will inform the future establishment of an independent public entity to develop, own, and maintain social housing in California. The Legislature intends the program to be the first step in creating 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 Social Housing Program to ensure that no Californian pays more than 30 percent of their income on housing by the year 2050.
5148
5249 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 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 Social Housing Program to offer the necessary social housing to increase housing production and acquisition in all jurisdictions throughout the state, which will inform the future establishment of an independent public entity to develop, own, and maintain social housing in California. The Legislature intends the program to be the first step in creating 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 Social Housing Program to ensure that no Californian pays more than 30 percent of their income on housing by the year 2050.
5350
5451 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5552
5653 ### SECTION 1.
5754
5855 (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.
5956
6057 (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.
6158
6259 (c) Housing burden creates severe financial, physical, and emotional impacts on households.
6360
6461 (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.
6562
6663 (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.
6764
6865 (f) With such a great failure to meet the housing needs of California residents, the state has a duty to act and help localities 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.
6966
7067 (g) It is the intent of the Legislature to establish the Social Housing Program to offer the necessary social housing to increase housing production and acquisition in all jurisdictions throughout the state, which will inform the future establishment of an independent public entity to develop, own, and maintain social housing in California. The Legislature intends the program to be the first step in creating 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.
7168
7269 (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.
7370
7471 (i) It is further the intent of the Legislature for the Social Housing Program to ensure that no Californian pays more than 30 percent of their income on housing by the year 2050.
7572
76-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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) Housing developed or authorized by a public entity that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ both a rental model and an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
73+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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) For the purposes of this title, all social housing Housing developed or authorized by the a public entity shall that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If a the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a government public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913.Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64914.Notwithstanding Section 64904, social64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1)The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(2)For the purposes of this part, all social housing(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program shall be is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.(b)The development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges.(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.(d)The land on which the housing units are built 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.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on leased state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ two different leasing models, the both a rental model and the an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
7774
7875 SEC. 2. Title 6.91 (commencing with Section 64900) is added to the Government Code, to read:
7976
8077 ### SEC. 2.
8178
82-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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) Housing developed or authorized by a public entity that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ both a rental model and an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
79+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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) For the purposes of this title, all social housing Housing developed or authorized by the a public entity shall that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If a the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a government public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913.Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64914.Notwithstanding Section 64904, social64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1)The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(2)For the purposes of this part, all social housing(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program shall be is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.(b)The development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges.(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.(d)The land on which the housing units are built 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.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on leased state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ two different leasing models, the both a rental model and the an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
8380
84-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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) Housing developed or authorized by a public entity that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ both a rental model and an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
81+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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) For the purposes of this title, all social housing Housing developed or authorized by the a public entity shall that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If a the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a government public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913.Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64914.Notwithstanding Section 64904, social64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1)The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(2)For the purposes of this part, all social housing(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program shall be is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.(b)The development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges.(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.(d)The land on which the housing units are built 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.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on leased state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ two different leasing models, the both a rental model and the an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
8582
8683 TITLE 6.91. THE SOCIAL HOUSING ACT
8784
8885 TITLE 6.91. THE SOCIAL HOUSING ACT
8986
90-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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) Housing developed or authorized by a public entity that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.
87+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. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) For the purposes of this title, all social housing Housing developed or authorized by the a public entity shall that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If a the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a government public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.
9188
9289 PART 1. General Provisions
9390
9491 PART 1. General Provisions
9592
9693 CHAPTER 1. Title64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act.
9794
9895 CHAPTER 1. Title
9996
10097 CHAPTER 1. Title
10198
10299 64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act.
103100
104101
105102
106103 64900. This title shall be known, and may be cited, as the Social Housing Act.
107104
108- CHAPTER 2. Definitions64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title.64902. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) Housing developed or authorized by a public entity that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.
105+ CHAPTER 2. Definitions64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title.64902. 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.64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) For the purposes of this title, all social housing Housing developed or authorized by the a public entity shall that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If a the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a government public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.
109106
110107 CHAPTER 2. Definitions
111108
112109 CHAPTER 2. Definitions
113110
114111 64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title.
115112
116113
117114
118115 64901. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this title.
119116
120117 64902. 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.
121118
122119
123120
124121 64902. 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.
125122
126123 64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.
127124
128125
129126
130127 64903. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned are returned through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.
131128
132-64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) Housing developed or authorized by a public entity that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.
129+64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.(2) For the purposes of this title, all social housing Housing developed or authorized by the a public entity shall that may be owned by the public entity.(b) If a the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include 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 or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a government public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private 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.
133130
134131
135132
136133 64904. Social housing means housing with the following characteristics:
137134
138135 (a) (1) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built is owned by a government entity.
139136
140-(2) Housing developed or authorized by a public entity that may be owned by the public entity.
137+(2) For the purposes of this title, all social housing Housing developed or authorized by the a public entity shall that may be owned by the public entity.
141138
142-(b) If the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.
139+(b) If a the housing unit is in a social housing development, the development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges that may include extremely low income, very low income, low income, moderate income, and above moderate income.
143140
144141 (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.
145142
146-(d) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.
143+(d) The housing units or the land on which housing units are built that are owned by a government public entity shall be protected for the duration of their useful life from being sold or transferred to a private entity to prevent the privatization of social housing.
147144
148145 (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.
149146
150-PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ both a rental model and an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
147+PART 2. Social Housing Program CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913.Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64914.Notwithstanding Section 64904, social64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1)The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(2)For the purposes of this part, all social housing(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program shall be is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.(b)The development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges.(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.(d)The land on which the housing units are built 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.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units. CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on leased state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing. CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ two different leasing models, the both a rental model and the an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
151148
152149 PART 2. Social Housing Program
153150
154151 PART 2. Social Housing Program
155152
156- CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.
153+ CHAPTER 1. Definitions64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.64912. 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.64913.Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.64914.Notwithstanding Section 64904, social64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1)The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(2)For the purposes of this part, all social housing(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program shall be is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.(b)The development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges.(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.(d)The land on which the housing units are built 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.64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.
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158155 CHAPTER 1. Definitions
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160157 CHAPTER 1. Definitions
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162159 64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.
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166163 64910. Unless the context demands otherwise, the definitions provided by this chapter shall apply to this part.
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168165 64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.
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172169 64911. Social Housing Program or program means the program under the Department of General Services that facilitates the creation of social housing pursuant to this part.
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174171 64912. 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.
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178175 64912. 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.
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180-64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.
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179+Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.
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185+Notwithstanding Section 64904, social
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189+64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:(a) (1)The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.(2)For the purposes of this part, all social housing(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program shall be is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.(b)The development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges.(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.(d)The land on which the housing units are built 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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184193 64913. Qualified social housing means social housing with the following characteristics:
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186-(a) The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.
195+(a) (1)The housing units are on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2.
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188-(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.
197+(2)For the purposes of this part, all social housing
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201+(b) The land on which the social housing is developed or authorized by the program shall be is owned by the Department of General Services and managed by a private entity.
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203+(b)The development contains housing units that accommodate a mix of household income ranges.
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207+(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.
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211+(d)The land on which the housing units are built 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.
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215+(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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190219 64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.
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194223 64914. Revenue neutrality means a system in which all monetary expenditures that result from the development and operation of social housing owned by the program are returned to the program through rents, payments on leasehold mortgages, or other subsidies, to further the maintenance and development of more social housing units.
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196- CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing.
225+ CHAPTER 2. Creation64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on leased state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing.
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202-64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing.
231+64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on leased state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.(c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing.
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206235 64915. (a) The Social Housing Program is hereby created in the Department of General Services.
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208-(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.
237+(b) The core mission of the program shall be to ensure that social housing developments are produced on leased state property leased pursuant to Section 14671.2, to help address the housing crisis.
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210239 (c) The program is authorized to identify and develop up to three qualified social housing projects on land declared excess by a state department and deemed suitable for housing pursuant to Executive Order No. N-06-19, with the intent to use the results to inform public policy related to developing an independent public entity to manage and develop statewide qualified social housing.
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212- CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ both a rental model and an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
241+ CHAPTER 3. Program Design64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ two different leasing models, the both a rental model and the an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
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214243 CHAPTER 3. Program Design
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216245 CHAPTER 3. Program Design
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218247 64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.(b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.(c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.
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222251 64916. (a) In all of its operations, the program shall comply with subdivisions (a) to (e), inclusive, of Section 14671.2.
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224253 (b) Priority consideration for the use of the programs proceeds shall be given to the creation, development, and subsidization of qualified social housing units.
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226255 (c) The program will act as a land bank for state properties in which to develop qualified social housing, by maintaining ownership of the land through ground leases.
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228-64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ both a rental model and an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.
257+64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ two different leasing models, the both a rental model and the an ownership model.(1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.(B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.(2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:(A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.(B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.(C) If the program 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 program.(D) 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.(E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.
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232261 64917. (a) The program shall solicit bids to develop qualified social housing units, and prioritize bids that demonstrate long-term revenue neutrality or a cost rent model.
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234-(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ both a rental model and an ownership model.
263+(b) In creating qualified social housing, the program shall employ two different leasing models, the both a rental model and the an ownership model.
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236265 (1) (A) In the rental model, the program shall extend a lease for a qualified social housing unit to eligible individuals.
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238267 (B) The program shall strive to ensure that residents do not pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing.
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240269 (2) In the ownership model, the housing units may only be sold after meeting the following conditions:
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242271 (A) A minimum of five years of owner-occupancy.
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244273 (B) The program shall have the right of first refusal to buy back a property.
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246275 (C) If the program 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 program.
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248277 (D) 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.
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250279 (E) 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. The heir shall be subject to the requirements of this paragraph.
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252281 64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.(2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.(B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.(C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.(c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.(2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.(3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.(4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.
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256285 64918. (a) (1) A city or county shall not deny a qualified social housing development authorized under the program.
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258287 (2) The Department of General Services shall notify a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.
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260289 (b) (1) The Department of General Services shall send a city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, any conceptual plans for a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.
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262291 (2) (A) Within 90 days of receiving the conceptual plans, the city or county may propose objective design review standards, as defined in paragraph (7) of subdivision (a) of Section 66300, for a qualified social housing development authorized under this chapter, which the Department of General Services shall accept.
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264293 (B) The proposed objective design review standards shall not differ from the city or countys existing objective design review standards for comparable developments in effect one year before the date the Department of General Services notifies a city or county as required by this subdivision.
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266295 (C) The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept design review standard proposals made by a city or county 90 days after a city or county receives the conceptual plans.
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268297 (3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), any design review standards proposed by a city or county on a qualified social housing development shall not include floor area ratios, height limitations, or density requirements.
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270299 (c) (1) The Department of General Services shall send completed plans to the city, or county if the development occurs in an unincorporated area, of a qualified social housing development occurring within its jurisdiction.
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272301 (2) If the city or county makes written findings based on substantial evidence in the record that the qualified social housing development might have a specific, adverse impact on public health or safety, the city or county shall notify the Department of General Services of those impacts within 90 days of receiving the completed plans.
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274303 (3) The city or county may propose modifications to the qualified social housing development to mitigate those specific, adverse impacts, which the Department of General Services shall accept if received within the 90-day period described in paragraph (2). The Department of General Services may, but is not required to, accept modifications made 90 days after a city or county receives the completed plans.
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276305 (4) For the purposes of this subdivision, specific, adverse impact means a significant, quantifiable, direct, and unavoidable impact, based on objective, identified, and written public health or safety standards, policies, or conditions as they existed on the date the Department of General Services sent its completed plans.