Bill Text: CA AB1850 | 2021-2022 | Regular Session | Amended
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Public housing: unrestricted multifamily housing.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2022-06-30 - In committee: Set, first hearing. Failed passage. Reconsideration granted. [AB1850 Detail]
Download: California-2021-AB1850-Amended.html
each unit in the development meets all of the following criteria:
Bill Title: Public housing: unrestricted multifamily housing.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2022-06-30 - In committee: Set, first hearing. Failed passage. Reconsideration granted. [AB1850 Detail]
Download: California-2021-AB1850-Amended.html
Amended
IN
Senate
June 06, 2022 |
Amended
IN
Assembly
April 25, 2022 |
Amended
IN
Assembly
March 29, 2022 |
CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE—
2021–2022 REGULAR SESSION
Assembly Bill
No. 1850
Introduced by Assembly Member Ward |
February 08, 2022 |
An act to add Part 2.8 (commencing with Section 18970) to Division 13 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to housing.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
AB 1850, as amended, Ward.
Public housing: unrestricted multifamily housing.
Existing law, the Planning and Zoning Law, requires each county and city to adopt a comprehensive, long-term general plan for the physical development of the county or city, and specified land outside boundaries, that includes, among other mandatory elements, a housing element.
Existing law provides for the establishment of various special districts that may support and finance housing development, including affordable housing special beneficiary districts that are authorized to promote affordable housing development with certain property tax revenues that a city or county would otherwise be entitled to receive.
This bill would prohibit a city, county, city and county, joint powers authority, or any other political subdivision of a state or local government from acquiring unrestricted multifamily
housing, as defined, unless each unit in the development meets specified criteria, including including, among other things, that the aggregate initial rent for all units postconversion is at least 10% less than the average aggregate monthly rent charged for all units over the 12-month period prior to conversion and at least 20% less than the small area fair market rent for at least half of the units. units, and the public entity agrees to make public on its internet website all financial and monitoring reports applicable to the development within 120 days of receipt.
The bill would specify that those provisions do not apply to a development that is or will be subject to a regulatory agreement with the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee or the Department of Housing and Community Development. Development, or is located in a flood plain or sea level rise vulnerability zone, as specified.
The bill would include findings that changes proposed by this bill address a matter of statewide concern rather than a municipal affair and, therefore, apply to all cities, including charter cities.
Digest Key
Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NO Local Program: NOBill Text
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
SECTION 1.
Part 2.8 (commencing with Section 18970) is added to Division 13 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:PART 2.8. UNRESTRICTED MULTIFAMILY HOUSING
18970.
(a) A public entity shall not acquire unrestricted multifamily housing unless(1) (A) The unit Each unit, exclusive of manager units, is subject to a long-term recorded regulatory agreement with a public entity that requires the unit to be affordable to, and occupied by, low- or moderate-income persons and families for a term of 55 years.
(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), all existing households whose income at the time of acquisition, regardless of income, acquisition exceeds the income limit for moderate-income households shall be allowed to remain in residency.
residency and such units may be rented at market rents until turnover to a new household.
(C) For purposes of this paragraph, rent limits shall be consistent with rent limits published by the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee, extrapolated from the 100 percent area median income rent for any income levels not directly stated by the committee.
(2) (A) The aggregate initial monthly rents for all units postconversion are at least 10 percent less than the average aggregate monthly rent charged for all units over the 12-month period prior to conversion and the conversion.
This subparagraph shall not apply if the unrestricted multifamily housing prior to conversion is subject to a local ordinance or charter that controls or establishes a system of controls on the price at which residential rental units may be offered for rent or lease, provided that increases in rents upon vacancy do not exceed the limits of subparagraph (C).
(B) The initial rents for at least 50 percent of the units are at least 20 percent less than the small area fair market rent, as determined by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, for the ZIP Code in which the
development is located and the number of bedrooms in the unit.
(B)
(C) Increases to the initial rents postconversion shall be limited per year to the lesser of the annual increase in the area median income for the county, as determined by the Department of Housing and Community Development, or 3 percent.
(C)
(D) Notwithstanding subparagraphs (A) and (B), (A), (B), and (C), a project owner may shift rent restrictions on units within a given property so long as the overall distribution of regulated rents remain the same.
(E) All rent limits referenced in this section shall include an allowance for utilities consistent with Tax Credit Allocation Committee regulations.
(3) The Each unit
is in decent, safe, and sanitary condition at the time of occupancy following the conversion.
(4) The Each unit was not acquired by eminent domain as part of the conversion.
(5) The public entity, if not a city or county, shall contract with the city in which the property is located, or the county for a property in an unincorporated area, monitors
or a state housing entity to monitor the property for compliance with the regulatory agreement for the term of the regulatory agreement agreement. If a city or county is the contracted monitor, the city or county shall monitor the development in a manner consistent with the monitoring standards and protocols of the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee. The city or county may charge a fee for this purpose and may contract with a state entity or another city or county for this purpose.
(6)The projected income from the property is adequate to repay all debt over a period not to exceed 35 years.
(6) The first year net operating income, based on postconversion rents, is adequate to repay all debt, except public soft debt, amortized on a level debt service basis over a period not to exceed 40 years. For purposes of this paragraph, “public soft debt” means debt provided by a public entity or the federal government for which all principal and interest payments, excluding residual receipts payments and interest payments not to exceed 0.42 percent per year to cover monitoring costs, are deferred for a term of at least 55 years and for which the simple interest rate does exceed the applicable federal rate published by the Internal Revenue Service or 3 percent, whichever is greater.
(7) Except as provided in subdivision (b), a public entity shall approve all debt on the property and hold an assignable right to purchase the
development, any interest in the development, or any interest in a partnership that owns the development for a price that does not exceed the principal amount of outstanding indebtedness secured by the building and all federal, state, and local taxes attributable to that sale.
building.
(8) The public entity agrees to give priority in leasing of units to applicants with housing choice vouchers.
(9) The public entity agrees to comply with the standards and procedures for basic applicant and tenant rights, including good cause eviction, tenant selection, and leases, required pursuant to the Department of Housing and Community Development’s uniform multifamily regulations (Subchapter 19 (commencing with Section 8300) of Chapter 7 of Division 1 of Title 25 of the California Code of Regulations) or successor regulations, and such selection standards shall additionally be demonstrably related to an applicant’s ability to
perform the obligations of an affordable housing tenancy. For purposes of this subparagraph, good cause to evict shall be required during the lease and at the end of a lease term, and good cause shall not exist solely where a tenant was qualified at initial occupancy and their income subsequently exceeds the applicable income limitation or due to an incident of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking against a tenant or criminal activity directly related to the domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking committed against a tenant.
(10) (A) No public entity levies a fee or other charge to the development except as follows:
(i) The city in which the property is located, or the county for a property in an unincorporated area, may charge a fee not to exceed fifty dollars ($50) per unit per year to offset specific costs solely attributable to the contracted monitoring services required by paragraph (5).
(ii) The public entity issuing bonds to acquire the property may charge a one-time administrative fee no greater than 0.5 percent of the acquisition price, not to exceed five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000), and annual fees not to exceed the costs solely attributable to the monitoring requirements of paragraph (5) plus 5 percent of those monitoring costs.
(B) The dollar amounts listed in this paragraph shall be adjusted for annual changes in the consumer price index.
(11) (A) Compensation to third-party project administrators shall not exceed the following:
(i) A fee at the time of acquisition no greater than 1 percent of the acquisition price or two million five hundred thousand dollars ($2,500,000), whichever is less.
(ii) An annual fee no greater than one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). These payments shall terminate in the event of termination of a third-party as project administrator.
(iii) Payments from one or more subordinate cash flow bonds that in aggregate shall not exceed 2 percent of the acquisition price or
five million dollars ($5,000,000), whichever is less, with an interest rate not to exceed the blended, weighted interest rate on the development’s nonsubordinate debt. These payments shall terminate or be transferred to a new project administrator in the event of termination of a third-party as project administrator.
(B) The dollar amounts listed in this paragraph shall be adjusted for annual changes in the consumer price index.
(12) A third-party project administrator is required to reimburse tenants for overpayments and is subject to a penalty of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) per unit for any year in which the rents charged are not in compliance with paragraphs (1) and (2) and the terms of the regulatory agreement, payable to the city in which the property is located, or the county for a property in an unincorporated area.
(13) The public entity and city in which the property is located, or the county for a property in an unincorporated area, agree to utilize all annual cash flow, sale proceeds, and penalty payments solely for one of the following purposes:
(A) The development of housing affordable to and occupied by lower-income persons and families, including deposit into a regional or local housing trust fund or a Low and Moderate Income Housing Asset Fund described in Section 34176.
(B) To distribute to all property taxing entities in proportion to each entity’s share of property taxes that would apply to the parcel or parcels if the property were subject to taxation.
(14) The public entity agrees to make public on its internet website all financial and monitoring reports
applicable to the development within 120 days of receipt.
(15) The requirements of this section shall be included in the property’s regulatory agreement and made expressly enforceable by tenants, eligible applicants, the city in which the property is located, or the county for a property in an unincorporated area, or a state housing entity.
(b) This section shall not apply to
in either of the following cases:
(1) When a development that is or will be subject to a regulatory agreement with the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee or the Department of Housing and Community Development.
(2) When a public entity purchases unrestricted multifamily housing that is either located within the local jurisdiction’s flood plain zone, or is located within the local jurisdiction’s sea level rise vulnerability zone line, the public entity has determined that the property faces related environmental hazards such as flooding, emergent groundwater, or liquefaction, and the public entity removes the
existing structure from the housing market.
(c) For the purposes of this section:
(1) “Consumer price index” means the last Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers published by the United States Department of Labor.
(1)
(2) “Public entity” shall mean a city, county, city and county, joint powers authority, or any other political subdivision of a state or local
government.
(2)
(3) “Unrestricted multifamily housing” shall mean a development consisting of five or more residential units that is not subject to a deed restriction limiting rents or the incomes of occupants.
(d) The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring housing, especially publicly owned housing, is affordable and safe is a matter of statewide concern and is not a municipal affair as that term is used in Section 5 of Article XI of the California Constitution. Therefore, this section applies to all cities,
including charter cities.