What do you think about the Measure M?
The initiative would do two things:
1. Require that any City proposal to increase building heights above current General Plan limits be approved by a vote of the people. (This would require a vote of the people on the City Council’s proposed General Plan amendment to allow 12 story buildings in the South of Laurel area of Downtown)
2. Require a minimum 25% affordable units in all new developments of 30 units or more. (current requirement is 20%)
How is this initiative related to sustainable transportation? Well, CFST’s mission includes supporting housing affordability. Frequent transit depends on increasing density near transit corridors. Yet San Francisco has high density and good transit in neighborhoods of two and three stories. I wonder, do we need 12 story buildings to reach our state mandated goals for affordable housing? The FAQ on the Housing For People Initiative website responds that existing zoning allows for 8,364 units, far more than the 3,736 units that the State requires Santa Cruz to build by 2031. I also wonder about how living in tall buildings affects the sense of community in the neighborhood.
Response 1
I hope the Campaign for Sustainable Transportation opposes this measure. We DO need more places with more height allowed in order to meet housing needs. While this is being opposed, nearly anywhere else in the city will be opposed even more, as you probably well know. I’d love to see this many more people living downtown. And even in SF, 25% inclusionary stopped nearly all housing development. (That said, I’ve always said we could get a higher inclusionary rate to work like that here IF we pulled back on the very high rate of special taxation of all new housing development that prioritizes so many other topics over affordability in our housing development requirements, but the city isn’t remotely close to doing that).
Thanks!
Response 2
Note that the city of Barcelona has a population density about 11x that of Santa Cruz. In its highest-density neighborhood (Eixample) with a population density about 30x that of Santa Cruz, the height limit is 5 stories or 20 meters. Density does not require tall buildings.
There are many issues confronting our city and the so-called Housing for People initiative only addresses a tiny subset. However, I think it’s a good step, and if it passes would re-assert the capacity of voters to have a say in city land use policy.
Response 3
My concern is not the rare possibility of 12 story luxury condos but the very low density zoning in many very urban, walkable, pricey residential neighborhoods. These days in order to avoid losing good light industrial jobs and the last remaining local businesses, people are urging new infill housing not in existing commercial and industrial zones but directly in the most “HIGH RESOURCE” residential neighborhoods. I noticed someone at the conference brought this up but the panelists never responded. So therefore I am concerned that this initiative would block the city from doing the right thing if they were to allow medium density housing in the exclusive inner walkable neighborhoods (which are all currently low density and exclusionary). I feel that, while not politically very feasible, the only way to make a real dent in inequality and outrageous rents is not building a few very high cost affordable units, but to implement across the board policies and taxes that have been done in other countries: hefty house flipping tax, vacancy tax, and second home tax, plus strong rent control, and ban on all corporate as well as foreign ownership of houses. I know it sounds radical but I just haven’t seen anything else actually make a difference!
Response 4
Response 5
Response 6
Response 7
Response 8
Response 9
Saying the new residents won’t have cars and will take transit is an unsubstantiated fantasy- in my view !
See also my guest opinion in Lookout Santa Cruz. -Rick
I would like to see a hydrogen-fueled-electric TIG/m double-decker tram go from the clock tower to the boardwalk on Pacific Ave, or from Harvey West Park to the Boardwalk.
She’d be my first pick.