Panel backs ministerial townhome approvals to widen homeownership paths
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Summary
AB 17 51 would allow ministerial approval of qualifying townhome projects that meet objective standards to expedite construction and expand affordable ownership opportunities; sponsors said townhomes can be roughly 30% more affordable than single‑family homes in many areas.
Assemblymember Quirk Silva presented AB 17 51 as a targeted approach to expand homeownership opportunities through townhomes by creating a ministerial approval route for projects that meet clear objective standards. Quirk Silva said only about 18% of households can afford a median single‑family home and argued townhomes are a more attainable path to ownership for working families.
Ed Manning (speaker 31) for the New California Coalition urged support, citing preliminary analysis that eligible townhome products are roughly 30% more affordable than single‑family homes across the state and that townhomes avoid many of the construction defect issues that complicate high‑rise condominiums. Holly Fermani de Jesus (speaker 24) for Habitat for Humanity described townhomes as a useful tool to build affordable homes across urban, suburban and rural counties.
The League of California Cities and other local government groups asked for clarifications on infrastructure, subdivision law and connection‑fee issues; authors said the bill preserves local fee authority but narrows eligible locations and includes exemptions for environmentally sensitive areas. Committee members moved the bill to the next committee with officers noting they would continue working on fee and infrastructure concerns.
