California Coastal Cities' Housing Plan: Build Elsewhere
Republican-controlled Huntington Beach has sued the state government to stop enforcement of state housing mandates.

One of the more entertaining aspects of the state's battle to open up housing development to reduce California's housing shortage is the degree to which it has united officials in liberal coastal cities with those in conservative ones. Although Left and Right typically use different rhetoric to evade new housing bills, they are strangely aligned in their ultimate quest to block permissive new construction laws.
Republican-controlled Huntington Beach, which has sued the state government to stop enforcement of state housing mandates (and was sued first by the state for its failure to process "by right" duplex approvals under Senate Bill 9), has championed the "local control" argument and stoked NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) fears about turning this suburban city into an urban hell-scape.
In a column, GOP Mayor Tony Strickland vowed the city will never be "rubber stamps for Gavin Newsom's vision of turning every community in California into his failed experiment of San Francisco, America's worst city, whose decline began on Newsom's watch as mayor there." Strickland lives in an "affordable-housing" unit and presumably his neighborhood has yet to turn into the Tenderloin.
In lefty near-coastal Beverly Hills, Councilman John Mirisch is raising a different specter—that pro-housing advocates are following the model of Texas, which has usurped local control on social issues including gun regulation. Mirisch also complains about corporate profits, the "urban growth machine" and the evils of "deregulation," but arrives at the same place as Strickland in opposing freer housing markets. Strange bedfellows.
Now, other coastal NIMBYs—who claim to stand up for principle, but seem allergic to newcomers moving into their cities—have something new to get agitated about. Senate Bill 423 is still alive in the California Legislature. It would extend the provisions of a landmark 2017 law, Senate Bill 35, which authorized a "streamlined, ministerial approval process" for multi-family projects in cities that aren't meeting their state housing mandates.
That law sunsets in 2026, but S.B. 423 would extend it for another decade. What's really got the no-growth cities upset is one short line in the bill language: "Strikes out S.B. 35's exclusion of the coastal zone." Existing law requires projects to still gain approval from the slow-growth California Coastal Commission. That would end and developers would no longer have to endure that excruciating process. Amendments that exempt additional coastal properties have resulted in the commission removing its opposition to the bill.
Why is this important? S.B. 35 had a measurable impact on the construction of affordable housing projects. "Between 2018 and 2021, developers proposed about 18,000 housing units statewide under S.B. 35—including about 13,000 low-income units, according to preliminary data from UC Berkeley's Terner Center for Housing Innovation. Of those, more than 11,000 qualified for streamlining under the law," The Mercury News reported.
Another significant provision of S.B. 423: it expands the streamlining to market-rate projects. That might not create many additional units given that, as Reason's Christian Britschgi has noted, pro-union prevailing-wage laws make it costly to build these projects without subsidies. Still, it's important to expand deregulation beyond subsidized projects. If the government stops stifling construction and imposing overly burdensome and arbitrary regulations, the market will rise to the occasion, boost supply, and open up housing at all price points.
Developers should be free to build more of everything—from single-family houses to apartments—without subjective approval (while following zoning rules, as the bill requires). Few current residents want more congestion, and yet-to-be new residents don't get a say, so the local default position often is "no". Councils often force developers to reduce the number of units when they do OK a project. And California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) lawsuits derail or delay projects.
The bill's opponents continue to throw contradictory arguments at the wall. In their letter of opposition to S.B. 423, some coastal city officials in San Diego County argued: "The fabric of our coastal communities will be forever changed. And for what? SB 423 will encourage higher density and perpetuate gentrification with little to no affordability."
The letter adds that rents for one-bedroom apartments in North San Diego County start at $5,750 a month and new multi-family homes are selling for nearly $3 million. It's true many newer units are pricey, but adding supply—including the construction of the rent-restricted units this bill encourages—is the best way to moderate pricing. More supply is the solution. Protecting a community's "fabric" is pabulum—and it locks in the current situation.
Environmental groups are complaining, also. They pay lip service to the need for more housing construction—but like the coastal cities apparently want it built anywhere else. That's the bottom line. The state has been underbuilding housing for years, which has led to eye-popping prices, especially in sought-after coastal cities. The answer is to build more. Sorry, but building it in someone else's backyard is no longer an option.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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“‘In a column, GOP Mayor Tony Strickland vowed the city will never be “rubber stamps for Gavin Newsom’s vision of turning every community in California into his failed experiment of San Francisco, America’s worst city, whose decline began on Newsom’s watch as mayor there.” Strickland lives in an “affordable-housing” unit and presumably his neighborhood has yet to turn into the Tenderloin.”‘
Not saying it hasn’t gotten much, much worse, but I remember my step-dad, a San Fran Native, and my mom, a San Fran Fan of the first order, describing the Tenderloin as a place one should never be, a half-century go.
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Libertarian wet dream - row upon row of $5,750 apartments - each housing 15 people, 11 of whom are illegal aliens, and with five cars out front.
That’s the wet dream of Koch-financed faux libertarians at Reason.
Actual libertarians respect and favor subsidiarity.
Don't forget the granny flat in the backyard, housing another family, helping the local economy grow.
F'En RINOS..... Giving the party a bad name because they can't stay principled in the platform - LIMITED government.
There is nothing “limited” or “libertarian” about state government telling local governments what to do.
There is when they're telling local government to LIMIT their governing.
No, it is not. There are various degrees of libertarianism, from full minarchy to a classically liberal government. In all those cases, subsidiarity trumps pretty much all other principles.
If you are against subsidiarity, you are a statist who wants to see centralized authoritarianism.
Subsidiarity is best served in a neighborhood HOA.
Yes, it is best served with an HOA. But it is second-best served by local government, and that’s the only option we have in many places. Subsidiarity is not served at all by state government overriding local government.
In fact, when only land owners could vote, the distinction between an HOA and local government was even weaker.
There is no subsidiarity in CA with Prop 13.
A real libertarian would throw the ring of power into the volcano, not wield it to enforce liberty.
To ensure (not enforce) Liberty and Justice for all.
I just don't think Libertarian = Anarchy.
>>the degree to which it has united officials in liberal coastal cities with those in conservative ones.
rich people with coastal housing are rich people with coastal housing.
There is nothing strange about it.
Local control of housing and zoning is a question of liberty and subsidiarity. That’s why conservatives support it.
And every rich “liberal” becomes a conservative once their own interests are at stake.
The only “strange” thing is when Reason advocates against subsidiarity; but that too is easily explained: Reason writers aren’t affected by such laws, so the behave like rich liberals vis-a-vis parts of the country they will never, and can never hope to, live in. Reason writers advocate against subsidiarity either out of ignorance or out of envy and a desire to destroy.
...and here I thought the conservative supported private property ownership. If they want control of their entire neighborhood they can either join a HOA or buy it all. I see no justice in allowing people to simply vote away other people's property rights.
No offense, but if I bought a property with significant restrictions on it, and I paid a certain price, I don't get to suddenly remove all of those restrictions and make it significantly more valuable.
Likewise, if I had to, say, buy a shitload of expensive land to build a house because it was a single family, acre minimum neighborhood, I'm going to be pretty pissed if someone's allowed to build an apartment building next door when my land was only allowed a single home.
The absolute ideals are wonderful, but you're fucking the people who had to play by the old rules over. Hard. Are you going to compensate them? Or is it just FYTW when you force them to pay way more for land they get to do less on than the big money developer, who would have had to pay way more for the land per unit without the power of the state to strip the old restrictions?
This is the same reason socialist security won't go away. Yet it will go broke instead because the 'savings' have already been stolen and they were allowed to be stolen in the first place because the same entity in-charge of justice was stealing it.
Crony Socialism is all about taking the justice out of it to allow for stealing. Don't kid yourself; Government controlled housing is of the same corrupt system. Consider if you'd bought your house under an HOA contract. You'd know how/when restrictions would change. You'd have a MUCH STRONGER vote/influence in the VERY LOCAL community standards. And when you were displeased with the outcome; you could turn to the justice system with a completely unbiased entity in the process to justice with a written contract as evidence. It is a far better system than one zoning commissioner (over-lord) calling all the shots with his/her 'in-crowd' (gov) influence who has no-skin in it personally and the entire unrelated community most of which has no skin in the game either.
I'd suggest legislation of exiting this polluted gov-zoning to allow pass-off to HOA's in each of the current zone standards. That would allow grandfathered standards without over-lords. And if the HOA (your specific neighbors) allow duplexes that's just something you'll have to deal with because you didn't BUY enough shares/lots in the HOA.
As should socialist security be privatized and any 'savings' not already stolen be grandfathered out to privatization.
Zoning and code restrictions are usually pre-existing when people buy property; property rights require those preexisting restrictions to be honored just like any other easement or CCR.
For state government to intervene in order to take away restrictions that people agreed to during purchase is unacceptable in a free society. This is not the state government’s business.
And let’s not kid ourselves about the motivations: progressives aren’t doing this because they want to protect anybody’s rights, they are doing this to open up development in upper middle class neighborhoods and destroy them.
And simply creating a privatized HOA would eliminate that. I see the problem itself being governed zoning. The very curse that provided the means to the curse you speak of. If governments only purpose was to ensure Liberty and Justice the government would be upholding that privatized contract instead of over-lording however they want to.
If you love trains, you need to put some high density housing projects in these outdated suburban towns, so more progressive activists, I mean low income essential workers, can live in nice places and commute to their protests, I mean jobs, without clogging up the freeways.
Is total deregulation too much to ask?
'Fraid so. It's California, after all.
"One of the more entertaining aspects of the state's battle to open up housing development to reduce California's housing shortage is the degree to which it has united officials in liberal coastal cities with those in conservative ones."
One thing about Libertarians is that they are like everyone else. Lie when it suits their purposes. The State law is applying Accounting Control Fraud to the entire state. Since California has no housing shortage and in fact has a glut of vacant housing, the state law is based on an intentional fraud.
For some reason, Libertarians believe that lies are sacrosanct, and anyone, who has enough power, may lie, cheat and steal all he wants because there is nothing more holy than the strong victimizing the weak.
has a glut of vacant housing
Cite?
I'd love to see the data that back this claim.
"The state has been underbuilding housing for years"
Underbuilding relative to WHAT?
And who says so, anyway? If a state wants to discourage (housing) development, why couldn't/shouldn't it, anyway? There ARE other states, y'know.
The only housing the state builds is prisons. The main reason housing is limited in California is that there are so many laws dictating the rules for housing developments, with lengthy and expensive approval processes, affordable housing set-aside mandates, union labor prevailing wage clauses, etc.
Why should a city be forced to submit to state-wide housing mandates? People bought houses in that city when the rules were understood to be set locally, and the people buying there were fine with it. Now someone in Sacramento wants to change the character of their town, and that's considered more freedom?
So setup an HOA and "rules" will be "understood to be set locally"...
The government doesn't need to be doing everything for everyone.
"Gavin Newsom's vision of turning every community in California into his failed experiment of San Francisco, America's worst city, whose decline began on Newsom's watch as mayor there."
Newsom is taking it country wide soon.