Right Column

Welcome to the Department’s newest technical assistance resource to assist local governments in adopting housing elements that effectively address housing needs, the specific requirements of State law and in furtherance of local goals and objectives. The Department is committed to working in partnership with local governments and the public and private sectors in addressing California’s continuing housing crisis. Toward that end, this website provides a toolkit of resources including:
- detailed information about specific statutory requirements;
- information and resources to complete effective analyses of housing needs, resources and constraints;
- sample/model analyses and programs; and
- links to resources for demographic data, current research and reports, housing and land-use funding and policy strategies, helpful public and private industry and advocacy organizations.
This site is currently under construction and will be expanded in the coming months. The Department welcomes suggestions on how to improve the site to deliver the technical assistance and resources most needed by local governments, housing consumers, and other critical stakeholders involved in providing or improving housing. To submit suggestions for expansion and improvements to the site, you may email buildingblocks@hcd.ca.gov.
In addition, the Department will be expanding the site to regularly highlight specific exemplary programs and strategies from cities and counties throughout California. In the coming months, a form for submitting recommendations will be added to the site. In the meantime, to submit recommendations or nominations, you may e-mail buildingblocks@hcd.ca.gov.
OVERVIEW OF HOUSING ELEMENT LAW
State law requires each city and county to adopt a general plan containing at least seven elements including housing. Unlike the other mandatory general plan elements, the housing element, required to be updated approximately every five years, is subject to detailed statutory requirements and mandatory review by a State agency (Department of Housing and Community Development). Housing elements have been mandatory portions of general plans since 1969. This reflects the statutory recognition that the availability of housing is a matter of statewide importance and that cooperation between government and the private sector is critical to attainment of the State's housing goals. The regulation of the housing supply through planning and zoning powers affects the State’s ability to achieve its housing goal of “decent housing and a suitable living environment for every California family” and is critical to the State’s long-term economic competitiveness.
Housing element law requires local governments to adequately plan to meet their existing and projected housing needs, including their share of the regional housing need. Housing element law is the State’s primary market-based strategy to increase housing supply, choice, and affordability. The law recognizes that in order for the private sector to adequately address housing needs and demand, local governments must adopt land-use plans and regulatory schemes that provide opportunities for, and do not unduly constrain, housing development.
The housing element process begins with the Department allocating a region's share of the statewide housing need to Councils of Governments (COG) based on Department of Finance population projections and regional population forecasts used in preparing regional transportation plans. The COG develops a Regional Housing Need Plan (RHNP) allocating the region’s share of the statewide need to the cities and counties within the region. The RHNP is required to promote the following objectives to:
- 1. increase the housing supply and the mix of housing types, tenure, and affordability in all cities and counties within the region in an equitable manner;
- 2. promote infill development and socioeconomic equity, the protection of environmental and agricultural resources, and the encouragement of efficient development patterns; and
- 3. promote an improved intraregional relationship between jobs and housing.
Housing element law recognizes the most critical decisions regarding housing development occur at the local level within the context of the periodically updated general plan. The RHNP component of the general plan requires local governments to balance the need for growth, including the need for additional housing, against other competing local interests. The RHNP process of housing element law promotes the State's interest in encouraging open markets and providing opportunities for the private sector to address the State's housing demand, while leaving the ultimate decision about how and where to plan for growth at the regional and local levels. While land-use planning is fundamentally a local issue, the availability of housing is a matter of statewide importance.
Housing element law requires local governments to be accountable for ensuring projected housing needs can be accommodated. The process maintains local control over where and what type of development should occur in local communities while providing the opportunity for the private sector to meet market demand.
HOUSING ELEMENTS MATTER
An effective housing element provides the necessary conditions for preserving and producing an adequate supply of affordable housing. Among other things, the housing element provides an inventory of land adequately zoned or planned to be zoned for housing, certainty in permit processing procedures, and a commitment to assist in housing development through regulatory concessions and incentives. In addition, to this fundamental framework, the housing element update process provides a vehicle for establishing and updating housing and land-use strategies reflective of changing needs, resources and conditions. For example, the housing element update process can provide the mechanism to adopt new strategies to promote infill, mixed-use, or downtown revitalization.
The housing element also provides a powerful tool to address the special housing needs of Californians including the homeless, farmworkers and persons with disabilities. The housing element process ensures local governments promote a variety of housing types including multifamily rental units, manufactured housing, transitional and other types of supportive housing. For example, California’s Mental Health Services Act (Proposition 63) provides financial resources to build supportive housing and addresses homelessness for people with mental illness. Housing element requirements to identify and analyze the housing needs of the homeless and extremely low-income households and identify sites and programs to meet those needs can also facilitate local efforts to obtain and effectively uses Proposition 63 resources.
The housing element update process also creates opportunities to increase interest in smart growth planning strategies and facilitates the ability of local governments to move from rhetoric to action. The housing element provides both practical and policy tools to promote efficient land-use patterns while meeting critical housing needs. The housing element process provides a vehicle for coordinating infrastructure, housing finance and long-term land-use planning. For example, the housing element is often a coordinating document, providing a schedule for local housing departments to apply for important housing and community development funds. The update process also provides a mechanism to review ordinance, identify outdated policies or modify codes that inhibit housing supply, affordability and choice. Many local governments have established new permit procedures to streamline the approval process for infill or higher density housing during the update of the housing element.
Not only does the housing element update process result in strategies to address local housing needs, it is also frequently the most effective tool to implement broader general plan and regional strategies including California Regional Blueprints or the San Diego Association of Government’s (SANDAG) Regional Comprehensive Plan. For example, SANDAG’s regional strategy establishes and incentivizes smart growth opportunity areas served by existing or planned high frequency transit. The housing element update process can encourage development on specific sites within these smart growth opportunities areas and complement SANDAG’s regional land-use strategy. A compliant housing element also provides jurisdictions in San Diego County with competitive advantage for receipt of SANDAG’s TransNet funding.
Finally, the housing element update process can also provide a vehicle for local governments to adopt housing and land-use strategies to address climate change and the reduction of green house gas emissions. Most of the housing and land-use strategies adopted by local governments to meet their existing and projected housing needs also serve to effectively address climate change concerns. For example, promoting higher density, infill housing for low-income workers and housing along transit corridors also can significantly contribute to reductions in green house gas emissions.
Table of Contents
Before You Start — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
Public Participation — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
Review and Revise — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
Existing Housing Needs
- Population, Employment, and Housing Characteristics — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Overpayment and Overcrowding — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Extremely-Low Income Housing Needs — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Housing Stock Characteristics — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Assisted Housing Developments "At Risk" of Conversion — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Opportunities for Energy Conservation — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
Special Housing Needs
- Persons with Disabilities — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Elderly — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Large Families and Female Headed Households — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Special Needs – Farmworkers — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Families and Persons in Need of Emergency Shelters — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
Projected Housing Needs
- Regional Housing Needs Allocation — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
Sites Inventory and Analysis
- Inventory of Land Suitable for Residential Development — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Environmental Constraints and Adequate Infrastructure — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Realistic Development Capacity — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Analysis of Non-vacant and Underutilized Sites — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Zoning to Accommodate the Development of Housing Affordable to Lower Income Households — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Zoning for Emergency Shelters and Transitional Housing — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Zoning for a Variety of Housing Types — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Second Units — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Adequate Sites Alternative — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
Constraints
- Land-Use Controls — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Fees and Exactions — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Processing and Permit Procedure — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Codes and Enforcement and On-Off-Site Improvement Standards — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Constraints-Housing for Persons with Disabilities (SB520) — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Non-Governmental Constraints — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
Programs
- Program Overview and Quantified Objectives — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Adequate Sites — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Assist in the Development — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Conserve and Improve the Existing Housing Stock — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Preserve Units At-risk of Conversion to Market Rate Uses — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Address and Remove or Mitigate Constraints — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Equal Housing Opportunities — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Redevelopment Low/Mod-Income Housing Fund — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
Other Requirements
- Analysis of Consistency with General Plan, Coastal Zone Requirements — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
- Priority for Water and Sewer — (Adobe PDF) or (Microsoft Word)
Additional Resources
- Housing Element Sample Tables — (Microsoft Word)



