The backstory of the San Francisco Affordable Housing Movement, the dedicated and zealous community advocacy, strategic development and allocation of funding sources, and responsiveness to market changes and political opportunities that have resulted in a system of strong housing preservation and production policies, programs and organizations in San Francisco
Read MoreThe Council of Community Housing Organizations together with Bay Area Forward released a report, "Who Will Teach Our Children?", identifying the housing and affordability levels needed for Bay Area educators to live where they work.
Read MoreCCHO breaks down the Bay Area’s Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA). The graphic serves as an educational tool for the public to better understand how it works:
What is RHNA?
How does the RHNA process work?
What does RHNA have and not have the power to do?
What do RHNA numbers mean?
What are its implications for affordable housing in the Bay Area?
Videos from UC Berkeley’s Urban Displacement Project breaking down what “gentrification” and “displacement” really mean.
Read MoreAn infographic/report by CCHO breaking down the innovative framework of Jobs-Housing Fit, which examines how the population is growing and changing in an area to determine the types and affordability of housing needed within the same geography. This allows us to understand what the housing needs of an area actually are and evaluate how housing production is or is not meeting those needs.
Read MoreThe latest UN report on housing focuses on the increasing financialization of housing and the negative ways this is impacting individuals and communities.
Read MoreBehind a number of the recently proposed policy “solutions” to San Francisco’s housing crisis is the theory of “filtering.” To explain why these policies that rely on market-rate housing and deregulation won’t actually make housing more affordable, CCHO created an infographic that breaks down the basics of filtering, the assumptions behind it, and the reasons it doesn’t work the way some say it does.
Read MoreCCHO’s annual report, published following the latest Housing Balance Report and Housing Inventory, that analyzes on a finer-grain level where affordable housing was produced and lost in neighborhoods across the City in 2015. This report shows the balance (or rather, imbalance!) of housing production as residents are experiencing it currently on the ground.
Read MoreA graphic chart designed by CCHO’s Fernando Martí showing who affordable housing serves, including what different “Area Median Income” (AMI) levels mean in terms of actual San Francisco wages, how affordable housing for those different income levels gets built, and where the gaps are. (Updated October 2017)
Read MoreThe San Francisco Anti-Displacement Coalition’s report on the current eviction crisis in San Francisco, including data on the increasing rate of eviction citywide and trends in types of evictions.
Read MoreRead [people.power.media]’s two-part series on public sites in San Francisco, which explains how designating public sites for public use would serve a broad range of residents who are being priced out of the City.
Read MoreFernando Martí’s latest presentation on the market’s inability to solve the affordability crisis and stop displacement, and CCHO’s alternative solutions (from UC Hasting’s conference, “What’s the G? Gentrification and the Myth of Fair Housing”).
Read MoreA report by CHPC and TransForm that underscores the importance of locating affordable housing by transit (and providing the state funding to make this possible!). Includes statics that show that lower income households near transit reduce their greenhouse gas emissions more than higher income households near transit.
Read MoreThe success of design or social innovation “solutions” to San Francisco’s housing crisis will depend on a framework for housing affordability that addresses fundamental issues underpinning the practical realities of achieving Housing for All.
Read MoreThe Silicon Valley Institute for Regional Studies’ detailed report on income inequality around the Bay Area, which shows, among other things, how inequality has increased more rapidly here than in the US as a whole and reveals the extreme gap between high- and low-income households in the Bay Area.
Read MoreJuly 2013, ABAG and MTC approved Plan Bay Area, which proposes to put 92,000 new housing units, 190,000 new jobs, and 73,000 more cars into San Francisco over the next 30 years.
Read MoreThe fifth Housing Balance Report released by the Planning Department, spanning the ten years from January 1, 2007 – December 31, 2016. The numbers say it all: the affordable housing balance for the past ten years is only 13.6%. (One note: The calculations used in the Housing Balance Report differ slightly from the deeper dive we publish each year with our annual Housing Snapshot Report, soon to be released.)
Read MoreGreat resources from UC Berkeley’s Urban Displacement Project showing which parts of the Bay Area are experiencing or at risk of gentrification and displacement. These tools provide essential research for creating policies tailored to the needs of specific geographies and communities.
Read MoreApril 2017
An article by George W. McCarthy of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy on the principles behind and importance of land value capture.
Read MoreNovember 2016
Urban Habitat’s latest report on the ways that growing inequality is reshaping the Bay Area, creating new areas of racial and economic segregation.
Read More