Laserfiche WebLink
1. AFFORDABILITY GAP ANALYSIS <br /> For any nexus-based affordable housing fee calculation, it is necessary to estimate the subsidy <br /> required to construct affordable housing units. Table 2 shows the subsidy needed to produce <br /> multifamily for-sale housing that is affordable to low- through moderate-income households (60 <br /> through 120 percent of AMI), while Table 3 calculates the subsidies for rental housing affordable <br /> to very low- through moderate-income households (50 through 120 percent of AMI). <br /> Product Type <br /> While the nexus fees calculated herein are based on demands created by for-sale housing that <br /> may be single-family or multifamily, the analysis assumes that new lower-income worker <br /> households would actually be housed in multifamily developments in Pleasanton. According to <br /> City staff, at this time in Pleasanton the subsidies available are most efficiently used to develop <br /> multifamily affordable units. As a result, the subsidy required to construct affordable units of <br /> this multifamily product type is used to determine the fee that applies to all types of <br /> development. EPS has assumed that these projects will have an average density of 30 units per <br /> acre and will adhere to City Code that requires two parking spaces per unit, assumed to be <br /> surface parking. <br /> In order to determine the average household size of future affordable housing units, EPS used <br /> two estimates from the US Census 2014 American Community Survey (ACS). The Census <br /> indicates that the average household size is 2.89 people and the average family size in <br /> Pleasanton is 3.25 people. Each of these figures rounds to an average of three people per unit, <br /> so EPS uses this assumption to determine the applicable income limits for the new units. <br /> California State law (California Health and Safety Code Section 50052.5) assumes that a 2- <br /> bedroom unit is occupied by a 3-person household, and this assumption is used in this analysis. <br /> Typically, a 2-bedroom unit in the Bay Area has a gross size of about 1,100 square feet <br /> (accounting for shared lobbies, hallways, etc.) and a net size of 950 square feet. <br /> This analysis estimates the subsidy that would be required to build for-sale and for-rent housing <br /> for the lower-income worker households. The subsequent impact fee analysis would assume that <br /> the most cost-efficient tenure type would be used; if for-sale units can be built for less subsidy <br /> than units offered for rent, the analysis would assume new affordable units would be for-sale. As <br /> shown on Tables 2 and 3 and discussed below, for-rent units are estimated to require a lower <br /> subsidy under present market conditions. In addition to representing cost savings, and thus a <br /> minimization of the impact fee, the reliance on rental housing may be more easily implemented <br /> and sustained, as many households at lower incomes will not have adequate wealth reserves for <br /> down payments on homeownership units, and may have further difficulty absorbing the ongoing <br /> costs of homeownership (taxes, repairs, etc.) that they can effectively avoid by renting their <br /> homes rather than buying. <br /> Economic&Planning Systems, Inc. 7 pmoos\6LllFkzvntanFa90.eyotly RorJaUk 9wsmg\15uureporc0ll619rorsak Pax <br />