New bill seeks to limit housing sprawl in fire- and flood-prone areas of California
The sprawl has allowed people to live closer to nature and buy homes in more affordable parts of the state where it's cheaper and easier to build. But it's also left millions vulnerable to catastrophic wildfires and flooding.
And as destructive natural disasters have become more frequent in recent years, state and local officials have felt increasing pressure: How does
Now, an unlikely coalition of environmentalists and housing advocates is backing a bill that seeks to slow growth in many parts of the state at high risk of fires and floods while encouraging more multifamily housing in existing population centers.
The proposal wouldn't outright ban new housing in regions at risk of fires and floods — or prevent people in those areas from rebuilding their homes after disaster strikes. But advocates say it would rein in the kind of large master-planned developments that in recent decades have popped up in the
Since 2018, devastating wildfires in
Across
"The reality, as I see it, is that the lack of affordable insurance (if one can get it at all) will be what limits building new homes in high fire-risk areas," Freedman said in an email.
But housing advocates blame policies restricting denser development in cities and suburbs for pushing new housing farther into wooded foothills and open floodplains where land is less expensive and space is plentiful. That's not only put more people in danger, advocates and environmentalists say, but distressed local ecosystems and boosted climate-warming vehicle emissions.
"We have to deprioritize building homes in hazard zones and instead prioritize housing closer to jobs and services, so people can spend more time with their families – and less time in polluting traffic,"
The legislation — co-sponsored by California YIMBY (short for "Yes In My Backyard") and the
While maps of the proposed hazard areas are still being determined, they could cover wide swaths of the
The bill would also require officials to streamline and approve larger "naturally affordable" multifamily homes in specific areas within walking distance of jobs, schools, transit, parks and shopping centers.
The building industry, however, appears poised to push back hard on the bill.
"It's disappointing to have a YIMBY group come out in favor of a bill that says YIMBY, but only in certain places," Dunmoyer said.
He said building homes anywhere in
And when it comes to large subdivisions, Dunmoyer said, developers can build roads, parks and golf courses around tract homes to shield them from wildfires. "I will contend we can master-plan a community not to burn," he said.
Despite such assurances,
Still, recent efforts to add more far-reaching restrictions have fallen flat. In 2021, a state bill to ban development in high fire-risk areas stalled out amid heavy opposition from the building industry. Before that in 2020, Gov.
Newsom said he shot down the bill because it would have created "a loophole for regions to not comply with their housing requirements."
Ward, the state lawmaker, said bringing together environmentalists and housing advocates — who have long been on opposing ends of development fights — should go a long way toward mustering the political support to secure a different outcome.
"It's a really strong starting point," he said, "for the success of this legislation."



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