CC - Item 4B - City Council Presentation - Housing Element Update PowerpointRosemead
2021-2029 Housing Element
& Public Safety Element
Update
CITY COUNCIL PUBLIC HEARING
JANUARY 11, 2022
What is the Housing Element?
•One of seven required elements of the General
Plan
•Assessment of City’s housing needs and how best
to accommodate existing and future housing needs
•Update required every eight (8) years
◦Deadline: October 15, 2021 + 120 grace-period
•Reviewed for compliance by State Dept. of Housing
and Community Development (HCD)
General
Plan
Housing
Conser-
vation
Land
Use
Open
SpaceMobility
Noise
Safety
2
Housing Element Compliance
Benefits of HCD Compliance
•Presumption of legally adequate Housing
Element in courts
•Maintain eligibility for State housing funds
•Don’t face RHNA carry-over into next Housing
Element cycle
Penalties of Noncompliance
•Risk of Litigation (AB 72, AB 101)
•HCD monitors for non-compliance; reports to Attorney
General (AG)
•Court imposed fines up to $100k per month
•Ineligibility for State Grants
•SB 2 / Local Early Action Planning (LEAP) Grants
•Other infrastructure/transportation funds being
considered
•If courts invalidate Element, suspend City’s
authority to issue building permits until brought
into compliance
3
Housing Element Update Process
Outreach
Housing
Needs
Assessment
Draft HEU &
Programs
HCD Review
of Draft HEU Adoption
HCD Review
of Adopted
HEU
HEU
Implementation
We Are Here
4
Regional Housing
Needs Assessment (RHNA)
•RHNA is a planning goal, not a production
goal
•State law does not mandate actual
production of units
•City must demonstrate adequate capacity
in local land use policies to
accommodate RHNA
•6th Cycle RHNA has similar percentage of
unit allocation per income category as
5th Cycle
5
Regional Housing
Needs Assessment (RHNA)
Income Category Rosemead RHNA
5th Cycle (2014-2021)6th Cycle (2021-2029)
Very Low 153 25.4%1,154 25.0%
Low 88 14.6%638 13.8%
Moderate 99 16.4%686 14.9%
Above Moderate 262 43.5%2,134 46.2%
Total 602 100%4,612 100%
Source: 2014 –2021 Rosemead Housing Element, SCAG Proposed Final RHNA Allocation February 5, 2021
6
New Housing Element
Requirements
•Higher RHNA Unit Allocation
◦6th Cycle RHNA unit allocation approximately 7.5 times higher than 5th cycle
•Affirmatively Further Fair Housing (AFFH)
◦To promote inclusive communities, further housing choice, and address racial and economic
disparities through government programs, policies, and operations
•Site Eligibility for Lower-Income Households
◦New regulations on how cities can reuse sites and increased scrutiny of small, and non-vacant
sites for lower-income households
•No Net Loss
◦Cities must preserve sufficient and available sites for lower‐income housing throughout the RHNA
planning period at all times
7
Public Participation
•Launched dedicated webpage and email address (December 17, 2020)
•Online housing needs/environmental justice survey (February 3 –March 21, 2021)
•Virtual stakeholder interviews (February 4 –10, 2021)
•Virtual joint City Council/Planning Commission study session (March 9, 2021)
•Virtual community workshop on the Housing Element/Environmental Justice (June 10, 2021)
•Housing Element 60-day public review period (September 3 –November 4, 2021)
•HCD 60-day review of draft Housing Element (September 17 –November 15, 2021)
•Planning Commission public hearing for recommendation to City Council (December 20, 2021)
8
Housing Programs
1 -Owner Occupied Rehabilitation Program
2 -Down Payment Assistance Program-
3 -Infill Housing Development and Site Recycling
4 -Land Assemblage and Write-Down
5 -Community Housing Development Organization
(CHDO) Construction Program
6 -Adequate Sites Inventory and Monitoring for No
Net Loss
7 -Water and Sewer Master Plans
9
8 -Opportunity Sites Marketing and Outreach
9 -Special Housing Needs and Zoning
10 -Development of Housing for Extremely Low-
Income Households
11 -By-Right Approval of Projects with 20 Percent
Affordable Units on “Reuse” Housing Element Sites
12 -Section 8 Rental Assistance Payments/Housing
Vouchers
13 -Mobile Home Park Assistance Program (MPAP)
14 -Fair Housing Program
Sites Inventory
•City is required to demonstrate a plan to meet the housing capacity requirements assigned
to the City based on the RHNA
•Vacant Sites and Underutilized Sites (residential and non-residential)
•Mixed-Use Areas
◦Mixed-Use Development Overlay
◦Freeway Mixed-Use Overlay
◦Garvey Avenue Specific Plan
•Accessory Dwelling Units (construction of 48 ADUs over the 8-year planning period)
•Rezoning of ten (10) sites to accommodate a buffer to address No Net Loss provisions
10
11
Sites Inventory Capacity Summary
Potential Housing Sites Very Low/Low
Income Units*
Moderate
Income Units
Above Moderate
Income Units Total
Vacant Sites 232 286 572 1,090
Non-Vacant Sites 1,783 991 2,631 5,405
Accessory Dwelling Units 262 8 114 384
Total 2,277 1,285 3,317 6,879
2021-2029 RHNA 1,154 638 2,134 4,612
Difference +1,123 +1,923 +5,451 8,497
* Includes Extremely Low-Income Units
12
HCD Housing Element Review
•Draft Housing Element submitted to HCD for 60-day review (September 17th)
•November 15, 2021 -HCD issued Housing Element comment letter
◦“Draft Housing Element addresses many statutory requirements; revisions will be necessary to
comply with State Housing Element Law”
•Comment Letter Key Points:
◦Provide additional local knowledge and data
◦Provide additional detail on site selection methodology, specifically for non-vacant sites
◦Modify programs for further compliance with State laws
13
Public Safety Element &
Environmental Justice Polices
•Focused technical update to the Public Safety Element to better prepare the City of
Rosemead for impacts of climate change, in accordance with SB 379
•Public Safety Element submitted to the California Geological Survey of the Department of
Conservation on October 15, 2021 for review, pursuant to State law
•Due to presence of Disadvantages Communities (DACs) in the City, SB 1000 requires cities
to develop Environmental Justice policies to be incorporated into General Plan
•Improve the disproportionate burden of environmental pollution/toxins in lower-income and
communities of color
•Environmental Justice policies/programs incorporated in Public Safety Element, Housing
Element, and other General Plan elements
14
Next Steps
•Submit for HCD Certification –January 2022
◦60-day HCD review of adopted Housing Element
•Housing Element Implementation
◦Rezoning of sites
◦Ongoing program implementation during the 8-year planning period
◦Wait for development proposals for review and approval
15
Staff Recommendation
•That the City Council:
◦Conduct a public hearing and receive public testimony;
◦Adopt Resolution 2021-66 (Attachment “F”),approving General Plan Amendment 20-01.
◦Authorize the City Manager to make iterative changes to the 2021-2029 Housing Element in
response to comments from HCD to support state certification of the 2021-2029 Housing Element.
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Thank You!
Questions?