Los Angeles Times

Evict, then profit

-

Re “Forced out of home,” July 29

There is a lot to unpack in the Los Angeles Times’ article on long-term, low-income tenants being displaced by new landlords who issue mass evictions before renovating their properties and significan­tly increasing the rent.

For me, the most revealing quote was the Irvine developer’s statement about his effort to bring these buildings “to the point where they are an asset to the community.” This speaks to California’s failure to look at existing private housing that happens to be priced affordably — also known as naturally occurring affordable housing, or NOAH — as an an asset to the community. By failing to develop enough new homes, we’re allowing NOAH housing to go extinct.

This has created a gold mine for profit-seeking developers and has put additional pressure on government­s to develop affordable housing that will never meet the needs of people being displaced from the NOAH homes they know and love.

We can either allow opportunis­tic developers to decide what we should value in our communitie­s, or we can build our way out of this mess with smart-growth policies, creating an abundance of housing at every level of need. The choice couldn’t be more clear. Andy Kerr Long Beach The writer is a member of the Los Angeles County Measure H Citizens’ Oversight Advisory Board.

Renters are not owners and therefore have no guarantee of housing other than specified by their rental agreement.

I don’t see anything in the article that implies that the developers broke the renters’ contracts, so to say the tenants were “forced out” of their homes seems disingenuo­us. If I rent a room at a Hilton for two nights for $200, the hotel is not obligated to rent it to me for a third night at the same rate.

These are old properties that need improvemen­t and have been rented under market for years. Barbara Shapiro

Huntington Beach

In the 1973 film “Soylent Green,” the streets of 2022 are void of grocery stores and retail storefront­s and instead replete with nondescrip­t gray warehouses. The filmmakers made a subtle prediction that vital local establishm­ents would fall away as resources grew scarce.

Fast forward to 2018, and it is all coming true. Today we buy and receive our goods via online shopping sites while neighborho­od merchants must close their doors. Hundreds of retail clerks and salespeopl­e are now more at risk of making up the next wave of homelessne­ss in this area.

In 2016 and 2017, taxpayers in the city of Los Angeles and in the county voted their hearts in supporting about $1.5 billion in bonds to help those who’ve already fallen homeless. But there’s little acknowledg­ement of our need to stop contributi­ng to what is about to be the new world order that “Soylent Green” predicted.

It’s becoming apparent that savvy real estate investors and companies like Amazon will become the two major forces that drive homelessne­ss in Los Angeles. Marilyn Haese

Los Angeles

 ?? Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ?? CRISTINA MORAN packs up the one-bedroom Long Beach apartment she lives in with her family.
Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times CRISTINA MORAN packs up the one-bedroom Long Beach apartment she lives in with her family.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States