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by greenie_beans 772 days ago
snark is not a helpful solution.
1 comments

That's not snark.

Government permitting is now a huge percentage of the cost of building a house in many US metros. CA is maybe the worst offender.

It's not just NIMBY. State and local governments have gotten exceedingly greedy over the past several years.

Over $100k per door impact fees! Years of entitlement hearings! Years of wrangling for building permits! Any project is a decade and costs a large multiple of its materials.
i'm the op that everybody is being snarky towards. thanks to a project that i worked on, a lot more people are aware of this fact. notably i played a very insignificant part, but you are preaching to the choir!
Yep, going to any Bay Area city council meeting makes it very clear why it’s hard to develop - it’s an incredibly long process to get permission to build. You see the same developers again and again, making tweaks to their plans and seeing if that will appease the council. It seems to takes years.

I’m currently building something in a much more lax area, but even here, the few parts that require permits/inspection are by far the largest hurdles, because they impose a rigid sequential order of operations that have to happen before I can move on, and require a licensed master tradesman to pull the permit, whereas most other things can generally proceed as materials/equipment/people become available.

On your point about local government getting greedy, I went to the state of the county address in our area recently, and the county executive gave a long laundry list of how many millions he was splashing out to x and y, to fanfare for each spending figure, as if the goal was to spend more, rather than get the maximal impact for the dollars. I guess most of the audience were people from those departments receiving the additional money, but as a non-government worker, it was a bit sickening.

I hired an electric company to put in a car charger. In order to participate in the EV pricing program it needed a 2nd meter, which needed a permit. The actual installation was a few hours. The permitting process went back and forth between city inspectors starting in September and didn’t get approved late January. The company didn’t fight anything, always did what they recommended and it still kept coming back with more “issues” and adjustments. The company said they’d never take a charger install job again in the city. It was ridiculous.
Yeah, that sounds a lot like the beginning of this job, the initial plan review for the building permit took like 4 months, and I had to call at each stage in the pipeline to get it moving again. They’re always super friendly, but they don’t seem proactive at all.

I don't see how a contractor could be efficient at all with this setup - I'm assuming they're better at getting things through building and planning, but even if it only took them a couple weeks, they'd need a pretty big pipeline to keep busy, to compensate for all the stalls.

i know. i cited that in my first comment. thanks for reiterating a truth that i acknowledged.

zoning regulations and entitlements are only one piece of the puzzle. a significant piece, for sure.