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Housing Market

  • BIASC-Staff posted an article
    BIASC's Baldy View and Riverside County Chapters Discuss the Housing Market In OC Register see more

    New single-family home construction is far below demand, and while new-home prices in Riverside and San Bernardino counties are lower than other Southern California areas, costs are still difficult for many Inland residents to meet.

     

    A recent draft report from California’s Department of Housing and Community Development outlined the statewide woes reflected in the Inland area.

     

    New-home production statewide is far below projected needs – 80,000 homes annually for the last decade, with a projected need of 180,000 homes per year. The lack of supply and associated rising costs are shutting a broad variety of Californians out of the market.

     

    The nation’s most populous state has the third-lowest home ownership rate among the 50 states and the lowest in California since the 1940s.

     

    An effort to streamline homebuilding permits failed last year in the state Legislature. California Gov. Jerry Brown promised in his January budget message to attack the housing issue again with a bill package he said would cut red tape, fees and other hurdles affecting the industry.

     

    Building Industry Association's Southern CaliforniaGovernment Affairs staff from Baldy View Chapter for San Bernardino County and the Riverside County Chapter of the Building Industry Association of Southern California spoke to members of the Orange County Register press in order to speak about the current state of the housing market and the building industry in Southern California.

     

    Despite the challenges, developers are finding ways to get homes on the market.

     

    The Imperial Hardware lofts project in downtown Riverside reflects a trend of younger buyers’ preferences toward townhouses in urban areas, with “walkability” for work and shopping, Garrison said.

     

    The Ontario Ranch development in Ontario is a 13-square-mile, master-planned community that ultimately plans 46,000 new homes.

     

    “It’s a finicky time for the industry,” Garrison said. “Homebuilders want to be in business in California. California and the communities need to set the conditions; if they set the conditions for it, we will be there to build.”

     

    Click here to read the full article from the Orange County Register.

     February 13, 2017