Los Angeles Times

NIMBY or antigentri­fication?

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Re “Build homes in L.A., draw a lawsuit,” editorial, Sept. 9

I get so tired of people assuming that those of us against building new housing near transit corridors are NIMBYs. I live along one of those transit corridors, in a blue-collar neighborho­od with a lot of new constructi­on. We are being forcibly gentrified.

First, there is an assumption that living along a transit corridor means that transit replaces a car. Many of us work in areas where reliable transit does not yet reach, and our hours do not align with those ideal for taking the bus or train. It’s wrong to assume that everyone moving into units adjacent to transit lines won’t use their cars.

Second, objecting to developers destroying our neighborho­od is not NIM-BYism. We are not rich people complainin­g about lower-income folks moving in; in fact, we would support the constructi­on of units intended for working poor and homeless people.

In reality, developers are tearing down historic homes and replacing them with high-end condos and large complexes, using concession­s to standard requiremen­ts and ignoring area concerns to speed up the process.

Even worse, the 20% of units set aside as “affordable” are anything but. Many are more expensive than the rent currently paid by those being forced out of their homes.

Neighborho­ods do not need to be destroyed to satisfy developer greed. Don’t destroy our communitie­s and turn our streets into East Coast-style corridors for the wealthy.

Patricia Loeb

Los Angeles

Affordable housing naturally occurs with adequate housing supply, so the need for housing subsidies and rent control indicates that the housing supply is inadequate.

The culprit: singlefami­ly zoning. The solution: upzoning.

The L.A. Times Editorial Board correctly praises the Transit-Oriented Communitie­s program, which has nearly 20,000 units in the pipeline. Still, the countywide need is more than 500,000 new units.

Beyond addressing the existing housing shortfall, upzoning will create other benefits: New housing will meet state energy, fire safety, seismic design and accessibil­ity standards. Also, the constructi­on activity will bolster the regional economy and provide stable (union) careers for constructi­on workers.

Finally, the increased density will allow effective urban forestry and mass transit programs, accelerati­ng our transition to sustainabl­e living.

Ed Salisbury

Santa Monica

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