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           | State unveils  new laws aimed at dealing with housing shortage  
              Will make it  easier for cities to approve accessory dwelling units 
                
Karen  Chapple is photographed on her deck overlooking her accessory dwelling unit at  her home in Berkeley, Calif., on Tuesday, July 12, 2016. A series of new laws  aim to make it easier for homeowners to build such units by avoiding separate  utility metering and other previous restrictions. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News  Group)           
             By Karina Ioffee | kioffee@bayareanewsgroup.com 
            PUBLISHED:  December 16, 2016 at 12:27 pm | UPDATED: December 16, 2016 at 2:24 pm 
               
              RICHMOND — Local  and state officials on Friday highlighted a set of new laws aimed at  helping ease California’s affordable housing crisis, including legislation that  will allow owners of single-family homes to convert a portion of  their home to a separate unit that can be rented out without going through  expensive upgrades. 
               
              Accessory dwelling  units, such as a master bedroom converted to a separate living unit with its  own outside door, or a former garage that can now be rented as a studio, are a  way to help ease the shortage of housing and give cities flexibility when it  comes to creating new structures, housing officials and local politicians said,  speaking at a news conference at Richmond’s City Hall. 
               
              “It instantly  creates an opportunity to expand the supply of housing at low rent levels,”  said Richmond Mayor Tom Butt. “Everything else we try to do to impact lack of  housing takes years. This is something you could do in a weekend.” 
               
              Richmond was one  of the first cities in California to pass a junior accessory dwelling unit  ordinance, which also went into effect this week. Previously, homeowners  who tried to convert a portion of their residence into a separate living unit  were often stymied by requirements that the units have their own sewer and  electricity meters, Butt said. Separate fire sprinkler systems will also not be  required if the main house does not have them. Units can vary between 150 and  500 square feet and have partial kitchens and bathrooms. 
               
              Mayor  Butt was joined at Friday’s news conference by Assemblyman Tony Thurmond,  D-Richmond, California Housing and Community Development Director Ben Metcalf  and Rachel Ginis, the executive director of Lilypad Homes, a nonprofit  organization that helped sponsor legislation on accessory dwelling units. 
               
              “The way we are  living in our homes is changing as more and more people are combining their  resources to stay in their home and turning their home as a resource to  generate additional income,” Ginis said. “In-law apartments are the  hottest amenity in the real estate market right now.” 
               
              Over the past 50  years, home sizes have increased by more than 30 percent, while households have  actually decreased, to an average of just 2.3 people, according to Thurmond.  Today, only one-third of the state’s population has two adults and a child  living in a home. Instead, the majority of households are single-parent  families, couples without children, empty nesters and young professionals. 
               
            The new laws  surrounding accessory dwelling units include AB 2406, AB 59 and AB 45.  | 
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