Los Angeles Times

Seismic safety tax credit is vetoed

The legislatio­n would have helped property owners strengthen vulnerable buildings.

- By Martha Groves martha.groves @latimes.com

Delivering a blow to Mayor Eric Garcetti’s plan to improve seismic safety throughout Los Angeles, Gov. Jerry Brown on Saturday vetoed legislatio­n offering tax credits for property owners seeking to bolster structures at risk of collapsing in a big earthquake.

Los Angeles on Friday enacted the nation’s most sweeping seismic regulation­s, requiring that an estimated 15,000 concrete buildings and wooden structures with weak first floors be retrofitte­d so that they could better withstand violent shaking. Garcetti and others had viewed tax credits as a possible way of easing the financial burden.

Brown said the state’s finances remained too precarious to expand such credits.

“Given [the] financial uncertaint­ies, I cannot support providing additional tax credits that will make balancing the state’s budget even more difficult,” he said in a statement about his veto of this and other bills that would have created new credits or expanded existing ones.

Garcetti expressed disappoint­ment with the veto but vowed to push to find ways to reduce the financial load of seismic retrofitti­ng on building owners and tenants.

“Every dollar we invest today saves lives and property when the next big one hits,” Garcetti said in a brief statement.

Under the new Los Angeles law, which the City Council passed unanimousl­y, property owners will have seven years to fix wooden apartments and 25 years to repair concrete buildings.

The city has already identified about 13,500 apartment complexes that officials suspect need retrofitti­ng. A Times investigat­ion in 2013 found more than 1,000 older concrete structures — including landmark buildings in downtown, Hollywood and Westwood — that require close scrutiny.

Owners will be required to find a way to pay for the work, which can range from $60,000 to $130,000 for wood apartments and millions of dollars for large concrete towers.

The city’s housing department has suggested that renters and owners evenly split the cost of repairs, with owners allowed to charge a monthly maximum surcharge of $38 to pay for the retrofitti­ng.

The bill that Brown vetoed would have used tax credits to offset 30% of the cost of seismic improvemen­ts. City officials in San Francisco also have made the retrofitti­ng of vulnerable buildings a high priority.

“I’m disappoint­ed,” said Assemblyma­n Adrin Nazarian, the Sherman Oaks Democrat who had proposed the bill.

“Often I agree with the governor on fiscal issues; however, California is on borrowed time. An earthquake will strike, and the cost we pay for preventabl­e damage will far exceed this modest tax credit.”

Nazarian said his goal had been “to at least start something, to start with one step, and then … when we saw it was really helping out our constituen­ts, to grow it over time.”

He added that he looked forward to working with Brown to ensure that California “prioritize­s seismic retrofitti­ng in next year’s budget.”

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i
Associated Press ?? GOV. JERRY BROWN vetoed legislatio­n aimed at helping property owners retrofit buildings deemed vulnerable in a quake. He said the state’s finances remained too precarious to expand such tax credits.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press GOV. JERRY BROWN vetoed legislatio­n aimed at helping property owners retrofit buildings deemed vulnerable in a quake. He said the state’s finances remained too precarious to expand such tax credits.

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