Legislative Analyst's OfficeAnalysis of the 2001-02 Budget Bill |
The California Housing Finance Agency (CHFA) was established by the Legislature in 1975 to provide below market-rate mortgage loans for single- and multi-family housing. The CHFA serves as the state's "mortgage bank" by selling tax-exempt bonds and then using the revenues to provide below market-rate loans. The bonds are not general obligations of the State of California, and the debt is repaid through revenues generated by the repayment of the mortgage loans. In 1999-00, CHFA made $1.1 billion in loans, with 88 percent of that amount for single-family housing.
Although CHFA is financially self-sufficient, the agency has received General Fund appropriations for two programs in recent years.
Downpayment Assistance Program. Chapter 81, Statutes of 2000 (AB 2865, Alquist), created the California Homebuyer's Downpayment Assistance Program. The 2000-01 Budget Act appropriated $50 million in one-time funds to the Department of Housing and Community Development to contract with CHFA for the administration of the program. The program provides moderate-income first-time home buyers with downpayment assistance of 3 percent of their purchase price. The assistance is provided in the form of a loan with deferred principal and interest. Since beginning operations in mid-October 2000, the program has received approximately $4 million in applications, requesting an average of about $4,000 in assistance.
School Facility Fee Reimbursements. Upon the passage of the state school bond measure Proposition 1A in 1998, Chapter 407, Statutes of 1998 (SB 50, Greene), went into effect and appropriated $160 million for the School Facility Fee Affordable Housing Assistance Programs, designed to increase the affordability of new housing. The funds are appropriated to the Department of General Services (DGS) and then provided to CHFA through contract. Chapter 407 required the Legislative Analyst's Office to evaluate the effectiveness of these programs. Our evaluation was published in a January 2001 report and is summarized below.
Given the school facility fee programs' sunset date at the end of calendar year 2002, the funds already appropriated should be sufficient to fund the programs through their conclusion. In addition, our analysis raises a number of concerns with the programs. Accordingly, we recommend that the Legislature eliminate the $60 million in scheduled appropriations for the programs in 2001-02 and 2002-03making the one-time funds available for other, more-targeted housing programs or other legislative priorities.
School districts have a variety of funding mechanisms available to them to pay for the financing of school construction, including local general obligation bonds, local Mello-Roos bonds, developer fees, and state funding. Developer fees are charged by school districts on new residential and commercial construction to help offset the costs of the new school construction that the development will require. Prior to the passage of Proposition 1A, school districts were limited in the amount of school facility developer fees they could charge. Also, as a result of a series of court decisions in the years preceding the passage of Proposition 1Aknown as the Mira, Hart, and Murietta decisionscities and counties were able to impose additional school facility fees on development as a condition of obtaining land use approval.
Proposition 1A and Chapter 407 created different levels of developer fees. The former cap on feesnow known as "level I" feesremains the maximum amount that a school district can charge except under specified circumstances. These level I fees are adjusted for inflation biennially, and as of January 2000, were $2.05 per square foot for residential construction and $0.33 per square foot for commercial construction.
For a school district to impose a fee in excess of the level I amount, it must meet specified conditions relating to local bond activity, year-round student enrollment, and use of "relocatable" classrooms. The amount of fees that can be charged over the level I amount is determined by the district's total facilities needs and the availability of state matching funds. If there is state facility funding available, districts are able to charge fees equal to 50 percent of their total facility costs, termed "level II" fees. If, however, there are no state funds available, "level III" fees may be imposed for the full cost of their facility needs (that is, twice the amount of the level II fees). Chapter 407 also prevents cities and counties from imposing their own school facility fees until 2006, thereby suspending the previous court decisions until that time.
In response to the concern that developer fees can reduce housing affordability, Chapter 407 created three separate programs that provide new home purchasers with state funding for a portion or all of school district facility fees paid on their homes. These housing assistance programs were then modified by Chapter 127, Statutes of 2000 (AB 2866, Migden), to expand program eligibility and extend their sunset an additional year, from January 1 to December 31, 2002. The differences among these programs are summarized in Figure 1.
Figure 1 |
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Comparison of Single-Family Housing Programs |
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Program 1 Economically Distressed Areas |
Program 2 Sales Price Limit |
Program 3 Moderate-Income First-Time Home Buyers |
|
Income Limits |
None. |
None. |
Moderate-income household limits. |
Eligible Locations |
Limited to "economically distressed counties" (currently 12 counties). |
Available statewide. |
Available statewide. |
Sales Price Limits |
175 percent of county median five-year sales price. |
$130,000. |
None. |
Limited to First-Time Home Buyers? |
No. |
No. |
Yes. |
Amount of Grant |
School facility fees paid above level I amounts. |
School facility fees paid above level I amounts. |
Total amount of school facility fees paid. |
Each program shares the following characteristics:
In addition to the single-family programs discussed above, Chapter 407 also created a funding program for the reimbursement of school facility developer fees for the construction of new multifamily housing units. A development is eligible for the reimbursement of all fees paid to school districts in exchange for dedicating a portion of the project's units for very-low-income households (50 percent of county median income, adjusted for household size) for a period of 55 years. The number of units required to be dedicated must be in the same proportion to total units as the share of fees paid is to total construction costs. For example, if developer fees were 2 percent of total construction costs, a developer would have to dedicate four units of a 200-unit project to very-low-income households.
Chapter 407 appropriated $160 million over five fiscal years from the General Fund to DGS for the developer fee programs. The department contracts with CHFA for the administration of these programs. Figure 2 shows the fiscal-year appropriations to the four programs. For the economically distressed areas and sales price limit programs, any funds not expended within 18 months of their appropriation may be transferred to the moderate-income first-time home buyers' program. Any unspent funds at the time of the program's sunsetDecember 31, 2002will revert to the General Fund.
Figure 2 |
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Appropriations of Funding for the School Facility Fee Programs |
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(In Millions) |
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Program |
1998-99 |
1999-00 |
2000-01 |
2001-02 |
2002-03 |
Total |
Economically Distressed Areas |
$3.5 |
$7.0 |
$7.0 |
$7.0 |
$3.5 |
$28.0 |
Sales Price Limit |
3.5 |
7.0 |
7.0 |
7.0 |
3.5 |
28.0 |
Moderate-Income First- Time Home Buyers |
6.5 |
13.0 |
13.0 |
13.0 |
6.5 |
52.0 |
Multifamily Housing |
6.5 |
13.0 |
13.0 |
13.0 |
6.5 |
52.0 |
Totals |
$20.0 |
$40.0 |
$40.0 |
$40.0 |
$20.0 |
$160.0 |
Single-Family Programs. Although they have been functioning since the beginning of 1999, the single-family programs have expended few of their available funds (see Figure 3). Of the 748 applications that have been approved through the three programs, home buyers have received an average reimbursement of less than $2,500.
Figure 3 |
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Single-Family Program Expenditures |
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Through August 31, 2000 |
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Program |
Available Funds |
Expenditures |
Number of Approved Applications |
Economically Distressed Areas |
$17.5 |
$0.2 |
75 |
Sales Price Limit |
17.5 |
0.0 |
1 |
Moderate-Income First-Time Home Buyers |
32.5 |
1.6 |
672 |
Totals |
$67.5 |
$1.8 |
748 |
After some experience with the programs, CHFA identified a number of problems and proposed a series of statutory changes to increase their use. These changes were incorporated into Chapter 127, effective beginning July 1, 2000. For the sales price limit program, very few homes in California were being constructed for less than the original purchase price limit of $110,000. Therefore, the limit was raised to $130,000 and is now adjusted annually for changes in statewide home sales prices. The first-time home buyer program was originally limited to households of low-income. Few households of this income level, however, are in the position of purchasing homes. Thus, this program was expanded to include moderate-income households.
As of September 2000, home buyers in 22 counties had received funding from the state. Four countiesFresno, Kern, Riverside, and Tularerepresent more than 60 percent of the single-family programs' expenditures. The concentration of applicants in the Central Valley should not be particularly surprising, given that this area is one of California's fastest growing housing markets and often relies on the use of developer fees to finance new school construction.
Multifamily Program. Likewise, the multifamily housing program has had limited success in funding applicants. From its allocation of $32.5 million so far, seven projects have been funded for a total of $1.1 million, and another 34 projects have been approved with expected expenditures of $3.7 million. Due to the complexities of multifamily affordable housing financing and construction, the program takes a particularly long time to move from initial application to finished constructiontypically a minimum of one year.
Our review of these housing assistance programs indicates a number of concerns with their operation, which we discuss below.
Lack of Applications Threatens Viability of Programs. Without a dramatic expansion in home buyer and multifamily developer interest in the programs, the programs will continue to be an ineffective effort to increase housing affordability. So far, CHFA has limited its marketing efforts primarily to the real estate industry, such as lenders, brokers, and real estate agents. The department is now in the process of developing a marketing strategy aimed at the general public. The CHFA hopes that a greater awareness by the public of the programs will expand applications.
While increased public awareness and the changes to the single-family programs implemented by Chapter 127 will increase their use somewhat in the future, the programs will be unlikely to expend their total funding allocations by the programs' sunset date of December 31, 2002. In order to expend all of the program funds by the sunset, applications would need to grow by more than 30 times over their current levels in the next two years.
Similar Home Buyers Treated Differently. Home buyers will typically pay for the local cost of their school facilities through a combination of developer fees, Mello-Roos bonds, and property tax overrides for general obligation bonds. Each of these financing mechanisms adds to the cost of housing, while providing revenues for local school facilities. The CHFA developer fee programs, however, only provide assistance for one type of these financing mechanisms. As a result, a home buyer who elects to buy a home in a school district using developer fees would be eligible for state assistance. Another similar home buyer opting to purchase a home in a district using Mello-Roos bonds would not be eligible for any assistance. Similarly, purchasers of resale homes, including first-time home buyers, are not eligible for any assistanceeven though they will likely bear the cost of school facility repair or reconstruction costs through some other financing means.
Because developer fees are not the sole method of taxing home buyers for the cost of school facilities, providing assistance based on the amount of developer fees paid excludes home buyers taxed in the alternate ways. We find little policy rationale for assisting home buyers in districts financing school facilities with developer fees but providing no assistance to others in districts which opt for other financing alternatives.
Programs Not Targeted to Highest Need. The developer fee reimbursement programs do not appear to be targeted to the Californians most in need of housing assistance. Given the limited level of housing assistance available to Californians, these programs fail to strategically target assistance for the "highest and best use" of state General Fund housing dollars.
The four developer fee programs have spent less than $3 million of the $100 million that has already been appropriated to them. The effect of Chapter 127's modifications, combined with CHFA's intensified marketing efforts, should increase the use of the programs somewhat. Yet, with the programs' sunset date at the end of calendar year 2002, the funds already appropriated should be sufficient to fund the programs through their conclusion. Given that, along with the above concerns raised about the programs, we recommend that the Legislature amend state law to eliminate the additional appropriations scheduled for the programs in 2001-02 and 2002-03. This action would make an additional $60 million in one-time funds available for other, more-targeted housing programs or other legislative priorities.