Gimme Shelter: How California’s new parking law could lower housing costs

In L.A. it costs $750,000 to build an affordable housing unit.  In San Fran the cost is $1.2 million.  Newsom has figured a way to make it a little less expensive—though in the long run very inconvenient.

“The new law in question does away with certain parking minimums — a frequent demand from local governments when approving a new restaurant or apartment building. Researchers have long argued these mandates add prohibitive costs to development — and stretch out cities, making driving a necessity.

Take affordable housing as an example. A single structured parking spot added nearly $36,000 to the cost of each housing unit funded by state tax credits over the past decade, according to a study last year from the Terner Center at UC Berkeley. Supporters argue the new law could eventually translate to more affordable units or, in the case of market rate housing, cheaper rents.”

Imagine a poor person living in a stack and pack slum needing to get to work, church see family or go to the grocery store.  They will depend on the dirty, disease ridden, dangerous, unreliable government transportation.  The good news is that the drug dealers will come to them.  This is a disaster in the making, with tax dollars.

Gimme Shelter: How California’s new parking law could lower housing costs

BY MANUELA TOBIAS, Calmatters,   10/7/22   

IN SUMMARY

A new state law unravels decades of parking rules in California cities. On this episode of “Gimme Shelter: The California Housing Crisis Podcast” CalMatters’ Manuela Tobias and The Los Angeles’ Times’ Liam Dillon explain how that could trim housing costs.

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed dozens of housing bills into law this year, but one of the most popular among housing experts had little to do with homes for people and a lot to do with homes for cars.

The new law in question does away with certain parking minimums — a frequent demand from local governments when approving a new restaurant or apartment building. Researchers have long argued these mandates add prohibitive costs to development — and stretch out cities, making driving a necessity.

Take affordable housing as an example. A single structured parking spot added nearly $36,000 to the cost of each housing unit funded by state tax credits over the past decade, according to a study last year from the Terner Center at UC Berkeley. Supporters argue the new law could eventually translate to more affordable units or, in the case of market rate housing, cheaper rents.

Change won’t arrive overnight. The law, penned by Assemblymember Laura Friedman, a Democrat from Burbank, kicks in on Jan. 1, 2023 and only applies to projects within half a mile from a major transit stop. And catering to demand, many developers will likely still opt in to build parking. But the law could inch California closer to meet both its housing and climate goals, its supporters argue.

One of its loudest cheerleaders is Donald Shoup, an urban planning professor at UCLA who has dedicated his career to making the case for the high cost of free parking, and developed a cult following along the way. Shoup joins CalMatters’ Manuela Tobias and The Los Angeles Times’ Liam Dillon on Gimme Shelter this week to break down the potential impacts of the new state law.