Shall the City expand the allowable uses of surplus property to
include building affordable housing for a range of households from
those who are homeless or those with very low income to those
with incomes up to 120% of the area median income; and, for
projects of more than 200 units, make some housing available for
households earning up to 150% or more of the area median income?
The Way It Is Now: San Francisco has a policy of using
real property the City does not need (surplus property)
to build affordable housing. If the property is not suitable
for housing, it can be sold and the proceeds used
to build affordable housing elsewhere in the City.
Under the City's policy, affordable housing is housing
that is affordable to households earning up to 60% of
the area median income.
Every year, City departments are required to identify
surplus property. The City transfers the surplus property
to the Mayor's Office of Housing and Community
Development, which then determines if the property is
suitable for affordable housing. If so, the City solicits
applications from nonprofit organizations serving the
homeless to build affordable housing on the property.
City property controlled by the Recreation and Parks
Commission, the Port, the Airport, the Public Utilities
Commission, and the Municipal Transportation Agency
is exempt from the sale requirements.
The Proposal: Proposition K would:
- expand the allowable uses of surplus property to
include building affordable housing for a range of
households from those with very low income
(homeless and those earning under 20% of the area
median income) to those with incomes up to 120%
of the area median income;
- in surplus property developments with 200 or more
units, allow mixed-income projects that include
affordable housing for households earning up to
120% of the area median income, housing for middle-income
households earning up to 150% of the
area median income and housing with no income
limitations;
- expand the annual process for identifying surplus
property with specific reporting dates, public hearings
and oversight by the Board of Supervisors;
- prohibit the City, without prior approval of the
Board of Supervisors, from taking any actions to
sell surplus property for 120 days if the Board of
Supervisors is considering developing this property
for affordable housing;
- require that at least 33% of the total housing units
developed on surplus property sold by the City be
affordable--with at least 15% of rental units affordable
to people earning up to 55% of the area
median income and 18% affordable to people earning
up to 120% of the area median income;
- maintain exemptions for City property controlled by
the Recreation and Parks Commission, the Port, the
Airport, the Public Utilities Commission, and the
Municipal Transportation Agency; and
- make it City policy to ask all other local agencies,
such as school districts, to notify the City before
selling property in San Francisco and give the City
the opportunity to buy it for affordable housing.
Proposition K would allow the Board of Supervisors to
waive the requirements of this law for other public
purposes, such as creating facilities for health care,
child care, education, open space, public safety, transit
and infrastructure.
- A YES vote on this measure means:
- A "YES" Vote Means: If you vote "yes," you want the
City to expand the allowable uses of surplus property
to include building affordable housing for a range of
households from those who are homeless or those
with very low income to those with incomes up to
120% of the area median income. For projects of more
than 200 units, some housing would be available for households earning up to 150% or more of the area
median income.
- A NO vote on this measure means:
- A "NO" Vote Means: If you vote "no," you do not want
to make these changes.
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