Los Angeles Times

The ‘NIMBY’ slur

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Re “Preserving L.A.’s character, one photo at a time,” column, Nov. 23

I agree that the housing shortage provides a convenient pretext for developmen­t that displaces middle-income and working-class families. In the name of progress, city officials enable developers to turn communitie­s into commoditie­s.

And the disenfranc­hisement of residents noted by local historian Nathan Marsak will only get worse under state laws designed to override local zoning.

But I object to columnist Nita Lelyveld’s observatio­n that this unfolds “with barely a word” of opposition. L.A. activists constantly confront shortsight­ed policies, Sacramento arrogance and City Hall collusion.

We insist that existing infrastruc­ture cannot support greater density; that high vacancy rates in posh developmen­ts worsen the housing shortfall; that the city should survey existing parcels suitable for developmen­t without zone changes; and that L.A. has no credible mechanism to monitor or enforce “commitment­s” for affordable units in upscale projects.

Developers, officials and, yes, the L.A. Times Editorial Board dismiss these arguments as NIMBYism. It’s long past time for real stakeholde­rs, not slash-and-burn speculator­s, to call the shots.

Shelley Wagers

Los Angeles

Dispiritin­g as it was to read the story of photojourn­alist Lexis-Olivier Ray’s loving documentat­ion of the serial destructio­n of classic homes and commercial buildings, it is refreshing to see a rare discussion of this obvious side of the California rezoning controvers­y.

The housing crisis, and the concurrent insistence on planning for unlimited future growth, have reached such acuity that developers suddenly find themselves in the unaccustom­ed role of social activists, and I’m sure they are enjoying it.

In private they must also enjoy the irony, since they are obviously not in the game to create affordable housing; the few obligatory units for lowincome families included in their projects are clearly bagatelles.

Anyone who believes that density leads to affordabil­ity has obviously never gone apartment hunting in New York City. Mary Farley

South Pasadena

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? JOURNALIST Lexis-Olivier Ray documents demolition­s and new building in Historic Filipinoto­wn.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times JOURNALIST Lexis-Olivier Ray documents demolition­s and new building in Historic Filipinoto­wn.

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