the California Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.
(commencing with Section 51190) of Part 1 of Division 1 of Title 5 of the Government Code.
(ii) The contract restricts the use of the land for at least 30 years to owner-occupied housing available at affordable housing cost in accordance with Section 50052.5 of the Health and Safety Code.
(iii) The contract includes a deed of trust on the property in favor of the nonprofit corporation to ensure compliance with the terms of the program, which has no value unless the owner fails to comply with the covenants and restrictions of the terms of the home sale.
(iv) The local housing authority or an equivalent agency, or, if none exists, the city attorney or county counsel, has made a finding that the long-term deed restrictions in the contract serve a public purpose.
(B) For real property subject to a contract that satisfies all the requirements of
subparagraph (A), there shall be a rebuttable presumption that, at the time of purchase, an assessor shall not include the value of the deed of trust referenced in clause (iii) of subparagraph (A) of this paragraph.
(ii) The contract subjects a single-family dwelling or unit in a multifamily dwelling, and the land on which the dwelling or unit is situated that is leased to the qualified owner by a community land trust for the convenient occupation and use of that dwelling or unit, to affordability restrictions.
(iii) One of the following public agencies or officials has made a finding that the affordability restrictions in the contract serve the public interest to create and preserve the affordability of residential housing for persons and families of low or moderate income:
(I) The director of the local housing authority or equivalent agency.
(II) The county counsel.
(III) The director of a county housing department.
(IV) The city attorney.
(V) The director of a city housing department.
(iv) The contract is recorded and is provided to the assessor.
(B) (i) For purposes of this paragraph, the sale or resale price of the dwelling or unit is rebuttably presumed to include both the dwelling or unit and the leased land on which the dwelling or unit is situated. This presumption may be overcome if the assessor establishes by a preponderance of the evidence that all or a portion of the value of the leased land is not reflected in the sale or resale price of the dwelling or unit.
(ii) Notwithstanding any other law, corrections of base year values and declines in value owing to the
restrictions on properties assessed under this subparagraph shall apply to all lien dates occurring after September 27, 2016.
(C) For purposes of this paragraph, all of the following definitions shall apply:
(I) The dwelling or unit can only be sold or resold to a qualified owner to be occupied as a principal place of residence.
(II) The sale or resale price of the dwelling or unit is determined by a formula that ensures the dwelling or unit has a purchase price that is affordable to qualified owners.
(III) There is a purchase option for the dwelling or unit in favor of a community land trust intended to
preserve the dwelling or unit as affordable to qualified owners.
(IV) The dwelling or unit is to remain affordable to qualified owners by a renewable 99-year ground lease.
(ii) “Community land trust” means a nonprofit corporation exempt from federal income tax pursuant to Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code that satisfies all of the following:
(I) Has as its primary purposes the creation and maintenance of permanently affordable single-family or multifamily residences.
(II) (ia) All dwellings and units located on the land owned by the nonprofit corporation or its wholly owned subsidiary are
either sold to a qualified owner to be occupied as the qualified owner’s primary residence or rented to persons and families of low or moderate income.
(ib) In the case of dwellings or units sold to qualified owners, if the community land trust, directly or through its wholly owned subsidiary, owns the land underneath the dwellings or units,
then the land underneath the dwellings or units shall be leased to the qualified owner of a dwelling or unit on the land for the convenient occupation and use of that dwelling or unit for a renewable term of 99 years. In the case of dwellings or units that are part of a condominium, cooperative, or other common interest development under which the land is owned by a homeowners’ association or person other than the community land trust, then the condominium unit or interest owned by the community land trust shall be sold to qualified owners for the convenient occupation and use of that dwelling or unit subject to affordability restrictions as that term is defined in this subdivision, except that in lieu of a ground lease there shall be an affordability covenant, of a duration of at least 99 years, recorded against the unit or interest.
(iii) “Limited equity housing cooperative” has the same meaning as that term is
defined in Section 817 of the Civil Code.
(iv) “Persons and families of low or moderate income” has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code.
are not necessarily limited to, the past history of like use restrictions in the jurisdiction in question and the similarity of sales prices for restricted and unrestricted land. The possible expiration of a restriction at a time certain shall not be conclusive evidence of the future removal or modification of the restriction unless there is no opportunity or likelihood of the continuation or renewal of the restriction, or unless a necessary party to the restriction has indicated an intent to permit its expiration at that time.
wherein the presumption of no predictable removal or substantial modification of the restriction has been rebutted, but where the restriction nevertheless retains some future life and has some effect on present value, the assessor may consider, in addition to all other legally permissible information, representative sales of comparable lands that are not under restriction but upon which natural limitations have substantially the same effect as restrictions.
value of the land being valued.
information on land under similar restrictions when this information is available.
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