CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 2022 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NIMBYS
GETTING A BAD RAP”
Rarely
has a major group of Californians suffered a less deserved rash of insults and
attacks than the myriad homeowners often described as “NIMBYs” – an acronym for
folks who may favor new developments, but “not in my backyard.”
NIMBYs
have killed liquefied natural gas projects pushed by Pacific Gas & Electric
Co. and Southern California Gas, thus saving California consumers billions of
dollars in rates they otherwise would have paid for generations for unneeded
and dangerous gas imports.
They’ve
prevented building prisons in urban areas, thus sending murderers, rapists,
burglars and more to isolated areas where escapees are less likely to harm
anyone than if they make off into crowded neighborhoods.
They kept
freeways from running through the greenest (and most expensive) residential
parts of the state.
Now they
often fight placement of permanent supportive housing for the previously
homeless in their areas, because those developments sometimes bring crime
increases with them. They also have pushed cities and counties to clean up or
wipe away encampments of the unhoused, often placed beneath freeway bridges.
Their
moves, whether flawed or beneficial for all law-abiding Californians, mostly
drew invective and eventually spawned creation of a opposing group called
California YIMBY (yes in my backyard), largely funded by developers who
essentially want a license to build what they want, where they want, and never
mind the cost to the mental or financial health of anyone living in the area.
Nowhere
have supposed NIMBYs taken more heat than in Berkeley today. In the wake of a
court decision won by a homeowners group called “Save Berkeley’s
Neighborhoods,” the academically choice UC campus there claimed it would have
to accept more than 3,000 fewer students for the next academic year than
planned.
In this
dramatic town vs. gown dispute, the homeowner group won a ruling that some say
will force the onetime flagship campus of UC (these days, UCLA is higher ranked
and gets more applicants) to lower its planned enrollment.
The
residents essentially complained that adding thousands of enrollees could
produce a new corps of homeless students or drive up rents in the area so high
that current occupants might be forced out. They also griped that introducing
thousands of new student residents into off-campus housing would create nightly
noise problems for other residents.
And,
using a sometimes maligned law called the California Environmental Quality Act
(CEQA), they won in California courts at every level.
For this,
they were labelled “reactionaries” and “backward” and “selfish” by some of the
state’s largest newspapers and television stations.
Meanwhile,
after taking a closer look, something that perhaps should have been done before
the neighborhood group went to court, the Berkeley campus concluded things
would not be so drastic after all: It turns out a thousand or so of the new
enrollees can take classes online wherever they live, others can wait six
months and then enroll, and no one need be deprived of an education, as critics
of the so-called NIMBYs all the way up to a dissenting state Supreme Court
justice, had claimed.
In fact,
the folks labeled NIMBYs previously accepted many campus expansions, but
resisted this one primarily because UC did not build new quarters for its new
students. Yes, that was proposed, but the campus conveniently did not examine
all the effects of its putative expansion on the area, and no construction was
imminent in any case. The neighbors, then, are really being lambasted for a
failure by campus officials to take care of needed business and preparation.
But
blasting NIMBYs is politically correct in this era, when YIMBY has claimed SB
9, a new law it helped push through the Legislature last year, would simply
allow homeowners to make duplexes of their single-family homes. That’s untrue:
The 2021 law actually allows at least six new units on virtually every current
single-family lot in California.
Politicians
also find it convenient to blast what they call NIMBYism whenever their
proposals are exposed as harmful to many Californians. Not surprisingly, dozens
of today’s legislators, and the governor, have been major beneficiaries of
campaign donations from developers and building trade unions who want to build
anywhere they can.
All of
which means the current anti-NIMBY fashion is often hooey. Informed Californians
must learn to see through it.
-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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