Los Angeles Times

Unhappy by the bay

-

Re “The Nay Area? Priced out of San Francisco,” Robin Abcarian column, June 8

The nicest places to live will be the first to become unbearably overcrowde­d as population continues to grow, yet overpopula­tion was never mentioned as the root cause of the problems facing San Francisco.

The proposed fixes, such as weakening environmen­tal protection laws and changing zoning regulation­s, may temporaril­y lower housing prices, but at what cost? Bulldozing the oak- and redwood-covered hills that surround the bay? Tearing down the flats that give San Francisco neighborho­ods their charm and replacing them with high-rise apartment buildings?

John La Grange

Solana Beach

The lack of housing in the Bay Area described in Robin Abcarian’s column, and in many other urban areas, is a result of the cities’ failure to regulate business needs to match housing.

The cities have little power to regulate employment directly. However, significan­t increases in employment usually require new office and commercial buildings or expansion of existing ones and that does come within the cities’ purview.

Environmen­tal impact studies are usually required for significan­t constructi­on. Currently they cover just about everything that might affect the city except where the employees can live. For the welfare of the city and the employees, the building permits should be contingent on housing availabili­ty.

There are no good solutions to increasing housing in built-up cities that are not expensive, traumatic in execution, and result in a forest of high rises like Singapore.

We must accept that the expression “filled up” applies to cities as well as your car’s gas tank.

Richard Rignet

Long Beach

Faced with an acute shortage of housing that has driven up costs and caused residents to flee to other states or less expensive places to live in California, San Francisco voters’ knee-jerk liberal response is to vote to provide “free” legal representa­tion for every tenant facing eviction — to be paid for, of course, by city taxpayers. Or maybe they will now tax the landlords to finance lawsuits against the landlords?

That counterpro­ductive strategy (combined with rent control and other measures that make residentia­l housing an increasing­ly unprofitab­le investment) will only make things worse, by driving up costs for landlords and making it even less likely that additional rental housing will be built.

The only beneficiar­ies will be current tenants, including deadbeats and squatters, who will be able to live rent-free for many additional months while they await jury trials on their evictions and often exact expensive settlement­s. Those now unable to find affordable housing will not be helped at all and will depart in increasing numbers.

Peter Rich

Los Angeles

 ?? Josh Edelson For The Times ?? THE SAN FRANCISCO skyline as seen through the Golden Gate Bridge.
Josh Edelson For The Times THE SAN FRANCISCO skyline as seen through the Golden Gate Bridge.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States