HomeMy WebLinkAbout08.08.2024@630 SP Joint CC and PCThursday, August 8, 2024
6:30 PM
City of South San Francisco
P.O. Box 711 (City Hall, 400 Grand Avenue)
South San Francisco, CA
City Hall, City Manager's Conference Room
400 Grand Avenue, South San Francisco, CA
Housing Standing Committee of the City Council and
Planning Commission
-
MARK ADDIEGO, Councilmember
MARK NAGALES, Councilmember
MICHELE EVANS, Commissioner
SAM SHIHADEH, Commissioner
NORMAN FARIA, Chairperson (Alternate)
Special Meeting Agenda
1
August 8, 2024Housing Standing Committee of the
City Council and Planning
Commission
Special Meeting Agenda
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Page 2 City of South San Francisco Printed on 8/9/2024
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August 8, 2024Housing Standing Committee of the
City Council and Planning
Commission
Special Meeting Agenda
CALL TO ORDER
ROLL CALL
AGENDA REVIEW
PUBLIC COMMENTS
Comments are limited to items on the Special Meeting Agenda.
MATTERS FOR CONSIDERATION
Motion to approve the Minutes of April 18, 2022.1.
Report regarding establishing a conversion process including noticing and relocation
benefits in the event of single room occupancy hotel and mobile home park closures,
redevelopments, or changes of use. (Katie Lan, Management Analyst II)
2.
ADJOURNMENT
Page 3 City of South San Francisco Printed on 8/9/2024
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City of South San Francisco
Legislation Text
P.O. Box 711 (City Hall, 400
Grand Avenue)
South San Francisco, CA
File #:24-787 Agenda Date:8/8/2024
Version:1 Item #:1.
Motion to approve the Minutes of April 18, 2022.
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CALL TO ORDER 5:05 p.m.
ROLL CALL Present: Mayor Nagales, Councilmember Addiego, Planning
Commission Chair Shihadeh, and Planning Commissioner
Faria.
Absent: Planning Commissioner Evans.
AGENDA REVIEW
None.
PUBLIC COMMENTS
None.
MATTERS FOR CONSIDERATION
1. Motion to approve the Minutes for the November 19, 2018, August 19, 2019, and March 21,
2022, meetings.
Motion – Councilmember Addiego / Second – Planning Commission Chair Shihadeh to approve the
Minutes for the November 19, 2018, August 19, 2019, and March 21, 2022 meetings. YES: Mayor
Nagales, Chair Shihadeh, Commissioner Faria, Councilmember Addiego; NAYS: None; ABSENT:
Planning Commissioner Evans; ABSTAIN: None.
2. Study session for a proposed 292-unit multi-family residential project at 40 Airport
Boulevard. (Christopher Espiritu, Senior Planner)
Senior Planner Espiritu and Ryan McNamara of Black Griggs Properties, LLC, presented a proposal
for a 292-unit multi-family residential project at 40 Airport Boulevard. The plan involves
demolishing the existing on-site building and constructing a new eight-story building containing 292
multi-family residential units and 308 parking stalls on two levels of podium parking. The proposal
includes several community benefits, such as safety improvements at the intersection of Airport
Boulevard/South Airport Boulevard, pedestrian and bike enhancements, and contributions to the
MINUTES
REGULAR MEETING
OF THE
HOUSING STANDING COMMITTEE OF THE
CITY COUNCIL AND
PLANNING COMMISSION
CITY OF SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO
P.O. Box 711 (City Hall, 400 Grand Avenue)
South San Francisco, California 94083
MONDAY, APRIL 18, 2022
5:00 p.m.
Teleconference via Zoom
Housing Standing Committee may meet by teleconference, consistent with the
Brown Act as amended by AB 361 (2021. Under the amended rules, the City
will not provide a physical location for members of the public to participate
in the teleconference meeting.
5
REGULAR HOUSING STANDING COMMITTEE MEETING APRIL 18, 2022
MINUTES PAGE 2
Community Facilities District. The staff is seeking input from the Housing Standing Committee,
particularly regarding the architecture and proposed community benefits.
Mr. McNamara presented a development overview of the amenities, which included the following:
• Community/co-working spaces
• Resident café
• Pet run and spa
• Fitness center
• Podium Courtyard
• Rooftop lounge and sky deck
Planning Commissioner Faria noted the importance of including three—and four-bedroom to meet
the housing needs. He requested clarification on the bedroom ratio for the 44 below-market-rate
(BMR) units. Mr. McNamara provided an overview of State law housing requirements.
Planning Commission Chair Shihadeh inquired about rent projections for the various unit types and
parking costs. Mr. McNamara provided an overview of the projected rental income and parking costs
depending on the number of spaces per unit.
Councilmember Addiego inquired whether the developer and the two businesses next to the project
site considered adding ingress to the project. Mr. McNamara stated the business declined ingress as
it would eliminate parking spaces. Councilmember Addiego inquired about future traffic solutions
for the area. Chief Planner Rozzi advised that without re-envisioning that intersection, there was no
way to improve the traffic flow.
Mayor Nagales inquired whether the Transportation Demand Management (TDM) ordinance
required residential projects to have a certain percentage of residents with alternate modes of
transportation. Senior Planner Espiritu stated that the current TDM ordinance does not have
residential requirements.
Councilmember Addiego requested the developer examine the pedestrian tunnel to determine what
would be needed to bring it up to a level conducive to people's enjoyment of walking to the train.
Mr. McNamara indicated that he would review the site and report back.
ADJOURNMENT
Being no further business, the meeting was adjourned at 5:55 p.m.
Submitted by: Approved by:
_______________________________ ______________________________
Rosa Govea Acosta Mark Nagales
City Clerk Councilmember
Approved by the Housing Standing Committee: / /
6
City of South San Francisco
Legislation Text
P.O. Box 711 (City Hall, 400
Grand Avenue)
South San Francisco, CA
File #:24-785 Agenda Date:8/8/2024
Version:1 Item #:2.
..Title
Report regarding establishing a conversion process including noticing and relocation benefits in the event of
single room occupancy hotel and mobile home park closures,redevelopments,or changes of use.(Katie Lan,
Management Analyst II)
RECOMMENDATION
Staff recommends the Joint Housing Standing Committee of the City Council and Planning Commission
consider and provide guidance on establishing a permit process for single room occupancy hotels and mobile
home parks proposed to be converted,demolished,and/or redeveloped.The intention of the policies is to
establish streamlined administrative processes for the City to enforce noticing and relocation benefit
requirements for residents displaced from these housing types.
BACKGROUND
South San Francisco is home to two unique types of naturally occurring affordable housing -mobile homes and
single room occupancy (SRO)hotels.When a mobile home park closes or is converted to another use,its
residents are displaced.Due to the complicated rental and ownership nature of these parks,displaced mobile
home owners often face the difficult choice of whether to abandon their home or move their home to another
mobile home park,often an expensive and onerous process.Likewise,when an SRO hotel closes due to
conversion or redevelopment,its residents are also displaced.(SRO hotels are residential properties where
individual tenants rent small,single rooms with shared bathrooms and often shared kitchens,often providing
naturally occurring affordable housing for lower-income households.)Both of these types of housing are
vulnerable to closure and redevelopment due to changing market conditions.SRO hotels,particularly in South
San Francisco,are aging developments.As SRO owners seek to sell these properties,residents are increasingly
faced with the challenge of finding limited affordable housing options.
SROs and Mobile Homes in South San Francisco
The city is home to at least seven currently occupied SRO hotels,comprising of over 220 naturally occurring
affordable SRO units.
Known SRO Inventory List - Updated July 30, 2024
Property Name Property Address Number of Units Status
Metropolitan Hotel 220 Linden Ave 68 Active; deed restricted affordable housing
w/ City loan
Industrial Hotel 505 Cypress Ave 29 Active; operated by County BHRS
contractor as PSH
S & L Hotel 400 Miller Ave 29 Active; listed for sale
146 Gardiner Ave 146-150 Gardiner Ave 21 Sold in 2022; code enforcement actions in
2023/2024
The Grand Hotel 731 Airport Blvd Approx. 57 Active
Alphonse Hotel 108 Grand Ave 19 Active, but all units are currently vacant
Atlas Hotel 322 Grand Ave Unknown Converted to tourist hotel, but still allows
long term stays
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Known SRO Inventory List - Updated July 30, 2024Property Name Property Address Number of Units Status
Metropolitan Hotel 220 Linden Ave 68 Active; deed restricted affordable housing
w/ City loan
Industrial Hotel 505 Cypress Ave 29 Active; operated by County BHRS
contractor as PSH
S & L Hotel 400 Miller Ave 29 Active; listed for sale
146 Gardiner Ave 146-150 Gardiner Ave 21 Sold in 2022; code enforcement actions in
2023/2024
The Grand Hotel 731 Airport Blvd Approx. 57 Active
Alphonse Hotel 108 Grand Ave 19 Active, but all units are currently vacant
Atlas Hotel 322 Grand Ave Unknown Converted to tourist hotel, but still allows
long term stays
Treasure Island Mobile Home and RV Park located at 1700 El Camino Real is the only mobile home park in
South San Francisco and houses over 100 permanent mobile homes.San Mateo Housing Leadership Council
recently canvassed Treasure Island Mobile Home Park residents to assess their housing needs and shared an
overview of survey responses with City staff.The survey revealed that many residents are low-income seniors
on fixed incomes,with a primary concern being long-term housing security.It also highlighted the diverse
rental and ownership structures among mobile home residents,including those who own their homes but rent
the space where it is located, and those who rent both the space and the home.
General Plan & Housing Element Policies
The City adopted a comprehensive update to the General Plan (GP)in 2022 and recently received State
certification for its 2023-2031 Housing Element.As stated in the General Plan,the City’s housing priorities
include new housing production while preserving affordable housing and protecting vulnerable residents from
housing instability and displacement.The proposed policies addressing SRO and mobile home park
displacement help achieve the goals outlined in the Housing Element and General Plan.Specifically,the
proposed ordinances contribute to the following policy goals identified in implementing the Fair Housing Plan
in the City’s certified Housing Element:
·Policy EQ-3:Support residents who are at-risk of being displaced.Reduce the rate of evictions and
support low-income residents who are at risk of being displaced. (GP)
·Policy EQ-8:Protect existing residents from displacement in areas of lower or moderate opportunity
and concentrated poverty and preserve housing choices and affordability. (FHAP)
·Program PRSV-5.2 Assist Tenants as risk of Displacement:The City shall assist tenants displaced by the
conversion of at-risk units by providing information about tenants’rights,providing referrals to relevant
social service providers,endeavoring to establish a funding source to assist nonprofit organizations that
support tenants, and facilitating other support as appropriate.
While the intention of developing a permit process to secure noticing and relocation benefits for residents being
displaced from SROs and mobile homes is not to prevent redevelopment or conversion of those properties,this
sort of policy can be viewed as an anti-displacement effort.The goal is to lessen the financial,emotional,and
familial impact of an eviction from naturally affordable housing unit into,most-likely,a market rate housing
environment.In this way,the proposed policies are an anti-displacement measure,aimed at addressing the
causes and impacts of residential displacement.
Relationship to Anti-Displacement Roadmap
While the City is working toward the preparation of a Commercial and Residential Anti-Displacement
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While the City is working toward the preparation of a Commercial and Residential Anti-Displacement
Roadmap,Council has directed staff to bring forward more urgent policies and not to wait for the conclusion of
the multi-year Roadmap preparation if the policies are warranted in the immediate term.Due to recent code
enforcement action at an SRO,the listing of an SRO hotel for sale on the open market,and the City’s
monitoring efforts at a deed restricted SRO hotel,it is evident that a policy to address SRO conversion may be
necessary in the near term,and not at the conclusion of the Roadmap process.Additionally,mobile home park
acquisitions and redevelopments have been covered by the media nationally and while staff is unaware of any
short-or medium-term plans for the mobile home park in South San Francisco to redevelop,the type of policies
that address SRO conversion are similar to those that would protect mobile home residents and so staff is
proposing these policies in tandem.
Benchmarking Research
Staff conducted extensive research on existing policies in the region.In developing policies to address SRO and
mobile home conversion or redevelopment in South San Francisco,staff consulted with jurisdictions that have
implemented similar measures and engaged with community-based organizations familiar with these housing
types.Insights from these discussions were instrumental in crafting policies to address mobile home park and
SRO hotel conversion.
Mobile Home Parks
State Law
Existing State law (California Government Code sections 65863.7,66427.4(a))establishes a minimum standard
for local regulation of the conversion of mobile home parks to other uses and mobile home park closures.
Specifically,the State law requires the entity proposing the conversion or redevelopment to file a report on the
impact of the conversion,closure,or redevelopment of the mobile home park.The report must include a
replacement and relocation plan that adequately mitigates the impact on the displaced residents of the mobile
home park. This legislation does not prevent a local agency from enacting more stringent measures.
San Mateo County Ordinances
The County of San Mateo has adopted more stringent regulatory measures,as allowed by State law.This
Chapter 5.156 of the San Mateo County Ordinance Code addresses mobile home parks located in
unincorporated San Mateo County.The County legislation requires mobile home park owners to submit a
relocation impact report to the County prior to converting or closing the mobile home park.This also creates a
process for park owners to notify park tenants.Adopting similar legislation would help streamline regional
alignment of mobile home park regulations.
The County also took these regulations a step further,enshrining a mobile home park zoning district that is
overlayed on mobile home park properties throughout unincorporated County.Since the implementation of
these ordinances,no mobile home park conversions have been proposed.While these ordinances do not
preclude redevelopment or conversion if pursued by park owners,they discourage conversion by increasing the
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time and costs.
City of San Jose Ordinances
Staff also examined San Jose’s Mobile Home Ordinances.San Jose has enacted both a Mobile Home Rent
Ordinance and a Mobile Home Conversion Ordinance,which together provide rent stabilization and tenant
protections.The conversion ordinance,an expansion of a 1986 measure,aims to prevent the permanent
displacement of residents and mitigate homelessness among lower-income mobile home residents.San Jose’s
measures include relocation assistance and advance notice requirements and were updated to provide more
specificity in definitions and implementation following a notable 2021 mobile home park closure.
In 2021,Winchester Ranch Mobile Home Park closed.It housed over 145 seniors.Most of the mobile home
park’s residents benefited from buyouts or condominiums in the new development on the site;however,some
newer residents only received buyouts and were not able to stay in place through the right of first refusal.City
Staff faced criticism for vague definitions and expectations of who is entitled to relocation benefits.Updates to
this policy have been effective in ensuring all permanent residents receive tenant protections and illustrate the
effectiveness of a well-structured conversion policy in balancing development with tenant protections,but
additionally highlight the importance of who is included within protections.
Single Room Occupancy Hotels
San Diego Housing Commission
A notable example of SRO regulation is by the San Diego Housing Commission (SDHC),which emphasizes
tenant rights and the preservation of SRO units.The SDHC policy mandates the replacement of SRO hotel
rooms that are demolished,converted,or rehabilitated,unless specific exemptions apply.The SDHC ensures
compliance with these regulations and provides relocation benefits to displaced tenants.SDHC staff shared that
this ordinance has effectively brought SROs into compliance,preventing their conversion into transient or
tourist hotels and preserving affordable housing for vulnerable residents.One specific hotel,the Occidental
Hotel,was sold to a developer in 2022.The developer intended to convert it into a tourist hotel.Under the
SDHC policy,displaced residents received advance notice and relocation assistance,maintaining their access to
affordable housing.
San Francisco
Staff also reviewed the Residential Hotel Conversion and Demolition Ordinance in San Francisco,designed to
protect SRO units from conversion or demolition.This ordinance requires SRO hotel owners to log occupancy
information daily and submit annual usage reports,alongside applying for permits for any property conversion
or demolition.Additionally,it mandates a one-for-one replacement of units through new construction or in-lieu
payments to the San Francisco Residential Hotel Preservation Fund.Although the notice and relocation
requirements in San Francisco are not very strong,the larger stock of SRO units (over 19,000 units)facilitates
easier relocation within the city.
In the process of conducting benchmarking research,staff created a matrix of existing SRO and mobile home
regulations to provide the Housing Standing Committee a greater understanding of the landscape of both
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regulations to provide the Housing Standing Committee a greater understanding of the landscape of both
mobile home park and SRO regulations in the area.
DISCUSSION
At this time,staff recommends preparing two ordinances -one addressing mobile homes and one addressing
SRO hotels -that amend the City’s Zoning Ordinance,Chapter 20 of the South San Francisco Municipal Code.
These ordinances would:
1.Define triggering events;
2.Define qualifying tenants;
3.Mandate substantial noticing before a mobile home park or SRO hotel is closed,demolished,and/or
converted;
4.Establish relocation benefits for tenants of mobile home parks and SRO hotels; and
5.Develop a ministerial approval process for mobile home park and SRO hotel conversions.This would
not include a ministerial approval of any new use,simply that the property is permitted to convert after
having met the noticing and relocation requirements of the ordinances.
Staff does not recommend requiring permanently preserving mobile home parks or SRO hotels,as the policies
in San Francisco and San Diego do by requiring unit for unit replacement or payment in-lieu fees.What staff
recommends is formalizing a process that maximizes protection for displaced tenants,the primary objective of
which is to ensure vulnerable residents can remain in South San Francisco (if they would like to)and avoid
displacement from the community at large.
Triggering Events
Staff recommends that the need for a conversion permit is triggered when the following happen:1)conversion
from long term housing to short term;2)conversion of current housing units to another use;3)conversion
through vacancy;and 4)closure.For both SRO hotels and mobile home parks,the use of a unit for tourist
and/or short-term use is also considered a conversion.Even though a housing unit may still serve a residential
purpose,if a unit transforms from serving residents with long term leases (leases over 30 days)to a day-to-day
basis,this is considered a conversion to short term use.Additionally,to prevent mobile home park or SRO hotel
owners from coercing residents to vacate and deliberately keeping spaces empty to evade paying relocation
benefits prior to closure,staff recommends defining vacancy for the purposes of triggering the conversion
permit process.Specifically,if 25%or more of the rooms in an SRO hotel or units in a mobile home park
remain uninhabited for over ninety consecutive days,without being due to a natural or physical disaster,this
condition should be considered a conversion under the ordinance.
Qualifying Tenants
Staff proposes that a qualifying tenant be defined as a resident residing in the SRO hotel or mobile home park
for a period of longer than thirty consecutive days in the one-hundred-eighty-day period prior to the issuance of
a notice of intent to apply for a Conversion permit.This does not include short-term hotel guests or short-term
mobile home park space rentals who are individuals staying for a period of less than thirty consecutive days.
This definition may be expanded to include the spouse,parents,children,and grandchildren of the legal
resident when those persons legally resided in the unit on the date of the application.For mobile home park
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resident when those persons legally resided in the unit on the date of the application.For mobile home park
residents,staff recommends residents who rent the space but own their mobile home and residents who rent the
space and rent their mobile home are both eligible to receive relocation benefits.
Noticing Requirements
Staff recommends SRO hotel and mobile home park owners be required to provide notices to tenants
throughout the conversion permit process.Specifically,an effective noticing strategy would include the Owners
notifying eligible residents of:
·The intent to apply for a Conversion Permit;
·No sooner than 12 months after the intent to apply for a Conversion Permit,the approval of the
Conversion Permit Application;
·The approval of a relocation impact report; and
·No sooner than nine months after the approval of the Conversion Permit Application,the termination of
residency would be given.
Relocation Benefits
While it does not permanently preserve mobile home parks or SRO hotels,a requirement to pay relocation
benefits seeks to formalize a process that maximizes protections for displaced tenants.The primary objective of
relocation benefits is to ensure that vulnerable residents can remain in South San Francisco and avoid
displacement from the community at large.
Core relocation benefits - best practices from benchmarking research - include the following.
·Noticing (as described above).
·Mandating a relocation impact report to identify adequate replacement housing in nearby mobile home
parks or other housing options for displaced residents and identify relocation costs.
·Use of a "relocation counselor"to aid residents who are in search of alternative housing,particularly
subsidized housing.
·Payment of moving costs for personal belongings and first and last month's rent and security deposit at
the identified alternative housing for all eligible residents.
·Payment of temporary lodging of up to six months, if necessary.
The table below outlines the projected costs for relocation benefits for displaced households seeking rental
units.However,the costs for relocating mobile homes or providing buyouts will vary based on the condition
and structure of each mobile home.
Example of Relocation Costs for Households Seeking to Be Relocated to a 1-Bedroom
AMOUNT
6 months rent cash benefit $16,908
Security deposit $ 2,500
First and last month rent $ 5,636
Moving costs $ 1,850
Subscription to relocation counselor $ 500
TOTAL $27,394
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AMOUNT
6 months rent cash benefit $16,908
Security deposit $ 2,500
First and last month rent $ 5,636
Moving costs $ 1,850
Subscription to relocation counselor $ 500
TOTAL $27,394
Mobile home park owners may request a waiver of the relocation benefits specified in the relocation impact
report in cases of bankruptcy or if the required relocation assistance exceeds reasonable costs for displaced
residents.
For mobile home residents who own their mobile home but are renting a space in a mobile home park,staff
recommends including the following relocation benefits.
·Payment of costs to move the mobile home to a new park,if feasible,or payment of in-place value of
the mobile home that cannot be moved (based on the appraised value).
·Buy outs for mobile homes that cannot be relocated to ensure that residents who have equity in their
mobile homes can get the value in place.
Approval Process for Conversions
Staff proposes to create Conversion Permit process to monitor and enforce noticing requirements and relocation
benefits for residents at risk of displacement.To receive an approved Conversion Permit,owners would have to
provide a notice of intent to apply for a permit to all residents at their SRO hotel or mobile home park at least
twelve months prior to the approval date of the permit.
During this 12-month period, the owner would work diligently to complete the following steps.
1)Complete a Conversion Permit application form and pay a fee (to be established and incorporated into
the Master Fee Schedule).
a)Prepare a relocation impact report.
b)Compile a list of all qualifying tenants.
Staff proposes that nine months after the Conversion Permit has been granted,the owner could terminate the
residential leases on the property.
This Conversion Permit process could happen in parallel to an entitlement process for a new use,should that be
the owner’s intent.However,staff recommends no permit for a new use,change of use,or demolition would be
granted until all requirements of the Conversion Permit have been met.
FISCAL IMPACT
The implementation of the new permit requirement will lead to minor increased costs for the Planning and
Housing Divisions.These additional expenses can be offset by new fees collected from permit applications
once a corresponding amendment is made to the City’s Master Fee Schedule.
CONCLUSION
Staff recommends the Joint Housing Standing Committee of the City Council and Planning Commission
consider and provide guidance on establishing a permit process for single-room occupancy hotels and mobile
home parks proposed to be converted,demolished,and/or redeveloped.The intention of the policies is to
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home parks proposed to be converted,demolished,and/or redeveloped.The intention of the policies is to
establish streamlined administrative processes for the City to enforce noticing and relocation benefit
requirements for residents displaced from these housing types.
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Permitting Process for Conversions and
Closures of Mobile Home Parks and SRO
Hotels
Joint Housing Committee
August 8, 2024
Staff Recommendation
Staff recommends the Joint Housing Standing Committee
consider and provide guidance on establishing a permit
process for single room occupancy (SRO) hotels and mobile
home parks proposed to be converted, demolished, and/or
redeveloped.
Policy Goals
•Establish streamlined administrative processes for the City to
enforce noticing and relocation benefit requirements
for residents displaced from these housing types
•Provide tenant protections for lower-income individuals
vulnerable to displacement
Background
•PBF Housing Fellow studied the vulnerability of affordable
housing for Single Room Occupancy (SRO) hotel residents
and mobile home park occupants
•Staff met with City Councilmembers individually to brief them
on early research on this topic
•Staff views this recommendation as part of the Anti-
Displacement Roadmap and aims to implement protections
before the two-year roadmap effort is completed
Background
•SROs and mobile home parks are key sources of naturally
occurring affordable housing for low-income households
•Residents face significant challenges, including discrimination,
lack of tenant protections, and limited access to financing
•Other jurisdictions have enacted legislation to intervene in
redevelopment to minimize resident displacement.
Existing SRO Hotel Inventory
Property Name Property Address Number
Units
Status
Metropolitan Hotel 220 Linden Ave 68 Not in compliance with affordability
regulatory agreements with city
Industrial Hotel 505 Cypress Ave 29 Active
S & L Hotel 400 Miller Ave 29 Active, but on market
146 Gardiner Ave 146-150 Gardiner Ave 21 Sold in 2022; unclear if occupied by
tenants
The Grand Hotel 731 Airport Blvd Approx 59 Active
Alphonse Hotel 108 Grand Ave 19 Units are vacant
Atlas Hotel 322 Grand Ave Unknown Converted to tourist hotel, but still
allow long term stays
SRO Examples
Mobile Home Park in South San Francisco
Treasure Island Mobile Home and RV Park (1700 El Camino Real)
Mobile home residents surveyed by San Mateo Housing Leadership Council
Mix of long-term and short-term residents
Housing Element
Alignment
•Policy EQ -3: Support residents who are at-
risk of being displaced
•Policy EQ -8: Protect existing residents
from displacement in areas of lower or
moderate opportunity and concentrated
poverty and preserve housing choices and
affordability
•PRSV-5.2 Assist tenants at risk of
displacement
Research Conducted
•Ordinances passed in 2017
•Includes rent control, establishing a zoning distrct, and a change of use ordinance
•Staff members report policy success—no conversion so far
County of San Mateo
•Mobile Home Ordinances passed in 2016
•Hosts 43 mobile home parks comprising of over 10,000 units
•Established Mobile Home Park Land Use Designation, Conversion Permitting Process, and Rent Stabilization
•Relocation benefits include right of first refusal
City of San Jose
•SRO Regulation Ordinance passed in 1997
•Sets up regulation process for SRO, includes conversion permit as a part of it
•Requires one-for-one replacement or payment to in-lieu fee; emphasizes preservation
•Staff members report success in issuing relocation benefits in 2022, but had trouble getting ahold of everyone who qualified
San Diego Housing Commission
•SRO Ordinance passed in 1986
•Emphasizes replacement of units in event of a demolition or payment to build new units
•Less relocation benefits, but greater opportunity for housing mobility (more SRO units)
City and County of San Francisco
Policy Structure
Triggering Events
Conversion to short term rental
Conversion to different uses
Closure
Conversion through vacancy
Eligible residents
Includes
•Residents who lived in SRO Hotel or Mobile Home Park for a period
longer than thirty consecutive days in the 180-day period prior to
issuance of notice of intent
•Residents who continue to live on site during application and permit
process
Does not include:
•Short term hotel guests
•Short term RV spot rentals
Notice Timeline
Notice of
Intent
Relocation
Impact Report
Application
Filed
Notice of
Application
Approval
Notice of
Termination
12 month period required 9 month period required
Conversion Permit Application Process
The application package includes:
•Conversion Permit application form and fee
•Relocation Impact Report
•A list of all tenants who qualify for relocation benefits
•Acknowledgement of Owner's obligations to provide written notices
•Any other information that ECD determines is necessary to ensure
compliance with this Ordinance and State law
Relocation Benefits
Core relocation benefits include:
•Noticing
•Mandating a relocation impact report to identify comparable
housing
•Access to a relocation counselor to help find subsidized housing
•Cash payment of moving costs, rent for six months, and a
security deposit for a new housing unit
Relocation Benefits – Mobile Home Residents
Rent space, but own
mobile home
Payment of costs to move the mobile
home to a new park and rent for six
months
OR
Payment of in-place value of the mobile
home that cannot be moved (based on
the appraised value)
Rent space and mobile
home
Cash payment of moving costs, rent for
six months, and a security deposit for a
new housing unit
Can request to move to a comparable
mobile home park or to other
comparable housing
Relocation Benefits Costs
AMOUNT
6 months rent cash benefit1 $16,908.00
Security deposit $2,500.00
First and last month rent $5,636.00
Moving costs 2 $1,850.00
Subscription to relocation counselor3 $500.00
TOTAL $27,394.00
1 1 month rent for 1-bedroom unit in San Mateo County published by HUD in 2024 = $2,818
2 Moving costs calculated from local moving businesses.
3 Calculated based on salary for two full-time housing navigator roles working for 6 months
Example of Relocation Costs for Households Seeking to Be Relocated
to a 1-Bedroom
Next Steps
If the Housing Standing Committee recommends proceeding
•Planning Commission Meeting on 9/5: Request approval to
amend §20.350.028 (Mobile Home Parks),§ 20.350.022 (Adding a definition of
SRO Hotels to the Group Residential Section), and § 20.620.020 (Residential
Use Classifications)
•City Council Meeting on 9/25: Request approval to amend zoning code and
establish permitting processes
Conclusion
Staff recommends that the Joint Housing Standing Committee
of the City Council and Planning Commission consider and provide
guidance on establishing a permit process for single room
occupancy (SRO) hotels and mobile home parks proposed to be
converted, demolished, and/or redeveloped.
Questions?