Live in a single-family home? This Bay Area company wants to give you $100,000 for the yard space you’re not using

Live in a single-family home? This Bay Area company wants to give you $100,000 for the yard space you’re not using

By KATE TALERICO
April 5, 2024

In recent years, California lawmakers have approved a flurry of legislation aimed at increasing the housing supply and addressing the state’s decades-in-the-making housing crisis. Senate Bill 9, passed in 2021, is one such change: it allows single-family homeowners around the state to split their lots in two, and build two homes on each lot. An analysis by the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at UC Berkeley estimated that the new law could result in 700,000 new homes.

Live in a single-family home? This Bay Area company wants to give you $100,000 for the yard space you’re not using

A wealthy Peninsula town is dragging its feet on building housing, state says. Now, it faces consequences.

By KATE TALERICO
April 2, 2024

The town is the first to have its housing element decertified by the state, which means it loses out on key state infrastructure funds. Wealthy Portola Valley earlier this year became one of the first towns in San Mateo County to receive state approval for its plan to build more housing.
Department says that plan isn’t worth anything if the city isn’t following through on it — and, as it turns out, Portola Valley isn’t.

California’s most controversial housing law could get a makeover

California’s most controversial housing law could get a makeover

by CalMatters
April 2, 2024 11:00 am

For the last two years the “builder’s remedy” has been the unruly teenager of California housing laws.
Now, some of California’s most powerful Democratic lawmakers are pushing legislation that would clear up, but also rein in, the state’s most controversial housing statute. Nearly a year and a half since a developer first used the law to propose a zoning-code-blowing project, 2024 may be the year that the builder’s remedy grows up.

Californians’ home insurance is being dropped due to ‘density.’ What does that mean?

Californians’ home insurance is being dropped due to ‘density.’ What does that mean?

By Megan Fan Munce
March 30, 2024

Last October, Marc Snyder’s insurance company informed him it wouldn’t be renewing his homeowners insurance this year for a reason he had never heard before: density.
The letter from Liberty Mutual said Snyder’s home was “located in a region where the dwellings are considered to be too densely concentrated for us to continue to provide coverage.”

Are California Housing Mandates Ending Community Involvement And Character Of Cities? | Amy Kalish | Lydia Kou

Are California Housing Mandates Ending Community Involvement And Character Of Cities? | Amy Kalish | Lydia Kou

Siyamak Khorrami
March 24, 2024

“The goal is to densify every town in the state. To densify it so that’d be walking around, not driving. In some places, it doesn’t work. But this whole policy has been applied as “one size fits all” with no complaining.”

Siyamak sits down with Amy Kalish, with https://citizenmarin.org/. She’s been studying what the Housing Mandates are for different cities in California. Amy’s going to tell us what’s happening with California communities.

Speculators and Affordability, not NIMBY and YIMBY

Speculators and Affordability, not NIMBY and YIMBY

LINCOLN MITCHELL
MAR 23, 2024

The discussion of housing in San Francisco remains mired in the inane polarized labeling of NIMBY and YIMBY. Neither of these terms are accurate and both obscure much of the nuance around a debate that is about much more than whether or not to build more housing.