Chris Elmendorf Profile picture
Mar 27 24 tweets 13 min read
@sfplanning just released drafts of the keystone pieces of city's housing element: (1) analysis of site capacity (as zoned), (2) analysis of constraints.

tl,dr: big progress on conceptual level, huge problems in practice.

This 🧵 covers sites; stay tuned for constraints. 1/22
The big & welcome news is that SF, like LA, undertook to comply w/#AB1397 by modeling sites' probability of development during planning period & discounting sites' nominal zoned capacity by p(dev). 2/

The leadership of SF and LA on this issue, coupled with @California_HCD's rejection of nearly all housing elements from SoCal cities, is going put pressure on other cities to get on board the p(dev) train. 3/
This is *so* important, b/c for last 40 years, cities have gotten away with junk plans premised on patently false assumption that if a site could be developed during planning period, it would be developed. 4/
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cf…
Reality check: in Bay Area, a typical 5th cycle "housing element site" had less than a 1-in-10 chance of development during planning period.
A site zoned for 100 homes should have counted for 10 or fewer, but it was counted for 100. 5/

escholarship.org/uc/item/6786z5…
The false p(dev) = 1 assumption allowed nearly all cities in expensive places to avoid rezoning for additional capacity. /6

lewis.ucla.edu/research/a-rev…
But as LA and now SF have discovered, a city that's realistic about p(dev) will have to rezone. A lot.
Or at least it should... /7
SF hired an economics consultant to fit a p(dev) model to data from 2001-2018 and, as described, the model seems reasonable. So far, so good. /8
Consultant concluded that SF has p(dev)-adjusted capacity for ***less than 21,000 new homes, under current zoning, over the next 30 years.***

Whereas the city's state-assigned housing target exceeds 80,000 homes over just the next 8 years! /9
So, big rezoning? There ought to be! But SF purports to backfill most of deficit w/ handwavy, "trust us" assumptions about other sources of capacity, ultimately committing to rezone for only ~22,000 more units.

The money table is on p. 8. Let's break it down. /10
For starters, city posits that 50% of modeled capacity over next 30 years will materialize in next 8 years.

Rationale: state law is now better for development, so a model fit w/2001-18 data understates capacity under current law. Ok, that's directionally correct. /10
But even using that indulgent assumption, SF has "modeled" capacity for only about 10k homes, leaving massive shortfall (another 72k-84k units).

And this is where things get real wacky. /11
First, city posits that sites which "met criteria provided by mayor's office" for funding 100% affordable projects have p(dev) = 0.50!
City provides *zero* information about rate at which such sites have been developed in the past. /12
It takes real chutzpah to assert, w/o any evidence or even info about city's financial capacity to acquire these sites, that sites targeted for social housing have vastly higher p(dev) than other sites.

But this "saves" S.F. from rezoning for 8600 more units. /13
Now to the biggest skeletons: the "development pipeline."

City credits itself w/nearly 50,000 units from "housing ... projects that have been proposed or that have already received [planning] approvals but that have not received building permits." /14
What's the basis for these numbers? "[D]iscussion with city agencies working on the [pipeline] projects to assess units likely to be delivered over RHNA period."

That is, "trust us." /15
Notably absent: any analysis of what share of "pipeline" projects from last housing element got developed during the last planning period. (SF's last plan counted ~35,000 "filed or approved" units.) /16
Finally, after all the massaging of numbers, SF concludes that it ought to rezone for ~22,000 more homes, & that for fair-housing reasons, they should be located on west side of city.
Some housing advocates are rejoicing. /17
But: in connection w/ analysis of constraints (more on that later), SF hired consultant for pro-forma analysis of different types of housing projects in different areas...and the consultant concluded that *nothing pencils out on the west side*. /18
On basis of that study, @sfplanning says that w/ current permitting process, impacts fees, exactions, & construction costs, the *only* kind of project that's economically feasible is a 24+ story high-rise in city's highest-demand neighborhoods. /19
Yet SF "plans" to meet its ~22,000 unit shortfall (after hand-waving) by rezoning west-side corridors for 55'-85' projects that per city's own analysis would have *negative* rate of return.

This is a cruel joke. Except it's no joke. /20
Here's the big picture: to meet its 82k unit target, San Francisco must *triple* its typical annual housing production.
Rezoning the west side for 22,000 economically infeasible homes won't cut it. /21
@California_HCD should nix this plan unless SF:
(1) backs up its "pipeline" & "mayor's office" projections w/ public data, &
2) commits to ministerial review + waiver of fees/exactions/standards that render projects economically infeasible until city reaches RHNA target.
/end

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More from @CSElmendorf

Mar 27
Ok, now let's break down @sfplanning's analysis of "constraints" to housing.
Context: this is a required component of city's housing element & it must be accompanied by concrete programs to "mitigate or remove" any identified constraints. /1
However, @California_HCD hasn't offered much substantive guidance about what counts as an actionable or unreasonable constraint.
In last planning period, many cities just summarized their rules & summarily concluded that they had no constraints. /2
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cf…
@sfplanning's analysis of constraints is a curiosity.
On one hand, it reads like a plea for putting SF into land-use receivership. It's full of jibes against Bd of Supes & neighborhood groups. The subtext is, we can't solve our problems; CA must do it for us. /3 ImageImageImage
Read 25 tweets
Feb 24
🧵@California_HCD has found L.A.'s largely exemplary housing plan noncompliant, on ground that it doesn't adequately "affirmatively further fair housing."

I fear this was a big mistake. 1/25
Context: the traditional problem w/ housing element law is that cities relied on fake assumption that every parcel in plan was certain to be developed during planning period. For a target of 1000 units, city would provide parcels whose zoning allowed ~1000 units, ignoring... /2
the fact that most parcels have a tiny probability of development during planning period. (For Bay Area housing element sites from last cycle, Kapur et al. find p(dev) < 0.10.) /3

lewis.ucla.edu/research/what-…
Read 25 tweets
Feb 19
🧵What is "CEQA sprawl," and is there a way to stop it?

tl,dr: It's the transmogrification of an enviro review statute into a NIMBY stop-everything (even education!) statute.

One way to fix it is w/ private right of action against legally excessive CEQA review. 1/16
As enacted in 1970, CEQA established a commonsense requirement for environmental study prior to major public projects w/ serious enviro consequences. /2
It now requires exhaustive, costly, time-consuming studies & serious litigation risk basically anytime anyone proposes to build or permit anything near rich people or or "well trained" interest groups. However benign the project.

Try running a university in Berkeley. /3
Read 17 tweets
Dec 13, 2021
Everyone freaked out by @DLeonhardt's terrifying synopsis of the antidemocratic movement must read @Nedfoley's brilliant new paper making case for round-robin primary elections.

I can't think of a more timely & important law review article. Ever. 1/n

papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cf…
The most hopeful statistic in @DLeonhardt's column is that "only" 60% of Republicans tell pollsters they believe Biden stole his win. Given probs. of acquiescence bias & symbolic response, real share of Repubs who believe this is no doubt much smaller. 2/n
In short, there's still a supermajority within the U.S. electorate that believes in democracy. The problem is how to ensure that this supermajority can defeat anti-democratic candidates. 3/n
Read 14 tweets
Dec 13, 2021
Here are eight questions I'd like San Francisco's Bd of Supervisors to ask before tomorrow night's vote to "paper" the denials of 469 Stevenson & 450-474 O'Farrell projects (~800 homes).
Bd is skating on thin legal ice. It will fall through if there aren't good answers. 1/n
Question No. 1: "Did city provide developer of either project w/ written notice of any general plan or zoning standards the project allegedly violates, & was this notice provided w/in 60 days of date on which project application was determined or deemed complete?" 2/n
State law (HAA) says city may not deny or reduce density of project on basis of zoning / general plan standards unless city provides this timely written notice. Gov't Code 65589.5(j)(2). 3/n
Read 25 tweets
Dec 12, 2021
Just read this terrific paper ⬇️. It's another strong finding on how structure of city gov't -- in this case, separation of powers b/t mayor and city council w.r.t. land use -- affects policy outcomes. 1/4
Most interesting finding in my book is that Dem wins in close mayoral elections have a much larger (positive) effect on number of multifamily housing units permitted over next 2-3 years than on number of MFH projects. 2/4
This is consistent w/ city execs having lots of discretion over project size (variances, CUPs, PUDs, density bonuses), but little discretion over share of city's developable land where multifamily housing is allowed. (The latter is usually set legislatively, through zoning.) 3/4
Read 4 tweets

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