Yorba Linda City Council weights in during early stages of state's housing needs mandate--RHNA
Yorba
Linda's city officials are wisely weighing in during the early stages
of a forthcoming determination of the city's responsibilities to
provide opportunities to meet housing needs under a state-mandated
Regional Housing Needs Assessment, known as RHNA (ree-na).
State
law requires cities to plan for existing and future housing needs,
with the Southern California Association of Governments, or SCAG,
responsible for developing the actual numbers for 197 jurisdictions,
including Yorba Linda, in six southern California counties.
A new
RHNA planning period began last October and should conclude by
October 2020 for the years 2021-2029, according to a recent report to
the City Council from Nate Farnsworth, the city's principal planner.
A
previous RHNA numbers assignment roiled local politics from 2008
until 2012, when city voters approved two measures to permit density
increases on 11 properties, so that, along with existing zoning, the
city would meet the RHNA mandate through 2021.
The
matter was a key issue in three council elections, with several
council members warning of a state take-over of the city's planning
processes if RHNA requirements were not satisfied.
RNHA
housing numbers assigned to Yorba Linda for 2008-2013 totaled 2,039
units, including 230 for extremely low income, 230 for very low
income, 371 for low income, 412 for moderate income and 796 for above
moderate income households.
The
numbers for 2014-2021 totaled 669 units: 80 for extremely low income,
80 for very low income, 113 for low income, 126 for moderate income
and 270 for above moderate income.
These
numbers were considered a target for housing growth and not a
building quota, so, if the city provided sufficient sites and did not
impose constraints to development, the city was not penalized for
falling short of the RHNA allocation.
Distribution
of a draft of new RHNA numbers is expected by February 2020, with an
appeals process running through July 2020 and a final proposal RHNA
allocation ready August 2020.
However,
right now, SCAG officials are developing a methodology for coming up
with the actual numbers to be assigned to southern California cities.
They've floated three options allowing for public comment.
These
options have drawn concerns, since each option would mean a different
set of future housing numbers for Yorba Linda. The city has
responded with a nine-page letter, including four pages of
attachments, outlining problems with each option.
The
letter cites the need “to preserve the integrity of the local input
process in establishing any RHNA methodology,” noting, “Ignoring
local input would be disastrous to many jurisdictions,” since many
cities might not meet state housing certification requirements.
Interestingly,
the city's letter was addressed to Councilwoman Peggy Huang in her
role as chair of SCAG's RHNA subcommittee. Each of the six SCAG
counties have two members and one vote.
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