SF has 305 affordable housing units sitting empty despite huge demand


Hundreds of San Francisco apartments set aside for low- and moderate-income families are sitting vacant, the result of a sluggish bureaucracy and pandemic-era leasing market that has become less predictable, according to a new report from the Board of Supervisors Budget and Legislative Analyst.

For 30 years San Francisco has required that housing developers include a percentage of “below market rate” units in their projects, an effort to create affordable homes and mixed-income neighborhoods in a city that has steadily grown wealthier and less accessible to average families.

While San Francisco’s 1992 inclusionary housing requirement has long been held up as a model — most major U.S. cities now have some version of it — the new report shows that the program is marred by high vacancy rates. Of the 1,961 units created under the program, 305 of them — about 15% — are not occupied, according to the report, which was requested by Supervisor Ahsha Safai.

A combined 21,000 households applied to live in the 305 apartments, according to the report. Yet the units remain unoccupied.

“We have a housing crisis in the city and yet we have a government bureaucracy that is standing in the way of getting people housed,” said Safai. “It’s unconscionable for us to be sitting there with that level of vacancies.”

The current iteration of San Francisco’s below market rate program — the units are known as BMRs — requires that 14.5% of homes in smaller projects of less than 25 units be made affordable while larger developments must set aside 21.5%. The income levels required to qualify is complicated: in smaller buildings households must earn just under 55% of area median income, about $58,600 for a two-person household; in larger buildings 60% of the below market rate units are set aside for two-person families at the 55% AMI level, while 20% target moderate-income households earning $85,000 and another 20% go to families earning $117,000.

Christie Donnelly opens the door to an apartment inside the George Apartments at 434 Minna St., in San Francisco,. Donnelly is the director of Brookfield Properties.

Christie Donnelly opens the door to an apartment inside the George Apartments at 434 Minna St., in San Francisco,. Donnelly is the director of Brookfield Properties.

Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle

Of the 305 units currently sitting empty, five have been vacant since 2019, 55 have been vacant since 2020 and 245 have been vacant since last year, according the report.

In addition to wasting badly needed homes, the number of empty units is a burden for builders who count on income from those units to pay back construction loans and cover operating costs, according to Residential Builders Association President Sean Keighran. In some cases they wait months or even years for the Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community Development, which oversees the program, to sign off on qualified applicants.

“Next to PG&E they are the most inefficient bureaucracy we have to deal with,” said Keighran “The units sit empty and the process takes forever. It seems like the city doesn’t care.”

The process of qualifying for a BMR unit is more arduous and time-consuming than applying for a typical apartment, according to Caroline Caselli, CEO of Haven Connect, a technology company that created a platform to help match BMRs with tenants.

Applicants have to prove income and asset verification for every member of the household, as well as rental history, credit score and other documentation.

“It’s like doing your taxes but more invasive — just for a rental,” she said.

For low-income tenants in the below 55% AMI range that sort of scrutiny may be familiar. But those in the 80% or 110% AMI range may have market-rate options, especially at a time when rents are down 12% from pre-pandemic highs and many new buildings are offering two or three free months and other perks.





Read More:SF has 305 affordable housing units sitting empty despite huge demand

2022-05-04 21:19:37

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