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<br />San Francisco Bay Area <br /> <br />Draft Regional Housing Needs Allocation, 4th Revision <br /> <br />The factors and weights (expressed in parenthesis) recommend by the HMC are: <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />Household growth (40%) <br />Existing employment (20%) <br />Employment growth (20%) <br />Household growth near existing and planned transit (10%) <br />Employment growth near existing and planned transit (10%) <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />Household growth, existing employment, and employment growth are estimated in ABAG's <br />regional household and employment forecasts, Projections. <br /> <br />A. Household Growth, 40 percent <br /> <br />Each local jurisdiction should plan for housing according to regionally projected household <br />growth within its boundaries during the RHNA planning period (2007 - 2014). Household <br />growth should be weighted 40 percent in the allocation. <br /> <br />The use of housing as a RHNA factor represents consistency with local, regional, and state <br />policies regarding where housing growth will and should occur in the region. Where and how <br />much housing growth will occur in the region is estimated by ABAG's forecasting model, as <br />documented in Projections. Specifically, household growth is based on: I) local land use <br />policies and plans; 2) demographic and economic trends, such as migration, birth and death <br />rates, housing prices, and travel costs; and 3) regional growth policies. <br /> <br />Household growth in ABAG's Projections is most influenced by local land use plans and <br />policies, including planned and protected agricultural lands, open space and parks, city- <br />centered growth policies, urban growth boundaries, and any physical or geological <br />constraints. <br /> <br />Regional policies incorporated into Projections since 2002, are assumed to go into effect by <br />2010, and therefore have some effect on regional housing growth estimates in the 2007-2014 <br />RHNA period. Regional policies assume that there will be increased housing growth in <br />existing urbanized areas, near transit stations and along major public transportation corridors. <br />These regional policies are consistent with state housing policies to promote infill <br />development, environmental and agricultural protection and efficient development patterns. <br /> <br />The impacts of regional policy assumptions in Projections are: a) potential environmental and <br />agricultural resource protection by directing growth away from existing open and agricultural <br />lands; b) the encouragement of efficient development patterns through increased infill <br />development and higher densities in existing communities; and c) the potential for increased <br />transportation choices, e.g., walking and public transit, through more housing development <br />near transit and jobs. <br /> <br />The household estimates in Projections account for all people living in housing units, <br />including students. Thus, the portion of the student population that occupies part of a local <br />jurisdiction's housing stock is counted as such and as a source of future household formation. <br />The portion of the student population that occupies "group quarters," such as college <br />dormitories, are not included in household population counts. This is consistent with state <br />policy regarding RHNA that excludes "group quarters" from being counted as housing units. <br /> <br />November 2006, Page 7 <br />