The conversation about housing affordability in Santa Barbara keeps arriving at the same place: rent control. It is an understandable impulse. Rents are high, workers are leaving, and property owners appear to be the most visible lever available. But rent control as a standalone response misdiagnoses the problem — and risks making it worse.
The core issue is not simply that rents are too high. It is that wages for essential workers in this city are too low relative to what the local housing market requires. A nurse, a teacher, a hotel employee, or a restaurant worker earning a typical Santa Barbara wage does not fail to qualify for local housing because landlords are uniquely greedy. They fail to qualify because the gap between what essential work pays and what Santa Barbara housing costs has become structurally unbridgeable — and no rent ordinance alone closes that gap.
What Santa Barbara needs is a Workforce Housing Stabilization Program: a coordinated strategy that pairs housing access tools with wage standards, uses existing housing stock more effectively, and distributes the responsibility for solutions across employers, property owners, and government — rather than placing it entirely on one party.
