Home>Articles>California Suing Calexico, Costa Mesa, Half Moon Bay, Ridgecrest, and Turlock Over State ‘Affordable’ Housing Law

Mulberry Gardens Senior Apartments, affordable housing development in Riverside. (Photo: California Department of Housing and Community Development)

California Suing Calexico, Costa Mesa, Half Moon Bay, Ridgecrest, and Turlock Over State ‘Affordable’ Housing Law

This isn’t about housing – it’s about submission

By Katy Grimes, July 16, 2026 4:38 pm

California Governor Gavin Newsom, Attorney General Rob Bonta, and the Department of Housing and Community Development are suing the cities of Calexico, Costa Mesa, Half Moon Bay, Ridgecrest, and Turlock for failing to comply with the state’s “affordable” housing law.

“No more excuses: Newsom administration takes legal action against five California local governments for defying state housing law,” the Governor’s press release screamed.

“California can’t solve the housing crisis while some cities sit on their hands and dare us to do something about it,” Newsom said. “These five jurisdictions had every chance to follow the law and plan for their fair share of housing. They chose not to, so now they’ll answer for it in court. Housing law applies statewide, and no city gets a pass.”

“We can’t fix the decades-long housing crisis if a few municipalities choose to just sit on their hands,” Newsom said.

“…the decades-long housing crisis” created by Democrat policies and illegal immigration.

However, this isn’t just about housing – it’s about submission.

And now these cities will have to dip into their already tight budgets to pay for legal fees.

According to the AG Bonta’s office, California requires every city and county to periodically update its housing element—a plan showing how it will meet its Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA), including homes for lower-income residents. This is part of a broader push to address the state’s severe housing shortage by planning for 2.5 million new homes in the current cycle. Non-compliance can trigger penalties, including civil fines under SB 1037 deposited into affordable housing funds and the “Builder’s Remedy,” which weakens local zoning restrictions for qualifying affordable projects. These five jurisdictions were given multiple opportunities (notices of violation, response periods, and meetings) but remained out of compliance well into the cycle. Over 95% of California jurisdictions have achieved or are nearing compliance.

This state harassment of cities goes back to 2019 when Gov. Newsom was sworn in as governor:

Almost immediately, Newsom sued the Orange County city of Huntington Beach for failing to provide enough additional “affordable housing,” while his own home county of Marin enjoys a moratorium on affordable housing building requirements until 2028.

“But some cities are refusing to do their part to address this crisis and willfully stand in violation of California law,”Newsom said at the time. “Those cities will be held to account.”

The California Department of Housing and Community Development is the state agency charged with overseeing local governments’ housing plans. “Since 1969, California has required that all local governments (cities and counties) adequately plan to meet the housing needs of everyone in the community,” the agency says on its website.

We reported that also on the website of the Housing agency are links to “Status and Copies of All Housing Elements.” Only, “all” cities are not included in the report, “Copies of all housing elements (page now gone).”

Notably absent were cities in Marin County. I guess the housing agency didn’t appreciate the Globe pointing out this disparity.

We also noted that the Department of Housing and Community Development reports that most of California city’s housing plans are in compliance, while 51 cities and counties are not, including Huntington Beach… and Selma, Orange Cove, Holtville, Lake County, Bradbury, Claremont, La Puente, Maywood, Montebello, Paramount, Rolling Hills, South El Monte, Westlake Village, Atwater… while all Marin County cities are listed in compliance (page now gone).

Notably, Gov. Jerry Brown signed the 2017 bill allowing Marin County to remain exempted from affordable housing requirements, he also signed SB 1333 in 2018 to eliminate a “housing loophole” that allows charter cities to reduce sites zoned for affordable housing, even if the action is inconsistent with the cities’ adopted general plans.

“California’s housing crisis demands action, not excuses,” said Attorney General Rob Bonta. “Jurisdictions that remain out of compliance with our Housing Element Law are standing in the way of the homes Californians need. We are well past the halfway point of the current housing planning cycle, and timely compliance is not optional.”

It’s fascinating that the governor and Attorney General are forcing cities to come up with affordable housing, when the state is incapable of doing it.

As expected, California residents weighed in on X to Governor Newsom’s pompous proclamation on X:

  • The “housing crisis” is entirely a creation of your moronic policies and regulations, which includes giving away undeveloped land to special interest groups who have donated large sums of money to you and the Democrat Party. GFY
  • Of course he won’t go after the actually problem that is creating the issue. Gavin and the democrats can’t survive without the illegals voting for them.
  • Oh ya, that’s where the housing crisis is. Everyone is scrambling to move to Ridgecrest and Turlock. As usual, our governor virtue signals, accomplishes nothing, and attacks the wrong problem. It’s hard to do everything wrong 100% of the time, but this guy beats the odds on stupidity.
  • You’re nothing short of a communist thug. Stop making the state the final destination for illegals and people that can’t afford California to begin with. All so you can subcidize their life and buy their vote while destroying middle class tax payers. GFY

And perhaps as important, is this one, correctly saying that Costa Mesa has no space for more housing:

  • Have you been to Costa Mesa? That is one of the most densely populated cities in Orange County. It is completely saturated with overdevelopment. Where the hell are they going to demand additional housing options to abide by your ignorant law? There is zero space left.

And this response is spot on:

 

There is a lengthy and unjust pattern of state enforcement against local resistance to state-mandated housing production. Local governments often correctly cite concerns over infrastructure, density, character, and costs, while the state argues uniform compliance is essential for affordability.

However, this isn’t about housing – it’s about submission.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Spread the news:

 RELATED ARTICLES

13 thoughts on “California Suing Calexico, Costa Mesa, Half Moon Bay, Ridgecrest, and Turlock Over State ‘Affordable’ Housing Law

  1. Simply IGNORE the LAME DUCK sessions of Newsom and Bonta.

    #SaveCalifornia
    #NEVERVoteDemocratAgain

    Californians Against DemoNcrats!

    #VoteRepublican2026

  2. I believe that the sacramento leftist, faux grievance front will have the same trouble defining “affordable housing” as they do defining what is a woman. In reality it’s nothing more than communist compulsion intended to divide us.

  3. Rob Bonta needs to quit being Gavin’s favorite kick-me lapdog and ranting about his version of housing and go get a real job. Of course he doesn’t bring up Marin County and the rest of ’em, does he, as TJ has repeatedly explained so well? No, that would make too much sense. Another useless, corrupt, politician, that’s what he is. As if we don’t have enough of those already, right?

  4. No more excuses for Marin County and it’s mostly wealthy residents who vote overwhelmingly for Democrats like Gavin Newsom who has a multi-million dollar estate there in Kentfield.

    If Newsom really believed in YIMBY (Yes in My Backyard) as he previously claimed, then cut the red tape immediately and build affordable high density housing and apartments near their mansion and throughout Marin County.

    The Newsom’s and their wealthy Democrat voting neighbors should welcome all the diversity that affordable high density housing would bring to Marin County!

  5. This is tyranny. Newsom is the tyrant. Maybe Newsom should take people into his mansions. Leave our communities alone.

  6. Cities that have built “affordable housing”, do that for an astronomically high price. The taxpayers pay for it, while the low income tenants pay very little. Along the way, cronies get paid very well. It’s a scam.

  7. No one wants to live around these welfare hood rats and illegal alien trash. They are nothing but trouble.

    We need to put them all in Marin County, right next to Gov. Failure’s $9 million house.

  8. Affordable housing is all about building Crime Boxes to ghettofy formerly safe communities. Newscum will not allow people to flee crime and live in safety, he will bring it to you at tax payer expense.

  9. Close the borders, rescind sanctuary cities, and support ICE. The fake California “housing crisis” is solved.. When a local motel puts up a No Vacancy sign, is that a motel crisis?

    Never good idea to encourage high-birth rate illegals, dependent on public services, who keep sending their US earned dollars back untaxed to their own home countries. And then blow the rest of their untaxed, under the table US dollars earnings, at the local Indian casinos. Who promise “freedom” from ICE, since they are sovereign nations within our US borders.

    A very toxic brew got created under Gov Newsom just to pay off the teachers unions. And now he dares claim the state has a “crisis” we are suppose to punish ourselves to fix? Think again.

    And you too Gens Z, who are currently defecting in irrational numbers to utopia-promising DSA Democrats. Think again.

    1. I’m not so sure that illegal latin americans are blowing much if any money at casinos. No one can live a low income, beer budget good life like your average mexican national in the US – they can stretch a buck until George Washington squeals in pain. Yes, many work for cash, under stolen identities, used as tools to beat down wages, some vote in our elections and nearly all send money home, but it’s rare that many would blow their money in a casino – that nonsense is for some of their american citizen grandchildren. Not sure about middle easterners and south asians, although I think a persian woman unleashed on America will tend to like expensive things. Wealthy chinese seem to be drawn to casinos like moths to a flame, but most chinese of modest means are frugal to obnoxiously stingy.

  10. I remember The Great American Boycott, also known as “A Day Without an Immigrant,” on May 1st, 2006, during which illegal aliens and their supporters stayed home and boycotted businesses across the U.S. I lived in Yucaipa and worked at Kmart in Redlands as a Sears Home Appliance Associate at that time. It was the only day I can remember that I didn’t have to call for a Spanish speaking associate. My sales were higher than average that day, probably because more of my time was spent on serious customers.

    I’d filled in for someone on the morning shift, so I left at 3pm. When I got home, we jumped back in the car and tried to drive to the beach, about 95 miles away, just to see if we could. The trip took a little over an hour, and while on the freeway I never had to hit the brake even once. Try that today and see what happens. Most likely, you won’t get there until well after 10pm because of the jammed traffic.

    If we want the housing ‘crisis’ to end and housing costs to go down, there’s a simple fix; evict roughly 2.5 million illegal aliens from the state. Democrats won’t let that happen, of course. Those are their voters.

    https://www.theglobalstatistics.com/illegal-immigrants-in-california/

  11. I don’t remember exactly when it was, sometime before 2010, but the “day without a mexican” depopulated the freeway, what a pleasure to be out and about that day. It’s been a while since I’ve been on the freeways west of the 215, but the best time to be on the freeway during the day was between 10am and 2pm, otherwise it was a nightmare. During “rush hour” a 70 mile trip was 2 hours minimum. The 210 through pasadena really, super sucked. 91, 101, 405, 110, 105, 10, 210, 5 and the rest were all bad.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *