Cities loath to accept add-on units
Deirdre Newman
City officials are bemoaning the passage of a bill by the state
legislature that that will severely diminish local control over the
construction of secondary residential units.
The final version of the bill, proposed by Assemblyman Darrell
Steinberg (D-Sacramento), was approved by the Assembly Wednesday and
is now headed to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s desk to be signed.
The bill was designed to create more housing opportunities by
making second units allowable in more single-family residential
areas, overriding cities that don’t allow them in those areas.
City officials adamantly opposed the bill because of this
infringement of local control, City Manager Allan Roeder said.
Officials made repeated efforts to convince legislators to vote
against the measure, and Roeder had taken the unique step of asking
for residents’ help in this cause.
Mayor Gary Monahan lamented that state legislators did not heed
cities’ concerns.
“Cities have a better sense of what’s going on in their
neighborhoods, and we need to be able to have decent control over
that,” Monahan said.
Assemblyman John Campbell, who voted for the bill, said he
supported it for two reasons -- private property rights and
increasing the pool of affordable housing.
“An awful lot of young people will not be able to afford a house
in Orange County,” Campbell said. “If you don’t want to live in an
apartment, one way to get a house is having someone else sharing the
rent with you.”
It is currently up to cities to decide how to regulate secondary
units -- also known as “granny flats” because cities often promote
them as senior housing by restricting the age of the occupants.
Costa Mesa has already revised its second-unit law to comply with
a previous bill and will have to change it again if Schwarzenegger
signs Steinberg’s bill. The city’s law currently only allows second
units in the lowest density, single-family residential zones.
If the bill becomes law, it likely means that Costa Mesa will have
to be much more generous in allowing second units on single-family
lots that are big enough to hold them, Roeder said. It would also
limit cities’ authority over the approval of homeowners’ requests for
second units, Roeder added.
“[The bill] moves much more in the direction of making second
units what we could call more of a matter of right than discretion on
the city level,” Roeder said.
Costa Mesa would also have to adopt the bill’s minimum second-unit
size of at least 600 square feet. The city currently does not have a
minimum size for second units.
City officials are hoping they will have better luck opposing
another bill that has been revived in the state legislature that
would give the courts the ability to override city council decisions
on low-income housing -- representing another intrusion into local
control, Roeder said. While the goal of the two bills -- to create
more housing -- is admirable, the means are unpalatable, Roeder said.
“I think what you’re seeing here is, in part, certainly an
understandable reaction to a very, very serious housing situation we
have throughout the state,” Roeder said. “While we don’t agree with
the specific provisions, I think both of them are aimed at trying to
free up opportunities to build more housing. I think the big
disagreement is in terms of how you do that. We feel that preempting
local regulations is not an answer.”
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