Sponsored link
Thursday, June 18, 2026

Sponsored link

News + PoliticsHousingPlanning Commission sides with mayor on cutting fees for affordable housing

Planning Commission sides with mayor on cutting fees for affordable housing

The vote, of course, was 4-2. But Lurie has backed down on charging more for arguments in the ballot handbook.

-

By an entirely predictable 4-2 vote, the Planning Commission just endorsed a plan to cut dramatically the amount of affordable housing the luxury developers are required to build.

The measure now goes to the Board of Supes, where it’s almost certain to win approval.

Commissioners Kathrin Moore and Gilbert Williams, members appointed by the supes who are leaving the panel at the end of the month, voted No. As is typical, all the mayor appointees voted yes.

Commissioner Kathrin Moore: “It took my breath away what we are giving away.”

The legislation would cut to 5 percent the “inclusionary” requirements, in what supporters say is an effort to get more market-rate housing moving.

But the Controller’s Office has already reported that even at zero inclusionary, no project currently makes financial sense. It’s not the modest affordability requirements (or zoning) holding back developers; it’s the cost of materials, labor, and most important, investment capital.

The cut would last for three years—so if the market changes, and more projects get underway, the city will have lost a significant source of funding for below-market housing.

The cut is part of a deal that the Mayor Daniel Lurie and Supervisor Myrna Melgar have offered: In exchange for reducing these fees, Melgar and Lurie are backing a November City Charter amendment that would guarantee a stable source of city funding for affordable housing.

Moore noted that the inclusionary money is already local law, and the current level of 12 percent could be extended until after November, when we know whether the Charter amendment has passed.

Sponsored link

“It took my breath away what we are giving away,” she said. “You can be really excited about going skydiving, but what if the parachute doesn’t open?”

Williams noted that the state housing requirements call for San Francisco to approve and fund 57 percent of its new housing at below market rate. But the state legislation, by Sen. Scott Wiener and his allies, includes no funding for that mandate.

If the city doesn’t issue permits for tens of thousands of new market-rate units, it can lose state funding—but if it fails to meet the affordable housing goals, nothing happens.

Housing activist Calvin Welch pointed out in testimony that when the city’s affordability requirements were at their highest, in 2017, developers built twice as much housing as they’ve build since those mandates were reduced.

Another speaker cited the city’s own nexus study showing that every unit of luxury housing creates a demand for affordable housing. If you mandate less that 25-40 percent affordable units, you actually make the crisis worse than it would be with no new housing at all.

None of that impressed the four mayoral-appointed commissioners, who bought into the argument that cutting obstacles to luxury housing will eventually bring prices down.

Meanwhile, in a remarkable victory, mayor has withdrawn a proposal that would have increased by a factor of five the cost of putting an argument in the city’s ballot handbook.

At the Budget and Appropriations Committee meeting Wednesday, a Lurie staffer announced that, after discussing the issue with a range of activists, the mayor wanted to table the issue, for now.

It might come back, but for now, the handbook will remain an affordable source of campaign information. In times like these, we take the wins we can get.

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our FacebookTwitter, and Instagram

Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond has been a political and investigative reporter in San Francisco for more than 30 years. He spent much of that time as executive editor of the Bay Guardian. He is the founder of 48hills.
Sponsored link
Sponsored link

Featured

Pullin’ Pork for Pride returns to The Castro!

Free and fabulous! Our annual fundraiser and Pride party is back with dancing, drag, drinks, and a hot pulled pork (and veggie!) menu.

BIG WEEK: North Beach Fest, Ube Fest, Library Day, Juneteenth Parade….

Aluna, The Kitchenettes, Parasol at Cafe Flore, Peaches Christ and Mink Stole, 'The Blackest Wrench,' Salted Summer Solstice, more to do!

Lurie and four supes move to cut affordable housing fees for luxury developers

Planning Commission to consider plan that city data shows will not lead to any new housing construction

More by this author

Lurie and four supes move to cut affordable housing fees for luxury developers

Planning Commission to consider plan that city data shows will not lead to any new housing construction

Lurie wants to make ballot arguments too expensive for small campaigns

EXCLUSIVE: Dramatic increase in fees would help big-money and undermine grassroots groups. It goes before the supes Wednesday.

The terrifying agenda behind the billionaire-funded Abundance movement

Behind the Big Tech money machine is a vision for society that ought to make us all very, very scared
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED