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Can California Legalize Its Way to Housing Abundance?

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Can California Legalize Its Way to Housing Abundance?

This essay has been adapted from one that first appeared in the Thesis Driven newsletter.

No state has passed more pro-housing legislation over the past decade than California. From streamlining multifamily entitlements to legalizing lot splits to enabling conversions of commercial assets, the state has passed a wave of laws aimed at unblocking housing development. And it doesn’t appear to be stopping soon, with recent changs removing environmental-review barriers for housing and upzoning near transit.

Yet California’s issuing of housing permits—for both single and multi-family development—has continued to sag. While interest rates and development costs have surely played a role in keeping construction subdued, the lack of market response to the state’s broad-based reforms raises questions about the efficacy of those reforms.

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Since 2017, California has passed dozens of laws at the state level aiming to encourage housing production, particularly in California’s most expensive metro regions: Los Angeles, San Diego, and the San Francisco Bay Area. In general, these laws attempt to force municipalities to allow higher-density development, including by legalizing backyard units and duplexes within low-density zones or unlocking mid-rise development near transit.

California’s development landscape is complicated by the fact that most metros are composed of many small cities, each of which controls its own zoning. While New York City consolidates 8.5 million people and more than 300 square miles under one jurisdiction and zoning code, the San Francisco Bay Area has no fewer than 101 municipalities serving 7.7 million people.

This fragmentation creates a kind of “tragedy of the commons” when it comes to housing. While more housing benefits the entire metro area, the cost of new infrastructure falls on the specific city that’s building that housing. Hyper-local governance also makes elected officials more vulnerable to hyper-local NIMBY (“not in my backyard”) populism.

The end result is that nobody wants to authorize building, creating a devastating housing shortage that is driving people out of California. The state is projected to lose four electoral votes after the next Census, so its cities’ reluctance to build is having real political consequences.

The solution, in the view of housing advocates and key legislators, is to take housing decision-making out of the hands of municipalities through state preemption, essentially forcing cooperation.

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I’m not going to get into the weeds of each California law that has been passed over the past decade, but a few notable examples include:

  • Accessory Dwelling Unit Reforms: Starting in 2016, California passed a series of reforms (SB 1069 and SB 229, among others) that made building ADUs in the state far easier, preempting local restrictions and removing owner-occupancy requirements.
  • SB 35 (2017): One of the first big state multifamily housing bills, SB 35 gave teeth to city-level housing production goals by streamlining approvals in cities that were not meeting the targets. However, the law came with below-market-rate and union-wage requirements.
  • SB 9 (2021): SB 9 allows California homeowners to split a single-family lot into two parcels and build up to two homes on each, effectively permitting up to four units where only one was allowed before.
  • AB 2097: This measure prohibits cities from requiring parking on new development with 0.5 miles of a transit stop.

Other legislation enabled conversions of commercial buildings, prohibited downzoning, introduced a permit “shot clock,” and limited abuse of environmental- review laws, among other things—a wish list of reforms that would, ostensibly, make building housing more appealing to California developers.

Unfortunately, the housing market has been unresponsive. While there’s no way to know how many units would’ve been built without these reforms, multifamily development in California has been sluggish at best.

Only 38,362 multifamily permits were issued in California in 2024, a decline of more than 24 percent from the prior year and below pre-pandemic norms. By comparison, Dallas alone has seen almost 18,000 multifamily permits issued over the past year despite having a fraction of California’s population.

Earlier this year, a damning report from YIMBY Law, a housing advocacy organization, noted that the raft of state housing laws has had “limited to no impact” on California’s housing supply.

“You can think of housing policy as being an elaborate mesh forming a net,” explained Laura Foote, executive director of YIMBY Action, another advocacy group. “You can pull out threads, but there’s still a lot of remaining threads left in the net. But that doesn’t mean we should stop pulling the ropes.”

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The YIMBY Law report points to continued intransigence from municipalities as one driver of the laws’ ineffectiveness.

“The default assumption is that cities are going to figure out some way to say no, and all that dampens the impact,” said Foote.

In many cases, cities must be sued into compliance with state law—an unappealing prospect to most developers, who must work with local officials. Foote told Thesis Driven this past summer that she’d like to see more developers fight recalcitrant municipalities in court, but many developers want to avoid getting into legal battles with their host cities. Cities, after all, have many ways of making a builder’s life miserable.

YIMBY Law’s report also highlighted one flaw in many of the state’s housing preemptions: costly mandates that make projects financially unworkable.

In California, legislative progress on housing has been driven by housing advocates in tandem with organized labor and (at times) pro-tenant groups. From a political standpoint, this coalition has gathered enough heft to pass legislation in the face of opposition from environmental organizations, cities, and other NIMBY groups.

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But to win the support of coalition partners, housing legislation often includes caveats and requirements that make actual development less feasible. Foremost among these are prevailing-wage and labor requirements.

“Union construction is extremely expensive, and institutional capital shies away from it,” said Zachary Streit, president of Priority Capital Advisory, a Los Angeles-based real-estate capital-markets firm. “You may think you’re doing something to help the worker base, but when capital leaves, it’s not clear how you’re helping anyone. You’re not creating jobs and you’re not creating housing.”

Many pro-housing laws such as SB35 also included requirements for below-market rate (BMR) housing, mandates that effectively require that market-rate rents be high enough to subsidize lower-rent units. These rules compound the problems housing developers are already facing in elevated interest rates and construction costs.

And cities, of course, can come up with their own creative barriers to housing development. Los Angeles, for instance, passed Measure ULA (the misleadingly titled “mansion tax”) in 2022, which imposes a tax of 4 percent—escalating to 5.5 percent—on all property sales above $5.5 million, which includes most multifamily buildings. A report by UCLA’s Lewis Center estimated that Measure ULA alone cut multifamily development in L.A. by 18 percent.

But simply explaining developers’ lack of enthusiasm for California as a matter of pro formas and underwritten yields misses a perhaps larger point: the state is increasingly seen as a risky and unfriendly place to build.

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If one speaks to multifamily developers in Los Angeles, the biggest issue that comes up is not zoning limitations, parking mandates, or even Measure ULA. It’s the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (DWP), the city’s public utility.  DWP has gained notoriety among multifamily developers for extensive delays in installing and connecting the utilities essential for leasing buildings.

“We’re sitting on a finished [building] with 176 units that was supposed to have power in April 2024,” wrote developer John Otter on X last month. “It’s Oct 2025 and no power. A $900k estimate was given by DWP to run a line to our project. We received the bill; it’s $3.3M.” Anecdotes like this from real-estate developers are depressingly common.

Developers also point to Covid-era eviction moratoria and the specter of rent control as contributing to the negative environment.

“California has trended very anti-business, very anti-developer,” said Streit. “It’s very unfriendly from both a political and tax perspective. It makes capital very wary of investing here.”

While Proposition 33, which would have allowed municipalities to enact broad rent controls, was soundly defeated at the ballot box last November, the mere prospect of rent-control-by-referendum is enough to spook some investors.

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“I’m from here. It has the best weather, the world’s best tech engine. It’s wild that we can’t attract institutional capital. It’s criminal the deals are getting done in the Sunbelt and not here,” Streit said.

“Institutional capital has now redlined L.A. No one will capitalize and build rental housing in the city going forward,” said Otter. “At the institutional capital and apartment developer level, it’s a small world, and we’re all communicating. Capital and developers don’t need to build in L.A. We can build anywhere,” he added.

While Otter’s comments are focused on Los Angeles, not California as a whole, L.A. represents a significant percentage of California’s unmet housing demand. And the hostility and barriers that developers face in Los Angeles are present in various forms in other cities. The vibes are bad for housing development in the Golden State.

Institutional real-estate investors are inherently conservative people, and real-estate investing is far more art and less science than many in the industry like to believe. After all, a project planned today may come to market in seven years and stabilize in a decade, and anyone who tells you what the market will look like in a decade is lying. So investing (or not) on the basis of vibes is less silly than it may initially appear.

“Folks in the institutional investor world, they want rules to be the rules—otherwise how can you make that massive investment?” added Foote.

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Unfortunately for housing advocates, vibes are hard to fix. But perhaps lessons can be drawn from one category of housing that has been meaningfully unlocked by regulatory change: accessory dwelling units, or ADUs.

The rise of ADUs in California provides a compelling counterexample to sluggish multifamily development. Since the state’s first ADU reform passed in 2016, the number of units produced per year has risen from under 2,000 to many tens of thousands. In 2023, Los Angeles County permitted more than 45,000 ADUs, significantly outpacing multifamily permitting.

“What’s great about ADUs is that you have one set of rules that apply throughout the entire state,” said Foote.

ADU legislation also avoided the baggage that dogged other state-level housing legislation: accessory units don’t come with wage requirements, and they (mostly) avoid below-market rate and rent control mandates. An investor can buy a house and build an ADU in the backyard with any labor willing to take the job and rent it at any price a tenant is willing to pay, which cannot be said for most multifamily development unlocked by state law.

These distinctions are due in part to ADU developers being less appealing targets than institutional multifamily builders for both organized labor and tenant advocates. “Build an 800-square foot structure in a backyard for $400,000” isn’t the kind of project that gets union leaders excited, and ADU owners—often portrayed as individual homeowners—are more sympathetic figures than Greystar or Blackstone.

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This soft-handed regulatory treatment has unleashed a minor boom in ADU development, a wave largely led by small-scale developers and investors—neither single homeowners nor institutional behemoths but hands-on operators building a handful of units at a time. In this respect, the ADU phenomenon may represent a model approach for fixing California’s housing laws.

“How do we build back the cottage industry of building 3-15 unit buildings?” asked Foote. “That industry got decimated and went into kitchen remodels and has to be coaxed back into housing.”

In a sense, small-scale developers are poised to benefit the most from California’s housing liberalization. Small projects have fewer burdensome requirements, and they’re less likely to draw the ire of local NIMBYs and officials for using state housing preemptions. But the sheer number of state housing laws is confounding, and the overlap of people who fully understand how the laws can be applied and who develop small multifamily buildings is tiny.

Of course, California is not attempting to legalize its way to abundance in isolation. Other states, such as Texas and Montana, have passed aggressive pro-housing legislation in recent years. Steven Stenzler, a senior policy advisor at Brownstein, sees this as a positive for pro-housing efforts in California.

“It shows it can be done, and it’s a great foil when talking to legislators,” Stenzler said. “‘Are you gonna let those guys beat us?’”

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Foote believes it is only a matter of time before developers see the opportunity and put negativity aside.

“Right now, California is an undervalued asset,” said Foote. “The undervalued part is because the only people who understand how to put the laws together [to build housing] are a few elite land-use attorneys.”

Foote predicts that developers—particularly small-scale builders—will find gold in California once again as word of new housing laws spreads.

“Have faith in the market,” she said.

Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images

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Neil Thwaites promoted to ‘Vice President of Global Sales & California Commercial Performance’ for Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines – Alaska Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines and Horizon Air

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Neil Thwaites promoted to ‘Vice President of Global Sales & California Commercial Performance’ for Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines – Alaska Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines and Horizon Air


Thwaites will lead the strategy and execution of all sales activities for the combined Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines team. His responsibilities include growing indirect revenue on Alaska’s expanding international and domestic network, as well as expanding Atmos for Business, a new program designed for small- and medium-sized companies.

Thwaites joined Alaska Airlines in January 2022 as regional vice president in California. Since stepping into the role, Thwaites has significantly sharpened the airline’s focus and scale in key markets and communities across the state, strengthening Alaska’s position as we continue to grow in California. He will continue to be based at the company’s California offices in Burlingame. The moves take effect Dec. 13, with Thwaites also continuing to lead his current California commercial planning and performance function in addition to Global Sales.

Prior to Alaska, Thwaites worked in multiple positions within the airline industry, including a decade holding roles in London, New York, and Los Angeles for British Airways (a fellow oneworld member); most recently as ‘VP, Sales – Western USA’, where he was responsible for market development strategy and indirect revenue for both British Airways and Iberia across the western U.S.

Thwaites is originally from the United Kingdom and graduated from the University of Brighton with a double honors degree in Business Administration & Law.



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Tiny tracker following monarch butterflies during California migration

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Tiny tracker following monarch butterflies during California migration


SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — When this monarch butterfly hits the sky it won’t be traveling alone. In fact, an energetic team of researchers will be following along with a revolutionary technology that’s already unlocking secrets that could help the entire species survive.

“I’ve described this technology as a spaceship compared to the wheel, like using a using a spaceship compared to the invention of the wheel. It’s teaching us so, so much more,” says Ray Moranz, Ph.D., a pollinator conservation specialist with the Xerces Society.

Moranz is part of a team that’s been placing tiny tracking devices on migrating monarchs. The collaboration is known as Project Monarch Science. It leverages solar powered radio tags that are so light they don’t affect the butterfly’s ability to fly. And they’re allowing researchers to track the Monarch’s movements in precise detail. With some 400 tags in place, the group already been able to get a nearly real time picture of monarch migrations east of the Rockies, with some populations experiencing dramatic twists and turns before making to wintering grounds in Mexico.

“They’re trying to go southward to Mexico. They can’t fight the winds. Instead, some of them were letting themselves be carried 50 miles north, 100 miles north, 200 miles the wrong way, which we are all extremely alarmed by and for good reason. Some of these monarchs, their migration was delayed by two or three weeks.

According to estimates, migrating monarch populations have dropped by roughly 80% or more across the country. And the situation with coastal species here in California is especially dire. Blake Barbaree is a senior scientist with Point Blue Conservation Science. He and his colleagues are tracking Northern California populations now clustered around Santa Cruz.

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MORE: Monarch butterflies to be listed as a threatened species in US

“This year, there’s it’s one of the lowest, populations recorded in the winter. And the core zones have been in Santa Cruz County and up in Marin County. So we’ve undertaken an effort to understand how the monarchs are really using these different groves around Santa Cruz by tagging some in the state parks around town,” Barbaree explains.

He says being able to track individual monarchs could help identify microhabitats in the area that help them survive, ranging from backyard pollinator gardens to protected open space to forest groves.

“So we’re really getting a great insight to how reliant they are on these big trees, but also the surrounding area and people’s even backyards. And then along the way around the coast, how they’re transitioning among some of these groves. And we’re looking for some of the triggers for those movements. Right. Why are they doing this and what’s what’s driving them to do that? So those questions are still a little bit further out as we get to analyze some more some more of the data,” he believes.

And that data is getting even more precise. The tags, developed by Cellular Tracking Technologies, can be monitored from dedicated listening stations. But the company is also able to crowdsource signals detected by cellphone networks on phones with Bluetooth connectivity and location access activated. And they’ve also helped develop an app that allows volunteers, citizen scientists, and the general public to track and report Monarch locations themselves using their smartphones.

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CEO Michael Lanzone says the initial response has been overwhelming.

MORE: New butterflies introduced in SF’s Presidio after species went extinct in 1940s

“We were super surprised to see 3,000 people download the monarch app. It’s like, you know, but people really love monarchs. There’s something that people just relate to,” says Lanzone who like many staffers at Cellular Tracking Technologies, has a background in wildlife ecology.

A number of groups are pushing to have the monarchs designated nationally as a threatened species. If that ultimately happens, researchers believe the tracking data could help put better protections in place.

“They’re highly vulnerable to, you know, some of the different things that that that we as humans do around using pesticides and also potentially cutting, you know, cutting down trees for various reasons. Sometimes they’re for safety and sometimes it’s, you know, for development. But so having an understanding of how we can do those things more sensibly and protect the places that they need the most,” says Point Blue’s Barbaree.

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And it’s happening with the help of researchers, citizen scientists, and a technology weighing no more than a few grains of rice.

The smartphone app is called Project Monarch Science. You can download it for free and begin tracking.

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Poisonings from ‘death cap’ mushrooms in California prompt warning against foraging

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Poisonings from ‘death cap’ mushrooms in California prompt warning against foraging


After a string of poisonings from “death cap” mushrooms — one of them fatal — California health officials are urging residents not to eat any foraged mushrooms unless they are trained experts.

Doctors in the San Francisco Bay Area have blamed the wild mushroom, also called Amanita phalloides, for 23 poisoning cases reported to the California Poison Control System since Nov. 18, according to Dr. Craig Smollin, medical director for the system’s San Francisco division.

“All of these patients were involved with independently foraging the mushrooms from the wild,” Smollin, who is a professor of emergency medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, said at a news conference Tuesday. “They all developed symptoms within the first 24 hours, including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal pain.”

Smollin said some of the patients were parts of cohorts that had consumed the same batch of foraged mushrooms. The largest group was about seven people, he said.

All of the patients were hospitalized, at least briefly. One died. Five remain in hospital care. One has received a liver transplant, and another is on a donation list awaiting a transplant, Smollin said. The patients are 1½ to 56 years old.

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Mushroom collectors said death cap mushrooms are more prevalent in parts of California this season than in years past, which could be driving the increase in poisonings.

“Any mushroom has years that it’s prolific and years that it is not. … It’s having a very good season,” said Mike McCurdy, president of the Mycological Society of San Francisco. He added that the death cap was one of the top two species he identified during an organized group hunt for fungi last week, called a foray.

In a news release, Dr. Erica Pan, California’s state public health officer, warned that “because the death cap can easily be mistaken for edible safe mushrooms, we advise the public not to forage for wild mushrooms at all during this high-risk season.”

Dr. Cyrus Rangan, a pediatrician and medical toxicologist with the California Poison Control System, said the “blanket warning” is needed because most people do not have the expertise to identify which mushrooms are safe to eat.

Still, he said, “it’s rare to see a case series like this.”

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The California Poison Control System said in a news release that some of the affected patients speak Spanish and might be relying on foraging practices honed outside the United States. Death cap mushrooms look similar to other species in the Amanita genus that are commonly eaten in Central American countries, according to Heather Hallen-Adams, the toxicology chair of the North American Mycological Association. Because death caps are not often found in that region, foragers might not realize the potential risk of lookalikes in California, she said.

Anne Pringle, a professor of mycology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said there is a litany of poisoning cases in which people misidentify something because their experience is not relevant to a new region: “That’s a story that comes up over and over again.”

An Amanita phalloides mushroom in Hungary. The species originated in Europe and is invasive in the U.S. Anne Pringle

Over the past 10 years, mushroom foraging has boomed in the Bay Area and other parts of the country. At the same time, information resources about mushroom toxicity — reliable and otherwise — have proliferated, as well, including on social media, phone apps and artificial intelligence platforms. Experts said those sources should be viewed with skepticism.

Longtime mushroom hunters maintain that the practice can be done safely. McCurdy, who has collected and identified mushrooms since the 1970s, said he bristled at the broad discouragement of foraging.

“No, that’s ridiculous. … After an incident like this, their first instinct is to say don’t forage,” he said. “Experienced mushroom collectors won’t pay any attention to that.”

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But McCurdy suggested that people seek expertise from local mycological societies, which are common in California, and think critically about the sources of information their lives may be relying on.

Pringle and McCurdy both said they have seen phone apps and social media forums misidentify mushrooms.

“I have seen AI-generated guidebooks that are dangerous,” Pringle said.

The death cap is an invasive species that originated in Europe and came to California in the 1930s, most likely with imported nursery trees. The mushroom is usually a few inches tall with white gills, a pale yellow or green cap and often a ring around the base of its stalk.

The species is found across the West Coast and the Eastern Seaboard, as well as in Florida and Texas, according to Hallen-Adams, who is also an associate professor of food science at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

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In California, it typically grows near oak trees, though occasionally pines, too. The mushroom’s body is typically connected to tree roots and grows in a symbiotic relationship with them.

The toxin in death cap mushrooms, called amatoxin, can damage the kidneys, liver and gastrointestinal tract if it is ingested. It disrupts the transcription of genetic code and the production of proteins, which can lead to cell death.

Hallen-Adams said the U.S. Poison Centers average about 52 calls involving amatoxin each year, but “a lot of things don’t get called into poison centers — take that with a grain of salt.”

Amatoxin poisoning is not the most common type from mushrooms, but it is the most dangerous, she added: “90% of lethal poisonings worldwide are going to be amatoxin.”

It takes remarkably little to sicken a person.

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“One cubic centimeter of a mushroom ingested could be a fatal dose,” Hallen-Adams said.

Symptoms of amatoxin poisoning often develop within several hours, then improve before they worsen. There is no standard set of medical interventions that doctors rely on.

“It’s a very difficult mushroom to test for,” Rangan said, and “also very difficult to treat.”

One drug that doctors have leaned on to treat some of the California patients — called silibinin — is still experimental and difficult to obtain.

“All of our silibinin comes from Europe,” Hallen-Adams said.

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Death cap mushrooms have continued to grow abundantly since their introduction, and Pringle’s research has shown that the species can reproduce bisexually and unisexually — with a mate or by itself, alone — which gives it an evolutionary advantage.

“If Eve can make more of herself, she doesn’t need Adam,” Pringle said. “One of the things I’m really interested in is how you might stop the invasion, how you might cure a habitat of its death caps. And I have no solutions to offer you at the moment.”



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