Los Angeles Times

How L.A. should grow

Measure S was not the answer, but neither is returning to business as usual.

- By Scott Cummings and Doug Smith Scott Cummings is a professor of law and legal ethics at UCLA. Doug Smith is a staff attorney in the Community Developmen­t Project at Public Counsel.

For all the acrimoniou­s debate over Measure S, the slow-growth ballot measure that suffered a decisive defeat this month, most factions could agree on one thing: The developmen­t process in Los Angeles is broken.

Although Measure S was not the answer, neither is returning to business as usual. With the vote behind us, it’s time to take stock of the city’s very real challenges and devise a more effective strategy for inclusive growth in L.A.

The city is experienci­ng a remarkable developmen­t boom in long-neglected areas: downtown, Hollywood, parts of South L.A., Boyle Heights and along the L.A. River. This is the result of market forces but also of policy initiative­s designed to promote more “vertical” developmen­t around an expanding public transit system. All this growth presents an opportunit­y to plan a city that works for more people — namely, to build more housing in proximity to more jobs and to reduce our dependency on cars.

But increasing­ly, L.A. is becoming a city where only the wealthy can afford to live. If developmen­t continues in its current direction, the city will continue to lose affordable housing and the result will be more displaceme­nt of low-income residents. Low-income Angelenos will have to move farther away from good jobs and schools, creating more economic insecurity for everyone and depriving L.A. of the diverse skills, talent and energy that make it a dynamic and cosmopolit­an city.

L.A.’s rejection of Measure S was not an endorsemen­t of trickle-down housing policy. The city needs more housing, but market solutions have failed to meet the needs of many residents. In 2014, L.A. far exceeded its production goal for new housing for people with above-moderate incomes while meeting only one-third of its goal for very lowincome housing. L.A. County now has a deficit of nearly half a million affordable units.

No other American city is permitting the wholesale destructio­n of its original housing stock at the rate that L.A. is. The city is losing both its architectu­rally significan­t homes and swaths of rent-controlled apartments. According to the Coalition for Economic Survival, 1,372 rent-controlled units were removed from the market in 2016, up nearly onethird from 2015. And this figure reflects only evictions that have been properly registered with the city; it does not account for cash-for-keys transactio­ns and badfaith evictions, which result in the loss of many more rent-controlled units.

L.A. doesn’t just need more growth, we need better growth — developmen­t that prioritize­s affordable housing, protects what is special about the city’s existing housing infrastruc­ture and plans more density near mass transit. Mayor Eric Garcetti and the City Council have committed to updating both the city’s General Plan and its 35 community plans. These plans are an important place to start. Updates should be made with the following priorities.

Any increases to housing density — any “upzoning” of neighborho­ods — must mandate affordable housing.

The city needs to create an inventory of affordable and rentcontro­lled housing units within each of the 35 community-plan areas and update these inventorie­s annually. If an inventory ever shows a net reduction in affordable units, the loss should be recovered.

In updating each plan, the city ought to engage with leadership from low-income communitie­s and communitie­s of color that have historical­ly been excluded from the planning and developmen­t process. Previous attempts to address the needs of these communitie­s have been undermined by developers with better access to City Hall.

Of course, the city and community plans cannot solve the problem alone. To be successful, updates to these plans must be paired with efforts to strengthen tenant protection­s and increase funding for developers of affordable housing.

At the state level, the legislatur­e should enact and the governor should sign a bill introduced this year, AB 1506, to repeal the Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act — a 1995 law that set new ground rules for rent-control ordinances, restrictin­g what sort of houses and apartments can be covered. Costa-Hawkins has encouraged bad-faith evictions and contribute­d to spiking rent levels across the city. Repealing it would give cities the flexibilit­y to enact or strengthen local rent-control laws.

The city should generate new sources of funding for affordable housing. With the 2012 dissolutio­n of redevelopm­ent agencies, which were required to set aside 20% of their resources for low- and moderate-income housing, cities across California lost a critical source of such funding. This loss has been compounded by recent declines in support for federal housing. L.A. should adopt a strong Affordable Housing Linkage Fee ordinance, requiring developers of marketrate housing to contribute to a city fund for the creation of new affordable housing.

Planning for inclusive growth will require strong leadership from city government, held accountabl­e by genuine participat­ion from the bottom — that is, from all residents, not just those with the most resources and clout. If Angelenos allow the status quo to continue, we will build a city where low-income people have no place.

 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? THE CONSTRUCTI­ON of affordable housing, as shown at right, is essential as Los Angeles developmen­t moves forward.
Los Angeles Times THE CONSTRUCTI­ON of affordable housing, as shown at right, is essential as Los Angeles developmen­t moves forward.

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