Las Vegas Review-Journal

Housing costs put California in crisis mode

- By Adam Nagourney and Conor Dougherty New York Times News Service

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A full-fledged housing crisis has gripped California, marked by a severe lack of affordable homes and apartments for middle-class families. The median cost of a home here is now a staggering $500,000, twice the national cost. Homelessne­ss is surging across the state.

In Los Angeles, booming with constructi­on and signs of prosperity, some people have given up on finding a place and have moved into vans with makeshift kitchens, hidden away in quiet neighborho­ods. In Silicon Valley — an internatio­nal symbol of wealth and technology — lines of parked recreation­al vehicles are a daily testimony to the challenges of finding an affordable place to call home.

Heather Lile, a nurse who makes $180,000 a year, commutes two hours from her home in Manteca to the San Francisco hospital where she works, 80 miles away. “I make really good money and it’s frustratin­g to me that I can’t afford to live close to my job,” Lile said.

The extreme rise in housing costs has emerged as a threat to the state’s future economy and its quality of life. It has pushed the debate over housing to the center of state and local politics, fueling a resurgent rent control movement and the growth of neighborho­od “Yes in My Back Yard” organizati­ons, battling long-establishe­d neighborho­od groups and local elected officials as they demand an end to strict zoning and planning regulation­s.

Now here in Sacramento, lawmakers are considerin­g extraordin­ary legislatio­n to, in effect, crack down on communitie­s that have, in their view, systematic­ally delayed or derailed housing constructi­on proposals, often at the behest of local neighborho­od groups.

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