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California
Related: About this forumBeverly Hills in Crisis as Judge Mandates New Affordable Housing: "People Are Furious"
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/local-news/beverly-hills-crisis-building-moratorium-affordable-housing-1235824276/The Hollywood Reporter:
For inhabitants of the countrys most sought-after ZIP code, the unwelcome news came in December: In a move to pressure the city to zone for more affordable housing, a restrictive ruling by a Superior Court judge put a moratorium on Beverly Hills right to approve any new home additions or project proposals by residents pending the approval of new homes for lower-income locals. In this ultra-exclusive community, where home remodeling is practically a sport, the notion that all renovations from simple kitchen remodels to multimillion-dollar grotto installations would require the ushering in of outsiders, or be delayed indefinitely, brought a particular unease.
That unease has turned to outrage for many living in the 5.71 square miles that make up the famed city, where rents and mortgages are more than double the national average. Following Superior Court Judge Curtis A. Kins Dec. 23 ruling, the city now finds itself fully entrenched in a battle over whats become an urgent issue across many U.S. cities: the demand for significant and meaningful affordable housing projects. Many residents already wary of the added foot traffic that will follow the opening of the Wilshire/Rodeo Metro station just want the status quo to remain in Beverly Hills. Some argue that Beverly Hills simply does not have the space to accommodate any new housing at all affordable or not.
The notion that the city lacks for space is laughable to affordable housing advocates. Other cities may sort of have that argument Beverly Hills definitely does not, says Matt Gelfand, in-house litigator for Californians for Homeownership, the group whose suit against the city led to Kins ruling. There is plenty of interest and there are plenty of places to put it, he tells THR, adding that proposals to do just that have flooded in over the past months. Beverly Hills is obviously a job center. Its got enormous commercial use. So it needs to have housing.
The Dec. 23 building moratorium decision amounts to a judicial check on the city of Beverly Hills, which has failed, for decades, to submit a blueprint for affordable housing that the state deems adequate. All California cities are required to submit a plan, known as the Housing Element, to the state every eight years outlining how they will accommodate a proportion of the population growth as California grapples with a statewide housing crisis.
That unease has turned to outrage for many living in the 5.71 square miles that make up the famed city, where rents and mortgages are more than double the national average. Following Superior Court Judge Curtis A. Kins Dec. 23 ruling, the city now finds itself fully entrenched in a battle over whats become an urgent issue across many U.S. cities: the demand for significant and meaningful affordable housing projects. Many residents already wary of the added foot traffic that will follow the opening of the Wilshire/Rodeo Metro station just want the status quo to remain in Beverly Hills. Some argue that Beverly Hills simply does not have the space to accommodate any new housing at all affordable or not.
The notion that the city lacks for space is laughable to affordable housing advocates. Other cities may sort of have that argument Beverly Hills definitely does not, says Matt Gelfand, in-house litigator for Californians for Homeownership, the group whose suit against the city led to Kins ruling. There is plenty of interest and there are plenty of places to put it, he tells THR, adding that proposals to do just that have flooded in over the past months. Beverly Hills is obviously a job center. Its got enormous commercial use. So it needs to have housing.
The Dec. 23 building moratorium decision amounts to a judicial check on the city of Beverly Hills, which has failed, for decades, to submit a blueprint for affordable housing that the state deems adequate. All California cities are required to submit a plan, known as the Housing Element, to the state every eight years outlining how they will accommodate a proportion of the population growth as California grapples with a statewide housing crisis.
TLDR: If [Beverly Hills] is going to grow, it has to grow vertically, Nissle says. Its going the way of Hollywood and Santa Monica, for better or for worse. Its just the new reality of things.
More at the link.
Crying in their caviar!!!
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Beverly Hills in Crisis as Judge Mandates New Affordable Housing: "People Are Furious" (Original Post)
usonian
Feb 2024
OP
Up in the Sierra foothills a whole lot of microwave towers are disguised as pine trees.
usonian
Feb 2024
#4
That's too funny -- here in LA proper, I've seen them "disguised" as pine trees ;).
LauraInLA
Feb 2024
#6
LauraInLA
(1,306 posts)1. So the solution is going to be building 17-story skyscrapers.
usonian
(13,848 posts)2. Disguised as the world's tallest palm tree?
I dunno.
LauraInLA
(1,306 posts)3. Hahahaha ;). Like the developer said, they have to go vertical.
usonian
(13,848 posts)4. Up in the Sierra foothills a whole lot of microwave towers are disguised as pine trees.
And not very well. 🌲
Enjoy the Beverly Hills 17-story palm 🌴 trees.
LauraInLA
(1,306 posts)6. That's too funny -- here in LA proper, I've seen them "disguised" as pine trees ;).
Old Crank
(4,653 posts)5. CA has a developers recourse law.
If the jurisdiction won't approve building housing to match their need and has no plan to do so, the developer can side step that jurisdictions approval process.
This is being used in and around SF because the rich cities refuse to approve anything.
diva77
(7,880 posts)7. The mandates are terrible and are based on false, contrived data and the result is skirting of environmental laws,
zoning laws, and no accountability for overdemand of limited resources such as water, gridlocking further already gridlocked streets with the overbuilding in these areas. The housing is anything but affordable also. It truly sucks.
Newsom has given the gift of a lifetime to the construction industry to overbuild in these areas.