Among key findings, the report highlights policies and practices inconsistent with state housing law, delay caused by the City’s discretionary review processes, and negative impacts from local politics on housing outcomes – all of which have real costs and dire consequences for Californians in need of housing.
In late 2022, the California Department of Housing and Community Development’s (HCD) Housing Accountability Unit (HAU) announced that it would work with the UC Berkeley Institute of Urban and Regional Development and others to analyze San Francisco’s housing approval policies and practices, including discretionary decision-making that creates excessive and costly delays. The resulting Housing Policy and Practice Review includes a comprehensive set of required actions and an implementation plan, with the first steps expected to be taken within the next 30 days.
“San Francisco’s notoriously complex, cumbersome, and unpredictable housing approval process came onto the state’s radar for good reason, as this rigorous HCD investigation and UC Berkeley research bore out,” said HCD Director Gustavo Velasquez. “HCD does much more than name San Francisco’s housing problems with this unprecedented Policy and Practice Review. We name very specific actions to bring the City into compliance with housing law and its own Housing Element, and which will move San Francisco into a new housing era with increased housing supply and affordability. Ultimately, these efforts will help stem the tide of displacement and make it possible for working class families to return to the City.”
The Review lays out a clear path forward for San Francisco in the form of 18 Required Actions with implementation timeframes, and an additional 10 Recommended Actions.
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