Los Angeles Times

A crisis caused by NIMBYs

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Re “Sacramento’s takeover threat,” editorial, April 8

The Times Editorial Board is incorrect.

Cities in this region have surrendere­d to NIMBYs who want to retain the open-space, ranch-style housing model. Most of those homes were built many decades ago. California is projected to have more than 50 million people by 2050. Many of the current 39 million people can’t find affordable housing today unless they drive 50 to 60 miles to their place of employment.

Much of the Los Angeles and San Francisco areas no longer have open space for new developmen­t. That leaves only one way to provide new housing: building up, not out.

Members of the state Legislatur­e are recognizin­g the reality of this situation. Local city council members and county supervisor­s have failed to do their jobs. Don Evans

Canoga Park

SB 827 by Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), which would override local zoning laws to allow taller residentia­l developmen­t near transit, needs hearings and negotiatio­ns to make it better, and your editorial makes that point and other good ones.

However, I was struck by your statement that the bill “robs residents and business owners of the right to shape their communitie­s, and it assumes they and their representa­tives can’t be trusted to make decisions for the greater good.”

Do you have any evidence that they can be trusted to do so? The reason the bill exists is precisely because they haven’t. Frank J. Gruber

Santa Monica

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