Los Angeles Times

For many, L.A. is falling out of reach

Anxiety about cost of living runs high, survey finds

- By Nina Agrawal

Four years ago, Chelsea Lutz moved to Los Angeles from Cleveland to pursue a career writing and directing films.

“I needed a really cheap apartment,” she said. She found one in Koreatown, where she didn’t particular­ly want to live, but it was all she could afford.

Today, Lutz, 28, shares a rent-controlled, one-bedroom apartment in the Miracle Mile area with her fiance.

“My rent’s expensive, but it’s not crazy expensive,” Lutz said. “But eventually I want to get a house and that’s worrisome because I want to be close to my job.”

Lutz is not alone. According to a survey released Monday by the Luskin School of Public Affairs at UCLA, residents across L.A. County are increasing­ly anxious about the cost of living, with housing costs at the top of their worries. Young people are feeling it the most.

“It’s a perfect storm for young peo-

ple who are spending a disproport­ionate amount of their income just to have shelter over their head, and as a result, some of them tend to live farther out where housing is cheaper and so their commutes are longer,” said Zev Yaroslavsk­y, a former county supervisor and current lecturer at UCLA who led the survey. As a result, younger residents rate their quality of life the lowest.

“What troubles me about this trend line is that young people are supposed to be optimistic and have a lot to look forward to,” Yaroslavsk­y said. “L.A. has always been a place of optimism — that’s what makes this place a magnet.”

The findings are part of a broader annual survey on quality of life as measured by nine categories, including cost of living, transporta­tion/traffic, education, healthcare and the economy. The scores are weighted according to the relative importance of those categories and aggregated into a “quality of life index.”

The overall index for 2018 was 56, down from 59 in each of the last two years. (The index ranges from 10 to 100, so the midpoint is 55.) Yaroslavsk­y said that drop was significan­t because the index reflects the qualities about which respondent­s care most — which in this survey included cost of living.

At a score of 43, cost of living was the lowest ranked of all nine categories.

“It’s been dropping like a rock these last few years,” Yaroslavsk­y said. “Housing is driving the low rating. This is not shocking news, but it continues to drop.”

Yaroslavsk­y cited the difficulty of getting into the ownership market, the loss of rent-stabilized units and skyrocketi­ng costs of market-rate rental housing.

“Young people are probably pressured more than anybody else ... and for young people of color it’s even more acute,” he said.

Adrian Alvarez knows what that’s like firsthand. The 32-year-old waiter-bartender came to L.A. from Puebla, Mexico, when he was 20 and worked as a gardener and at a carwash before making his way up in the restaurant business. He splits the $1,200 rent on a studio apartment in the Pico-Union neighborho­od with a friend and is conscienti­ous about his spending.

“Sometimes I go out with friends and I don’t spend any money, I don’t buy any drinks,” Alvarez said. “I have to save in case of an emergency.”

Alvarez, who works four days a week, sometimes for 12 hours at a time, doesn’t have health insurance. Every month, he tries to put away half his income.

“I could live by myself and pay for my own apartment,” he said, “but then the majority of my income would go toward rent.”

Still, Alvarez said he has few complaints about his quality of life, as he’s always been able to find work, get around, eat and pay for some entertainm­ent on the side.

“If you’re willing to work hard, you can get ahead here,” he said.

He does worry about his landlord raising the rent, though, and knows family members and friends who have fled L.A. for Las Vegas and Montana, where housing costs are lower.

“But they have to endure the weather,” he said.

According to the survey, a majority of residents reported that they themselves, a family member or a close friend had considered moving from the area because of rising housing costs, including two-thirds of those younger than 50.

One-quarter of those surveyed reported concerns about becoming homeless, with that concern weighing most heavily on young people, renters and those making less than $30,000 a year.

Across the board, residents overwhelmi­ngly expressed support for rentcontro­l policies and a preference that new apartment buildings go up only in multifamil­y zones and not singlefami­ly zones. They were split on whether the effects of new housing and developmen­t were beneficial.

Beyond housing, the survey found that people ages 18 to 39 were also more negative about their healthcare, job satisfacti­on and the environmen­t as compared with older people. They were more positive about public transit and their ability to get around, as well as on race relations and the effect of immigrants on the community.

Somewhat surprising­ly, there was a nearly 50% drop in the percentage­s of Latinos and Asians/Pacific Islanders who said they worried about being deported or someone they knew being deported.

“Last year there was this frenzy — the Muslim ban, build the wall, end of ” Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, Yaroslavsk­y said, referring to a series of policies and intentions President Trump announced early in his administra­tion. “But the sky didn’t fall in. The courts have stepped in. The state Legislatur­e, the City Council, the Board of Supervisor­s all took steps to convey the message [to immigrants] that we have your backs.”

The survey was conducted by phone and online in English and Spanish in March and included interviews with 1,457 L.A. County residents. The quality of life index was prepared in partnershi­p with the California Endowment and the public opinion research firm Fairbank, Maslin, Maullin, Metz & Associates Inc.

 ?? Bob Chamberlin Los Angeles Times ?? HOUSING costs are among county residents’ top worries, a study found. Above, an Arts District project.
Bob Chamberlin Los Angeles Times HOUSING costs are among county residents’ top worries, a study found. Above, an Arts District project.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? A BICYCLIST passes lofts downtown. Younger residents are especially affected by the high cost of living, according to the UCLA survey.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times A BICYCLIST passes lofts downtown. Younger residents are especially affected by the high cost of living, according to the UCLA survey.
 ?? Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ?? ONE-QUARTER of L.A. County residents who took part in a survey reported concerns about becoming homeless. Above, a downtown apartment in 2015.
Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ONE-QUARTER of L.A. County residents who took part in a survey reported concerns about becoming homeless. Above, a downtown apartment in 2015.

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