Transcript Slide 1

SCANPH conference
October 1, 2010
Sustainable Communities Strategies 101:
An Introduction to California’s New Planning
Law
Assembly Bill 32: Global Warming
Solutions Act
• Signed in 2006
• Required state Air Resources Board to
adopt a plan that will reduce greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions to 1990 levels by
2020
• Covers all significant contributors of GHG
emissions, including agriculture, industry,
and transportation
SB 375 Overview
SB 375: Achieve a
portion of these
reductions by
reducing the
amount we have to
drive.
SB 375 contents
Four components:
1. GHG reduction target
2. Sustainable communities strategy
3. Housing planning
4. CA Environmental Quality Act (CEQA)
modifications
Component #1: Setting the GHG
reduction target
• Lead agency: California Air Resources
Board (ARB or CARB)
• Goal: “ambitious but achievable”
• Targets adopted at September 23 meeting
SCAG: 2020 = 8%
2035 = 13%
• Can be adjusted every four years
Component #2: Developing the
Sustainable Communities Strategy
• Responsible agencies: Metropolitan Planning
Organizations (MPOs)
• Part of the Regional Transportation Plan (RTP)
• Contents:
– Land use pattern
– Transportation investments
• Must be realistic
Component #2: SCS (cont)
Alternative Planning Strategy (APS):
• Prepared if the region cannot achieve its
target with its reasonably expected
transportation resources and land use pattern
• Shows what’s needed to meet the goal, e.g.
more money for public transit and more
compact homes throughout the region
Component #3: Localities’ Housing
Planning
SB 375: does NOT diminish local land use authority
BUT housing element = de facto implementation of
SCS’s land use pattern
Changes made by 375:
• Housing needs allocated consistent with SCS
development pattern
• Element covers 8-year period and is due 18
months after RTP is adopted
Component #3: Localities’ Housing
Planning (cont)
• Local government accountability
–
–
–
–
Penalty for failing to adopt element
Rezonings
Deadline for other programs
Reporting
• Enforcement
– Builder’s remedy
– Citywide remedy
Component #4: CEQA modifications
• Reduced requirements for residential and
mixed-use development that is consistent
with the SCS
• Exemption for narrowly-defined “transitpriority projects”
• Reduced requirements for broader group
of transit projects
How can SB 375 serve equity goals?
1. Create more rental homes affordable to lower
income Californians
2. Increase investment in affordable transit serving
low-income neighborhoods and communities
3. Improve health outcomes in low income
communities
SB 375 and equity
WON’T WORK WITHOUT AFFORDABLE HOMES
• Less Land = Increase in Land Value =
– Increase in Housing Price > Trans. Savings
– Increase in Displacement/Gentrification Pressures
• Jobs/Housing Balance IS NOT Jobs/Housing Fit
– Wages Often Insufficient
• Fair Housing Impacts
• SB 375 Undercut If Workers Can’t Afford the
Homes
Defining Success in 2011-12
 SCSs that fully accommodate housing needs,
invest trans. $$ to bolster affordable TOD, and
reduce GHGs by placing affordable homes near
job centers and expanded transit.
 Strong housing elements with zoning for
apartments, local trust funds, and other programs
tailored to meet local needs.
 Ongoing, dedicated state investment to increasing
the supply of apartments affordable to lower
income Californians
Winning Strategies
1. Statewide, partner with ARB, HCD, and allies.
 Develop better modeling
 Create “model” social justice scenario
 Publications framing housing’s role
2. Build broad-based regional and local coalitions.
 Influence SCSes
 Shape housing elements
 Follow housing element implementation – litigate if
necessary
3. Pass legislation to create a dedicated funding
source for investment in homes affordable to all
Californians.
Contact information:
Julie Snyder
Policy Director
(916) 447-0503, x102
[email protected]