Friday, September 16, 2011

Meaningful Parking Reform Dead in California (For Now)

Meaningful Parking Reform Dead in California (For Now)

Ethan Elkind | September 16, 2011 at 10:55 am | Tags: AB 710California League of CitiesNancy Skinner | Categories: CaliforniaClimate ChangeGreen LivingLand UsePolitics | URL: http://wp.me/prxko-34a

AB 710, the eminently sensible parking reform bill, died a sad death in the State Senate during the last-minute frenzy on bills last week.  The bill would have prevented local governments from maintaining excessively high parking minimums for development projects located near transit stops, unless they can document a need for high parking requirements.  Of course, developers could add more parking as the market requires, but gone would be the mindless local mandates.

Parking_garage_lighting

Parking garages everywhere can rejoice!

As it currently stands, a number of local jurisdictions have one-size-fits-all parking requirements that impose high costs on infill real estate developers (parking spots can cost upwards of $30,000 each to build), even when they build transit-adjacent projects where residents are likely to use transit and not drive.  Normally, it wouldn't be a matter of public interest how much a developer has to pay for his or her project.  But in this instance, these requirements are preventing critical infill projects from being built and/or limiting the scale of existing projects, which pushes development farther out into open space and agricultural land, leading to more traffic and bad air.  It also drives up costs for infill affordable housing developers and artificially raises housing prices on everyone, hurting low-income residents the most.

As I posted earlier, the League of Cities was the prime culprit for torpedoing the bill, launching a full assault by their cities on State Senators and barely defeating the bill after unanimous approval in the Assembly.  Read more of this post

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