Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Even with good pay, they moved out of L.A. area

As more escape high costs, experts believe the demographi­c loss won’t be permanent.

- By Summer Lin

Bethany Jansen and her husband, Andrew, decided to pack up their 500-squarefoot Venice apartment and move to Bethany’s hometown near St. Louis and start a new life and business.

Jansen, who was working in downtown Los Angeles before the COVID-19 pandemic, commuted two hours a day. Jansen, 32, and her 34year-old husband were making about $150,000 combined a year, but they felt it was not enough to afford a house in neighborho­ods where they wanted to live.

Now in St. Louis, the couple makes less money but said it goes much further — and without the intense commute.

“We’re getting more out of our paycheck, and the quality of life is better because we’re not sitting in a car all day in traffic,” she said. “Working from home let me set my own schedule, and my mental health is a lot better. We’re not making six figures like we were, but it doesn’t matter as much because we can pay for rent and do the things we need to do.”

The Jansens represent one part of the exodus from Los Angeles and other major cities that took place during the pandemic, which opened many opportunit­ies for remote work, as well as sparked deep conversati­ons about what they wanted out of life.

For people of fairly high incomes who left L.A., a big factor was housing prices, which continued to explode during the pandemic and left them wondering whether they would ever be able to buy a home here.

“It was a factor knowing we were never going to be able to afford a house,” she said. “People are buying a shack in L.A. for $700,000, renovating it and selling it for $1.5 million. No matter how hard we work, we’ll never be able to afford that.”

The couple pays $1,300 a month to live in a three-bedroom house that she said felt like a “mansion” compared with their one-bedroom L.A. apartment, which costs about $1,800 a month to rent.

“You don’t get the scenery and the culture as much here, being able to

drive to the beach — those are the things we miss about L.A.,” Jansen said. “But those are the kind of things we’re OK with giving up to have this life out here.”

Much has been said about the shifts in population away from California coastal hubs, such as Los Angeles and the Bay Area, and the new lives some people have found in other parts of the state and nation. For those with financial means, the trade-offs involved giving up the dream of living in the Golden State with the cheaper housing and other financial benefits of less expensive cities.

But demographi­cs experts are doubtful that these shifts in urban population­s are permanent.

People will eventually move back, they say, new residents will be attracted to all that California offers, and immigratio­n will help offset the outflow.

Of the country’s 56 major metropolit­an areas, Los Angeles had the second-greatest numeric population loss between July 1, 2020, and July 1, 2021, according to an analysis by the Brookings Institutio­n using U.S. Census Bureau estimates. The net domestic migration — the number of people moving out compared with those moving in — was 204,776 in L.A. That’s nearly double the population loss the city experience­d between 2019 and 2020, when it lost 128,803 residents.

Like other major metro areas, L.A. has seen a rise in domestic out-migration since 2010, as more residents moved to other parts of the country and the economy improved. Between 2019 and 2020, out-migration didn’t change significan­tly in the L.A. metro area compared with previous years, but it rose sharply between 2020 and 2021.

William Frey, a senior fellow with the Brookings Institutio­n and the demographe­r who wrote the analysis, said California has been losing out on middle-class residents and gaining young profession­als and college graduates since about 2000, and because immigratio­n dipped significan­tly across the U.S. during the pandemic, the flow of immigrants hasn’t been enough to counter the domestic outmigrati­on.

“California being a fairly liberal state, they have all of these programs to help student loans and affordable housing, but there’s a niche of people that are not doing that poorly to qualify but they could do a lot better by moving somewhere else,” he said.

Internatio­nal migration slowed during the pandemic, reaching the lowest levels in the U.S. in decades, according to Census

Bureau data.

The U.S. gained 244,000 immigrants between 2020 and 2021 — a significan­t decline from the 1 million who came to the U.S. between 2015 and 2016 and the 477,000 who immigrated between 2019 and 2020.

In the L.A. metro area, 5,237 internatio­nal residents moved in from 2020 to 2021 — the lowest number in more than two decades, according to Frey’s analysis of census estimates. In comparison, about 11,676 internatio­nal migrants moved to the city between 2018 and 2019.

Frey expects immigratio­n to pick back up and help repopulate the state’s labor force.

“I don’t think we should see California as being a long-term population loser,” he said. “Immigratio­n will come back, and there’ll be some breathing room in terms of affordabil­ity and other opportunit­ies.”

Frey also said that the last two years won’t be a good predictor of the longterm migration trends in Los Angeles, and that he fully expects some residents to move back after the pandemic.

“Everybody says it has to do with work from home changing people’s work habits, but sooner or later, they’re going to want to cluster again to some degree,” he said. “There’s so much in coastal California with its diverse economy. People who have educations who are creative are going to want to live there. It’s too soon to say it’s the end of it.”

USC economics professor Matthew Kahn, who wrote the book “Going Remote” about the work-fromhome shift during the pandemic, said that despite high taxes, California has historical­ly been able to retain residents because of high-quality services and amenities, including the weather and its picturesqu­e beaches. The trouble comes when people no longer believe those services are living up to their expectatio­ns, he said.

“The super-rich can always have the best of everything. But if you felt like housing was expensive, you were worried about the quality of schools and what you wanted from life isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, COVID was a wake-up call to try something new and experiment,” he said.

The COVID-19 crisis opened new possibilit­ies for more residents to live farther from their jobs, and many California­ns took advantage of that, Kahn said.

“Americans have tended to live 30 minutes from where they work, but going forward, that could be a bigger radius if you’re only going a couple days a month,” he said.

Kahn believes that one way for California leaders to address the recent exodus is to focus on improving its services.

“Cities like L.A. would have to do a better job competing to keep these individual­s if they’re more footloose,” he said. “I’m a big believer in competitio­n, and so if California is exporting wealth and losing the upper middle class, cities are going to have to do a better job of addressing crime, improving quality of life, reducing pollution — all the things we care about in day-to-day quality of life.”

Taylor Avakian, a broker in Los Angeles and a senior associate for Matthews Real Estate Investment Services, said he’s seen California­ns move to Florida, Texas and other warm-weather states because of lower taxes.

“People would prefer to pay less taxes, and a big catalyst was the pandemic,” he said. “We pay taxes for the fantastic things we get here in California, like the Mediterran­ean climate, and we didn’t have access to it because everything was closed. People were asking, ‘Why am I paying for these amenities when I can’t use them?’ ”

In November 2020, Tulasi Lovell moved from Culver City to a large house in Ramona in San Diego County.

Lovell, 34, wanted to be a homeowner but couldn’t afford to buy in Los Angeles. After many of her friends left L.A. during the pandemic and she no longer had to work in an office, Lovell decided to move after about a year in Ramona to Brooklyn, N.Y., with plans to purchase a house in a nearby suburb.

Lovell, who earns a combined $200,000 annually with her husband, said it wouldn’t be feasible for them to buy a desirable home in Los Angeles.

“There’s the joke that if you see a million-dollar property in L.A., it’s condemned,” she said. “I feel like it’s unsuitable right now, unless you already bought your house years ago. Becoming a new homeowner is near impossible.”

Sarah Dobbyn, 41, gave birth to her second child in April 2020, just as local businesses and parks were shutting down, leaving her and her husband, Joe, with nowhere to take their kids.

The couple decided to move to Lake Oswego, Ore., where Dobbyn’s parents had a four-bedroom house they offered in exchange for paying for repairs and maintenanc­e on the home.

“We have two kids here, and we needed to give up the dream of living the L.A. life and being able to go to the beach and getting by in a small apartment,” she said. “We make a good salary, but our money didn’t go super far in L.A.”

Dobbyn, who makes a little over $100,000 annually, said she and her husband wouldn’t have been able to afford a house in Los Angeles, and if they did, they would’ve had to move farther out.

“It was the quality of life for us, our son and the new baby,” she said. “If Joe and I had not had children, we would’ve stuck it out in L.A.”

Lovell said she could see even more people leaving L.A. if companies continue to let employees work from home.

“If more jobs become decentrali­zed with remote work, the middle class just has so many better options,” she said.

 ?? Adam Schluter ?? BETHANY and Andrew Jansen left Venice Beach for St. Louis, where costs are lower and traffic is lighter.
Adam Schluter BETHANY and Andrew Jansen left Venice Beach for St. Louis, where costs are lower and traffic is lighter.

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