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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(108,136 posts)
Thu Jan 6, 2022, 01:49 PM Jan 2022

Not again. AIDS nonprofit wants to block L.A.'s ambitious plan for desperately needed housing

Last fall, the Los Angeles City Council finally adopted an ambitious plan to help fix the city’s crippling housing shortage by making room in existing neighborhoods for nearly half a million new homes over the next eight years. So, of course, there’s now a lawsuit trying to halt the plan.

The AIDS Healthcare Foundation, a nonprofit based in Hollywood that often fights development, sued last month, arguing that the city violated state environmental law when it adopted the plan.

That’s the story of L.A. and much of California.

For decades, slow-growth, not-in-my-backyard opposition has obstructed much-needed housing construction, particularly in coastal urban areas, even while local economies and the population have continued to grow. That’s created a shortage that has driven up home prices and rents to levels that are unaffordable to the majority of Californians. With the problem at a crisis point, state and local leaders have started to make it easier to build new housing, but there is still strong pushback at every turn.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/realestate/editorial-not-again-aids-nonprofit-wants-to-block-las-ambitious-plan-for-desperately-needed-housing/ar-AASs2jz

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Not again. AIDS nonprofit wants to block L.A.'s ambitious plan for desperately needed housing (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Jan 2022 OP
When I lived in Silicon Valley before 1990, Mr.Bill Jan 2022 #1

Mr.Bill

(24,312 posts)
1. When I lived in Silicon Valley before 1990,
Thu Jan 6, 2022, 05:02 PM
Jan 2022

The Planning Commissions in all of the counties were packed with realtors. They had a vested interest in stopping building of any kind, because that made existing buildings more valuable. I don't know what is going on there now.

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