Through a process more complicated than nuclear fission, state law and regional agencies determine how much housing each city must be prepared to provide in the coming years. That determination is called the RHNA (Regional Housing Needs Allocation). The allocation is based in large part on something called the Job-Housing Connection Strategy. While much more complicated than it seems from its title, job growth is a significant factor in the amount of housing allocated to any particular city. Thus, while cities look to increase their business base, doing so increases the amount of housing for which they must also have room. Cities like Menlo Park, with its relatively recent inflow of Facebook, can end up in a precarious situation with a large employer and insufficient room for residential growth.

Business growth and then the requisite housing growth, in turn impacts on the resources of the locality. There is more traffic, more strain on the water and wastewater systems, more strain on the municipal infrastructure and more strain on the municipal employees having to service a larger population of both residents and commuters coming into the city for work.

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