SB 9 will be heard in the CA Senate Housing Committee on Thursday morning 4/15 at a meeting to start at 10:30

SB 9 will be heard in the CA Senate Housing Committee on Thursday morning 4/15 at a meeting to start at 10:30

SB 9 will be heard in the CA Senate Housing Committee on Thursday morning, 4/15 at a meeting to start at 10:30 (or when the earlier full Senate meeting adjourns). The call-in info to testify at the hearing is as follows: 

1-877-226-8152, access code: 9992257

From the Senate’s info page:  Telephonic participation in committees is available during hearings by calling in during the public comment period. You can dial the phone number provided by the Chair of the committee at the time of the hearing or find the number posted on the committee website.   (I have posted that info above.)  As is our normal practice, public comment will be accepted at the conclusion of each bill presentation.

To watch the livestream of the proceeding visit: www.senate.ca.gov

To listen only, but not testify, for this hearing in the Senate Chamber, please dial 1-888-251-2909 and use Access Code 7362831.

Teleconference Quick Tips

  1. Call the toll free number and enter the access code:  Dial:  1-877-226-8152  Enter access code: 9992257
  2. You will enter the ‘waiting room’ where you can listen but will be muted
  3. Mute the device you are watching the hearing on
  4. Listen to the hearing using the phone.  You are listening for a VOICE that prompts you for your position on the various bills.  It will ask if you SUPPORT a bill.  If yes, you must dial 1-0 immediately which places you in the “support” queue. 
    Later, the VOICE will prompt you, asking if you OPPOSE a bill.  YES — so dial 1-0 right away, to be placed in the “OPPOSE” queue.
  5. Be patient.  At some point a live operator will enter the call and quickly assign you a LINE NUMBER.  The operator speaks quickly so be prepared to WRITE down the LINE NUMBER.  You must have it to speak.  You must listen carefully for you won’t know when the operator will come on the line to assign your LINE NUMBER.  There can be a short wait.
  6. Once you receive your line number, you are now in the queue
  7. Wait in the queue, the moderator will call your line number and unmute you. 
  8. You are now ready to address the committee. Start talking.  Don’t let them hang up on you.  Quickly state your name, group, and why you SUPPORT or OPPOSE the bill.

For further detailed instructions on using the teleconference service, please visit the committee webpage www.senate.ca.gov/committees


The Housing Committee agenda includes the following bills:
MEASURES HEARD IN FILE ORDER
Measure:     Author      Summary          Livable CA position in italics

S.B.No. 9    Atkins.          Housing development: approvals.  Ends single-family zoning, and is nearly identical to SB 1120, the false “duplex” bill misreported by most media outlets in 2020                                       Strongly Oppose.
S.B.No. 581 Atkins.         General plan. S.B.No. 392 Archuleta.    Common interest developments: document delivery. S.B.No. 621 Eggman.      Conversion of motels and hotels: streamlining. S.B.No. 679 Kamlager.    Los Angeles County: housing development: financing. S.B.No. 678 Rubio.          Unaccompanied Women Experiencing Homelessness Act of 2021. S.B.No. 765 Stern.           Accessory dwelling units: setbacks.Current Accessory Dwelling Unit (granny flat) law forces cities to let developers build to within 4 feet of a neighbor. This bill leaves the setback  
                                           distance up to the cities, as it should be. Strongly Support.
S.B.No. 490 Caballero.    Housing acquisition and rehabilitation: technical assistance.
S.B.No. 649 Cortese.       Local governments: affordable housing: local tenant preference. S.B.No. 432 Wieckowski. Common interest developments.
S.B.No. 234 Wiener.        Transition Aged Youth Housing Program.

*************************************************************************************************************************************************************************
SB 9 one of this session’s VERY bad bills.  Per Livable CA summary:
SB 9 Ends single-family zoning, and is nearly identical to SB 1120, the false “duplex” bill misreported by most media outlets in 2020. The facts: where 1 house now sits, developers can build at least 6 units, not 2 or 4 units (See detailed Fact Sheet). On March 26, 2021, barraged with criticism, Atkins wrote to the San Diego Union-Tribune vowing to rewrite SB 9 to reduce its density to 4 units where 1 house stands now. Yet her new language instead allows 6 units. SB 9 is an unprecedented experiment that invites speculators and big investors to disrupt homeownership and harm the stability of 21M Californians. It’s wrong. Strongly Oppose.

From Livable CA fact sheet https://www.livablecalifornia.org/sb-9-fact-sheet-2-9-21/)

SB 9 Fact Sheet 2/9/21 – Livable California The statement that California needs 3.5 million housing units has fueled panic in the legislature and resulted in proposing bad housing bills like SB 1120. The 3.5 million figure is totally wrong. www.livablecalifornia.org

SB 9 lets developers choose from 3 upzoning scenarios, without public hearing or public review:

● 4 stand-alone houses or 2 duplexes where 1 home stands now;

● 6 units, a mix of houses, duplexes and granny flats, where 1 home stands now;

● 8 units, a mix of houses, duplexes and granny flats unless a city rejects that plan

How can this possibly fit on a lot?

● SB 9 works hand-in-hand with existing ADU law, or Accessory Dwelling Unit law, to quickly multiply upward from a simple “duplex” to 6 units, and even 8 units;

● No garage required, just 1 parking “space” per unit, to squeeze in extreme density;

● No parking required within ½ mile of major transit, or in a designated historic district, or when the Accessory Dwelling Unit is part of another building;

● No yard required, just 4-foot setbacks, crowding up against neighbors;

● SB 9 allows speculators to create this density on lots as small as 1,200 sq. feet;

Whether poor, working-class or well-off, from South L.A. to Santa Barbara to Oakland, homeowners would lose all say over the zoning of the street they put their savings into.

Top scholars agree that such state-ordered upzoning will drive land costs very high, and in turn housing costs will spiral upward, not down.

Please see below if you wish to understand the complex “Three Scenarios” mechanisms of SB 9, missed even by the League of Cities, and missed by California’s largest media outlets* in 2020 when this bill was titled SB 1120 — and died on the Assembly floor.

______________________________________________________

SB 9’s Three Scenarios

Analysis by Livable California Volunteer Attorneys and Urban Planners Lead author: Retired attorney Nick Waranoff

December 2020

SB 9 would allow 8 units where there is now one lot (one parcel). A city, however, would not be required to approve more than 6 units. Here is how this would happen:

1. SB 9 would add Govt Code section 65852.21 (allowing 2 units on a single parcel in a single-family residential zone [the so-called “duplex” provision, but in reality a “two residential units” provision]) and Govt Code 66411.7 (the lot-split provision).

     a.) The two residential units on one parcel provision authorizes two residential units on a single lot in a single-family residential zone.

     b.) The lot-split provision authorizes a single lot to be split into two lots of equal size.

     c.) An application to do either or both of these is processed ministerially, by right.

     d.) There is no requirement for affordable housing and no CEQA review.

2. Under existing law, there is also a right to one Accessory Dwelling Unit and one Junior Accessory Dwelling Unit per parcel (Govt Code 65852.2).

     a.) An Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) can be attached, or detached from an existing home, or a conversion of an existing space such as a garage. A local agency is prohibited from establishing a maximum size of an ADU of less than 850 square feet, or 1,000 square feet if the ADU contains more than one bedroom. When ADUs are created through the conversion of a garage, carport or covered parking structure, replacement off-street parking spaces cannot be required by the local agency (Gov. Code 65852.2, subd. (a)(1)(D)(xi)).

     b.) A Junior Accessory Dwelling Unit (JADU) can be created within the walls of a proposed or existing single-family residence or garage and shall contain no more than 500 square feet.

     c.) A local agency can limit the places within its jurisdiction where ADUs can be located, only based on the adequacy of water and sewer service, and the impacts on traffic flow and public safety, if the agency chooses to pass an ordinance.

     d.) “Although cities and counties are mandated to permit ADUs and JADUs, they are not required to adopt ADU and JADU ordinances. However, any city/county that does adopt an ADU ordinance, must submit the ordinance to HCD [California Dept. of Housing and Community Development] within 60 days.”

     e.) There is no requirement that an ADU or a JADU be limited to affordable housing.

3. Under SB 9, three allowed densities, of 4 units to 8 units would be allowed on what is one lot today. The three scenarios are:

     a.) Scenario One (4-unit density): The “two residential units” provision of SB 9 (sometimes mistakenly called the “duplex” provision, but not limited to “duplexes”) is invoked but not the lot-split provision: The single lot can now have two free-standing houses, two townhouses, or a duplex. There is no requirement as to whether the two residential units be a “duplex,” or attached to each other, or free-standing. In addition, an ADU and a JADU are allowed as of right on the parcel. Total 4 units: “Two residential units” plus an ADU and a JADU on a single lot.

     b.) Scenario Two (6-unit density): The lot-split provision of SB 9 is invoked, but not the “two residential units” provision allowed on each of the two new lots. One lot becomes two lots. Each lot can have one free-standing house or townhouse, PLUS an ADU and a JADU. Total 6 units: “Two residential units” plus two ADUs and two JADUs, on a single lot that has been halved into two lots.

     c.) Scenario Three (8-unit density): Both the lot-split provision and the “two residential units” provision are invoked. One lot becomes two lots. Each lot can have two free-standing houses or townhouses, PLUS each lot is entitled to an ADU and a JADU. Total 8 units: Four “residential units” plus two ADUs and two JADUs, on a single lot that has been halved into two lots.

     Note regarding Scenario Three:

Under SB 9, a city is not required to approve an ADU or a JADU where both the lot-split provision and “two residential units” provision are invoked. So a city could limit the eight-unit scenario to four housing units on what was formerly one parcel (one lot). See proposed section 65852.21(e), part of the “two residential units” provision, that would provide, “Notwithstanding Section 65852.2 [the existing ADU law referenced above], a local agency shall not be required to permit an accessory dwelling unit on parcels that use both the authority contained within this section [the two residential units section] and the authority contained in Section 66411.7 [the lot-split section]” and proposed section 66411.7(h), part of the proposed split-lot section, that would provide, “Notwithstanding Section 65852.2 [the existing ADU law], a local agency shall not be required to permit an accessory dwelling unit on parcels that use both the authority contained within this section and the authority contained in Section 65852.21 [the two residential units section].

*The Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, San Diego Union-Tribune, Cal Matters, and other media did not understand the fine print in SB 1120 before publishing “duplex” stories in 2020 that dramatically downplayed this radical experiment, underway nowhere in the U.S.********************************************************************************************************************************************************************************
YOU CAN VISIT THE LIVABLE CALIFORNIA WEBSITE FOR MORE INFO ON THE BILLS, SAMPLE LETTERS WITH MORE DETAILS, AND FOR ADDITIONAL CALL-IN INSTRUCTIONS.  Go to:

https://www.livablecalifornia.org/act-to-oppose-sb-9-and-sb-10/?emci=80b9e68b-3c9d-eb11-85aa-0050f237abef&emdi=929e9e18-649d-eb11-85aa-0050f237abef&ceid=2907861

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