Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program Secures $15 Million from State, But More Investment Is Needed

Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program Secures $15 Million from State, But More Investment Is Needed

Without retrofits, buildings built before 1978 that have large ground-story wall openings 鈥 for example, for parking stalls 鈥 are prone to collapse in earthquakes.

Photo by Melissa Edeburn for SPUR

California鈥檚 Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program received $15 million in the 2023鈥24 state budget to subsidize retrofits of seismically vulnerable older apartment buildings across the state. This program will principally provide financial assistance in the form of grants to multifamily property owners who own wood-frame buildings with a 鈥渟oft-story鈥 structural deficiency 鈥撯 typical of buildings built before 1978 that have large openings in ground-story walls for parking stalls, garage doors, or storefront windows. The program is intended to support low- to moderate-income renters as well as communities with high earthquake risk and high social vulnerability. How the state will target these renters remains unclear.

Although a far cry from the program鈥檚 original allocation of $250 million for use over 10 years, the $15 million the program ultimately received owes to a coalition鈥檚 efforts to advance the seismic resilience of California鈥檚 existing housing stock.

SPUR, along with the , the , and the , fought for program funding by writing support letters and gathering signatures from local governments, property owner associations, structural engineers, and others. Coalition representatives testified at an Emergency Management Committee hearing in May and coordinated with the committee鈥檚 chairperson, Assemblymember Freddie Rodriguez (D-Pomona), to in the state budget this year. We commend the work of Assemblymember Rodriguez, and we call on the state to be prepared to dedicate more funds in the coming years to maintain the Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program.

 

Retrofitting Buildings Is an Investment in Communities

The San Francisco Bay Area has a earthquake in the next 30 years. In a major earthquake, many homes may become uninhabitable. Communities fracture as people search for temporary shelter or are forced to relocate. In the event of a major earthquake, the retrofits catalyzed by the Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program will contribute to disaster recovery by

  • Protecting residents from physical harm
  • Allowing residents to return home more quickly than they otherwise would
  • Reducing residential displacement and neighborhoods鈥 need to rebuild
  • Preserving existing housing in the midst of a long-term housing and homelessness crisis
  • Decreasing the of an earthquake by avoiding building collapse, which minimizes debris waste and the need for carbon-intensive new construction

By reducing building damage and keeping people in their homes, retrofitting can help maintain social networks during emergencies. These non-government support networks, provided by neighbors and community groups, are 鈥撯 just look at the that popped up during the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

Soft-Story Retrofit Ordinances Are Lacking in California

In the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and the 1994 Northridge earthquake, California experienced firsthand the . In the Northridge earthquake, some 200 soft-story buildings collapsed, including one in which . Yet few cities in California have gathered building inventory data to determine their soft-story building risk, and even fewer have adopted a mandatory soft-story retrofit ordinance. San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, Fremont, and Los Angeles are among the exceptions. In the Bay Area, recently adopted a mandatory retrofit ordinance, is not far behind, and San Jos茅鈥檚 ordinance is still under development. At present, most mandatory retrofit ordinances target wood-frame buildings that have two or more stories and three or more units and that were permitted for construction before 1978. Because of the age of these buildings, units in them are often relatively affordable to rent or buy. Therefore, if these buildings collapse in an earthquake, lower-income residents could be at greatest risk of injury and displacement.

 

Mandatory Soft-Story Retrofit Ordinances in California

Most mandatory retrofit ordinances target wood-frame buildings that have two or more stories and three or more units and that were permitted for construction before 1978.

 

San Francisco

Berkeley

Los Angeles

Oakland

Year Adopted

2013

2014

2015

2019

Building Characteristics

3 or more stories, 5 or more units, constructed before 1978

2 or more stories, 5 or more units, constructed before 1978

2 or more stories, 3 or more units, constructed before 1978

2 or more stories, 5 or more units, designed or built prior to 1991

Approximate Number of Buildings Subject to Mandate

4,900

300

12,500

1,480

Sources: (1) San Francisco data 鈥撯 ; 2) Berkeley 鈥撯 Communication with City of Berkeley; (3) Los Angeles 鈥撯 ; (4) Oakland 鈥撯


Without a state financing program, adoption of mandatory retrofit ordinances has been slow. Cities struggle to dedicate resources to low-probability, high-risk hazards in the midst of more immediate and overlapping crises, including homelessness, housing affordability, and climate change. With the new state-funded Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program, local jurisdictions could be offered some financial and technical assistance to develop retrofit programs.

 

The Path to the Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program

In 2022, proposed an allocation of $400 million per year for five years to provide matching grant funding for earthquake retrofits, establishing the Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program. Soon after, the amount was reduced to $250 million for one year (covering 10 years of program implementation) and the program was placed in a budget trailer bill, , which was approved and signed into law by Governor Newsom in June 2022. Despite bipartisan support for the program, the program received no funding in the governor鈥檚 . Assemblymember Rodriguez immediately put forth an emergency funding bill, , to appropriate $250 million for the program. After further negotiations, the funding package for the Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program was reduced to $15 million for fiscal year 2023鈥24.

The Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program is the state鈥檚 first program with the goal of protecting vulnerable renters in the event of a major earthquake. The program seeks to target 2鈥搖nit to 20-unit multifamily residential buildings in communities with high social vulnerability.

The California Residential Mitigation Program (CRMP), a joint-powers-authority of the California Earthquake Authority and the California Governor鈥檚 Office of Emergency Services, will direct development and implementation of this program. The CRMP was established, by state mandate, in 2012 to help . Prior to creation of the Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program, the state offered retrofit assistance only to qualified homeowners. It did so through the CRMP鈥檚 , which targets single-family homes with 鈥渃ripple walls,鈥 or short wood stud walls around a house鈥檚 crawl space, and through the $5 million pilot , which targets single-family homes and duplexes with a living space over a garage.

The CRMP has yet to determine the criteria for grants offered through the Multifamily Seismic Retrofit Program. We do not yet know how many at-risk buildings will be retrofitted with the program鈥檚 initial funding of $15 million. For reference, a recent 黑料传送门review of soft-story retrofit cost data from the City and County of San Francisco鈥檚 mandatory retrofit program and the City of Berkeley鈥檚 retrofit program revealed that the average cost of a seismic retrofit is $104,000 for soft-story buildings with 5鈥14 units and $15