Studies
HCD "Green Building & Sustainability Resources" guide

This new electronic bibliography compiles best practices and the most current research on green building and sustainability issues.
Latino Homeownership Poll
The Housing Bottom Line: Fiscal Impact of New Home Construction on California Governments
Despite frequent claims that new housing costs state and local governments more in services than it generates in tax revenue, a study released today concludes that housing does pay its own way – and then some.
Inclusionary Zoning - A public policy failure

Housing Supply and Affordability: Do Affordability Mandates Work?
April 2004
San Jose State University professors Benjamin Powell, Ph. D and Edward Stringham, Ph. D conducted research to assess inclusionary zoning in the San Francisco Bay Area. Inclusionary zoning has been particularly prevalent in the Bay Area, growing to more than 107 communities in 2003. It is the primary policy to attenuate affordable housing woes by local governments. Powell and Stringham provide extensive data exemplifying the detrimental effects of inclusionary zoning on housing prices and supply. Reason Public Policy Institute published this report in April 2004.
Affordable Housing in Monterey County
Do Affordable Housing Mandates Work?
Evidence from Los Angeles County and Orange CountyJune 2004
California and many urban areas nationwide face a housing affordability crisis. New housing production has chronically failed to meet housing needs, causing housing prices to escalate. Faced with demands to "do something" about the housing affordability crisis, many local governments have turned to "inclusionary zoning" ordinances in which they mandate that developers sell a certain percentage of the homes they build at below-market prices to make them affordable for people with lower incomes.
California was an early leader in the adoption of inclusionary zoning, and its use there has grown rapidly. Between 1990 and 2003, the number of California communities with inclusionary zoning more than tripled - from 29 to 107 communities - meaning about 20 percent of California communities now have inclusionary zoning.
California's Deepening Housing Crisis
California continues to experience very high rates of population growth and further tightening of its housing markets. Even encompassing the recession of the early 1990s, California's population grew by an average approximating 450,000 people annually and is projected to gain around 600,000 annually over the next decade.
Housing production has not kept pace with the State's housing needs particularly in the coastal metropolitan areas and housing need has worsened, especially for renter households and low-income owner households throughout the State.
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