40 Comments
Apr 24·edited Apr 24

These preposterous 'land acknowledgement' statements are part of the larger libel against the entire United States that promotes the idea that the nation exists on 'stolen' land. If the armies of vagrants they tolerate in West Hollywood are to be called 'un-landed' then aren't today's unlanded the same as yesterday's unlanded? Hey, morally superior people of West Hollywood, give the unlanded your land, and the homes on them. Then, those vagrants on the sidewalk will be landed, and in a home: YOURS. They won't do this of course, and they'll find a way to undermine that 'affordable' housing project as well. They don't want their maids living among them, and they don't want the 'homeless' to be West Hollywood residents either. If those natives from the past somehow showed up in the present to claim their land, they'd get the same treatment.

Expand full comment

California ALWAYS has a housing "crisis." Texas does not. California zones the s--- out of every inch of land. Texas does not. People are leaving California because of the cost of living, especially housing (when it's even available), keeps rising. Where do they go? Among other places, they go to Texas. The cost of living in Texas is lower and this is especially true in the housing market. Big government, even at the local level, loves to pass zoning laws. Cui bono? It's Occam's Razor. Drop the zoning laws and home prices go down as new houses go up.

Expand full comment

"Homeless" is a misnomer. This is mental illness, and severe drug addiction, and it isn't solved with more houses that none of these people can afford. They need treatment, followed by make work programs.

In terms of building low income housing in high income neighbourhoods, I agree with the home owners, as they earned the right to live in the communities that they established. The root cause of all of this is government meddling, with ever increasing taxes, fees and levies that hinder development and make it impossible for free market to thrive. If government cut red tape, and allowed developers to build, then the free market would balance itself. Economics 101...Supply and demand. The maid can charge more for her commute, but isn't entitled to live in the same neighbourhoods, and the homeowners might just have to pay more for her to drive out. Socialism is a failed experiment.

Expand full comment
Apr 24·edited Apr 25

I think this is a bit reaching. I’ve lived in LA for a long time and West Hollywood, being an independent city and small one at that, does have bad traffic and the traffic logjam of trying to get through that area, whether on Sunset, Santa Monica, or Fountain has gotten worse over the years. I have to add that a lot of those new apartments that go up have units that end up being converted to Air BnBs- especially in the Hollywood and downtown area. With regard to all the homeless in the city, many are from out of town and out of state. Proper thing to do would to treat them for addiction, deal with their mental health issues, and get them into a job program. Unfortunately, many don’t want to give up their ability to get high/drunk, thus disqualifying them from entering housing provided by the city and county.

Expand full comment

Hypocrisy is funny and even kind of cute!

Vote blue, no matter who!

Go Joe, go!

Trump said things about pussies... that "trumps" everything!

Vote blue, no matter who!

When I say "Kamala" you say "K!"

When I say "Kamala" you say "K!"

When I say "Kamala" you say "K!"

Expand full comment
founding

I'm a developer in Northern California. I don't mind zoning. I like not being Houston. But there will never be affordable housing in California unless things change that will never change such as 1. $100,000 building permit fees. 2. Up to $20,000 per house to mitigate for species that are endangered but appear to be everywhere. 3. Mandatory union labor to build a house for gosh sake. 4. Rampant NIMBYISM. 5. Environmental regulations that drive up the cost of housing. 6. Adding the cost of affordable housing to the price of market rate housing. The laws of supply and demand are evident. We need hundreds of thousands of additional homes, many in the coastal urban elitist areas where NYMBISM is rampant. We won't get them. It costs twice as much to build here as most places. We need to zone more land for housing, decrease regulations, allow the private sector to build so that supply/demand can regulate. Not in my lifetime.

Expand full comment

Oh my…. The State of California dictates what communities can and cannot do with their communities. The progressives want affordable housing, but not where they live. The City Council folds Left on all issues. Reminds me of how the elite on Martha’s Vineyard got rid of illegal migrants in a nano-second, yet every one of them likely votes Democrat and spews so-called “Progressive” and MSNBC talking points.. Yuck.

Expand full comment

The author confuses low income housing with temporary housing for the homeless. The unhoused issue is so extremely complicated and umbrellas those in financial stress , with the mentally ill, and the drug addicted….further complications and clouding the issue is not needed! The goal of unhoused programs is to support and make the transition to permanent housing possible, but the implication that low income housing is the first placement is usually incorrect.

The low income housing is theoretically a place to live for those in the community who are employed or have an income source, but cannot afford housing in the community. It should be housing for maids, teachers, civil workers, restaurant workers, those on social security, etc. But low income housing guidelines from the state of CA also have green goals. An example is limited or no parking for the units. This means that the maid with the car commuting hours may not be able to park at the housing unit.

The green goal for low income housing is to support a person giving up their car and using public transportation to decrease pollution levels, congestion, etc. Public transportation in many CA communities is not reliable or unavailable. It could also be suggested that a maid in W Hollywood with a car is more employable because they can easily access many residents, service businesses after hours, and transport their equipment. Parking off site is often difficult since few parking spaces are available that are without time limits, free, and secure. Gascon and Price and the current laws have essentially legalized breaking into cars and removing parts from cars which further complicates the need and expense of being the working poor.

Expand full comment

The racist, progressive people of Palo Alto California implement their racist policies by making below market rate housing "for school teachers". "Low Income" (not that teachers are low income) people can live near them--but only if they have Master's degrees. The janitor who cleans their kids shit off the bathroom floor? Let him live somewhere else.

https://www.paloaltoonline.com/news/2023/02/03/heres-what-you-need-to-know-about-the-new-teacher-housing-project-in-palo-alto/

(It's even worse, of course, because the teachers get the imputed income from the discounted rent and mortgages tax free! So they can cry poverty and get even more tax dollars even though you and I would need to earn $500,000/year to buy equivalent benefits.)

Expand full comment

This title is deceptive. Fake news. Renting in LA is a disaster. It's a very violent, racist (towards white and other) city and degenerative city. You wouldn't know this unless you live there.

Expand full comment

These people aren't interested in solutions; they're interested in virtue signaling. Although I agree that existing residents have a right to live in the community of their choice, they should just shut up about caring about low income housing. The worst are those who complained it wouldn't be good enough. Just be honest - you paid a lot for your home so you would live among other rich people, not the poors!

Here's a news item from TFP today - "An empty office tower in San Francisco that was once valued at $62 million just sold for $6.5 million." If these hypocrites in California really wanted to address the "housing crisis," the city would scoop it up, waive zoning restrictions, and find a way to convert it into residential housing. I can hear the "but, but, but..." already.

P.S. Ben, this segment needed more man-on-the-street.

Expand full comment

This is a terribly misleading and simplistic article. I'm an affordable housing advocate with extensive experience in LA and am familiar with this project and the non-profit developer, which is a terrific organization. My haircutter lives next door and opposed this project due to its size and other factors, not its population. Yes, there are serious NIMBY problems everywhere. Per those opposing, this project is 7 stories high where no other building is close to that height (they are 3-4) and it is next to a church that it will dwarf. Of the 89 units, 62 units (69%) are 303 square foot studios intended to house 2+ people. Underground parking consists of 66 stalls for 200+ residents (most of which are for economy sized vehicles), 18 of which are to be shared with the church, further limiting available spots. Street parking and traffic is a very challenging in the area. There are other concerns. So, it's not such a simple situation. There are serious and genuine "quality of life" issues to be taken into account in these matters. We desperately need more affordable housing for both the working poor and those with special needs but dismissing and mocking people for raising these issues is not productive or helpful.

Expand full comment

In a market economy, devoid of government involvement and tinkering, everyone would have housing.

If there is demand for housing, it will get built unless government steps in to restrict it through its insidious hurdles and policies. Government involvement should be limited to supporting those buying or renting, not building or managing.

It runs against the market to insert low cost housing into expensive neighborhoods. Location determines price. Want better housing? Work harder, pay attention in school, etc.

I benefitted from living with two parents who prioritized education and modeled working, frugality and citizenship. They were very poor immigrants, owned a laundry and only one finished high school. I and my friends in similar situations all succeeded in life, earning doctoral and professional degrees and/or owning businesses. Our parents did not receive government supports and we worked our ways through colleges and/or received scholarships.

I used to take girlfriends to see the home and neighborhood where I lived from 3rd grade through high school. No matter the degree of success I attained in life, I was proud of living in a country that allowed one to improve his life through work and education.

Imposing housing where it does not belong is an aspect of our country taking the social welfare path instead of the work hard and study path of personal responsibility and achievement.

Expand full comment

John Heilman, the councilmember who casts some shade on the NIMBY at the very end of the video, is a longtime lecturer at USC Law School for the subject of Community Property. He was a GREAT law professor and I nailed that subject on the Bar exam thanks to him. He was actually Mayor of West Hollywood back in the late 1990s. He was funny, smart and no surprise he had a whip-smart comment at the end of this video.

Expand full comment

I read the story - it was a great story. I wanted to share it with some people I work with, but the link seems dead or misdirected. Can someone check it?

Expand full comment

I can't presume to know Ben's motives, but if this is mostly a skewering of progressive hypocrisy, then have at it. But the demurrals being voiced do point to valid concerns, even if the WeHo lefties are ashamed to own up to it. We lived there for 25 years, from the time we fell off the turnip truck barely in our 20s until the day we couldn't bear another minute of the loud, vulgar, New Orleans-but-without-the-good-food chaos. I understand the concern of residents who just want to have what is still recognizable as an American standard of living. Striving to preserve that standard isn't a vice; going vertical and packing them in isn't a self-evident virtue. Ultimately I think those in WeHo hoping to preserve their status quo are going to have to move--they just haven't admitted it to themselves yet. Intolerable density is coming, and it's going to look more like Rio than Tokyo.

Expand full comment