CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 8, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 8, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“HOUSING ANSWER MUST HELP MANY, LEAVE OTHERS UNHARMED”
“HOUSING ANSWER MUST HELP MANY, LEAVE OTHERS UNHARMED”
Scott
Wiener, the ultra-liberal Democratic state senator from San Francisco appeared
surprised the other day to learn the truth of the old saying that no matter how
much lipstick you paint on the face of a pig, it remains a swine.
Wiener
was stunned when a sweeping proposed law he touted as the solution to
California’s serious problems of housing affordability and homelessness was
killed – for this year – by the Senate’s Transportation and Housing Committee
on a lopsided vote.
“I
absolutely did not see that coming,” he told the New York Times.
Wiener
planned to nullify much of the zoning that keeps California cities pleasant
places where folks who own, rent or buy single-family homes can pretty much
figure no one will soon build skyscrapers or big box stores near them.
A host
of building trades unions and high tech executives seeking cheaper housing for
prospective employees backed his bills taking that assurance away from
homeowners living near rapid transit stations or frequently used bus stops, no
matter what the carefully crafted plans of their cities might say.
Without
doubt the problems Wiener targeted are serious. More than 50,000 persons now
live on the streets of Los Angeles County alone, at least 115,000 statewide.
These
numbers demonstrate an urgent need for low-cost housing across California. So
does the median price of homes in the state, now topping $460,000, more than 30
percent above the levels of just three years ago.
But
that doesn’t dictate the kind of wholesale changes Wiener proposed, changes
that could have altered the way of life of many millions of Californians. His
bill failed because a solution to the problems of hundreds of thousands should
not create new problems for many millions of other people. That’s why the plan
was opposed by environmental groups and every city that took a position.
As
originally proposed, Wiener’s SB 827 called for cancellation of existing
single-family zoning within half a mile of light rail stations and within a
quarter mile of frequently traveled bus routes. Approval for new buildings of
five to eight stories would have been mandated in those areas, covering up to
95 percent of some cities. Existing requirements for parking space would also
have been greatly reduced.
The
reasoning for this was that planners believe virtually all residents of new
transit-adjacent projects will ride the nearby buses and trains, while very few
will drive cars. That presumption is flatly wrong. Reports over the last year
show public transit ridership has not risen significantly since 2014, even
though several new rail lines and extensions opened in that time. Yes, rail
ridership is up, but there are fewer bus riders, suggesting some folks likely
switched from buses to the much faster trains.
Plus,
many homes and low-rise apartment buildings would have had to be razed to make
way for the denser housing Wiener wanted to prescribe, displacing many
thousands of Californians to make room for more thousands of others.
Before
the first legislative hearing on his bills, Wiener softened them a bit,
lowering the height limit on new buildings from eight to five floors and
applying his new zoning only to areas around bus stops that are busy all day,
rather than just during rush hours. He also added some protections against
evicting existing tenants.
This
still would have betrayed homeowners who invested their life savings in the
belief that existing zoning assured they would have no high-rise residents
peering into their back yards.
Wiener’s
revisions, then, were mere lipstick on a pig, not changing the essence of his
plan, and opponents easily saw that.
Far
better would be to promote local solutions to homeless dilemmas, like a new
program letting homeless veterans park overnight on the grounds of some Veterans
Administration centers. In Los Angeles, Mayor Eric Garcetti proposes rewards
for neighborhoods that support building local homeless shelters, to include
more city services like road repairs and cleanups.
And
Republican Travis Allen, running for governor, suggests more homes in outlying
areas around big cities.
Overall,
it’s a positive that homelessness and affordability at last are getting major
attention. But solutions must be designed not to harm other Californians.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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