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Clovis Must Zone For Low-Income Housing According To Court Ruling

 

A recent ruling on a lawsuit filed in 2019 says the city of Clovis must begin the process of building more high-density, affordable housing and has been violating a state law by not doing so.

Attorney Patience Milrod, executive director of Central California Legal Services, says Clovis has traditionally zoned for single family homes, pricing out low-income residents.

 

“The court’s order will force Clovis for the first time in decades to zone for lower-income housing, which is something Clovis has refused to do for, gosh, at least 50 years,” Milrod says.

 

She filed the lawsuit on behalf of Dez Martinez, a homeless advocate and founder of the non-profit, We Are Not Invisible. Martinez became aware of the problem when she was looking for housing a few years ago. 

 

“When I got a homeless voucher, that was the first place I ran back to, to go look for and I couldn't find anything because I didn't want to be in Fresno because all the places that accepted my vouchers in Fresno were high-crime areas,” she says.

The ruling says a court order will be issued soon, forcing the city to comply with the Housing Element Law. The law requires high-density, low income housing to be made available.

That means the city will have to properly zone for 4,400 units in four months. Once that happens, developers can then build high-density housing at a minimum of 20 units per acre. The order requires 200 acres to be zoned. 

Martinez says low-income families deserve an equal opportunity to live in communities like Clovis.

“They need to be given vouchers and opportunities to go into a neighborhood that is clean, that is crime free, close to schools, close to clean parks, close to a lot more lighting. They have a lot of lighting on their streets,” Martinez says. 

The order may be issued in the next two weeks. In that time, the city of Clovis can file an appeal. 

 

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Soreath Hok is a multimedia journalist with experience in radio, television and digital production. She is a 2022 National Edward R. Murrow Award winner. At KVPR she covers local government, politics and other local news.