Home » Bills Aim to Make it Easier to Convert Commercial Buildings to Housing

Bills Aim to Make it Easier to Convert Commercial Buildings to Housing

Press Release

by CC News
Assemblymember Miguel Santiago

(Sacramento, CA) – Assembly Member Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) announced the introduction of two bills that seek to make it easier to provide more housing across California.

Sponsored by Central City Association of Los Angeles (CCA), AB 2909 and AB 2910 will bring more housing units online through adaptive reuse (the safe conversion of underused commercial buildings for residential uses).

The COVID-19 pandemic spurred a significant shift in the way people work, reducing the amount of time spent working in offices and increasing the amount of work done on a hybrid schedule or entirely remotely. However, trends in remote and hybrid work have stabilized with day-to-day office occupancy hovering around 50 percent in city centers across California. Meanwhile office vacancy rates generally continue to climb as tenants allow their leases to expire or downsize.

“We desperately need more housing units and we must make it easier to live in downtown areas,” said Assembly Member Miguel Santiago. “That’s why adaptive reuse is a critical tool to addressing California’s housing crisis and furthering our sustainability goals while breathing new life into downtowns across the state. We can do this by cutting red tape and creating more incentives through our bills AB 2909 and AB 2910.”

“We’re grateful to partner with Assemblymember Santiago on a legislative package that will help make adaptive reuse a viable tool for tackling our housing crisis while sparking economic recovery for downtowns,” said Nella McOsker, President & CEO of CCA.

AB 2909 expands the Mills Act, an economic incentive program in California for the restoration and preservation of qualified historic buildings by private property owners, to incentivize the conversion of commercial buildings to residential uses. Specifically, the bill would make buildings that are at least 30 years old and located in commercial zones eligible for Mills Act contracts and require that property tax savings be reinvested in retrofitting and repurposing existing buildings to create new residential rental units.

AB 2910 enables jurisdictions that are designated as “Prohousing” and that are compliant with state housing law to adopt alternative building regulations to facilitate the conversion of commercial or industrial buildings to residential units.

AB 2909 and AB 2910 are expected to be heard in the Assembly Local Government Committee in April.

Social Housing

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1 comment

MODERATE March 15, 2024 - 11:45 am

No matter how they slice the baloney, this is yet more overriding of local authority in favor of the almighty and all-knowing state.

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