Los Angeles Times

Kill this sprawl once and for all

-

Re “Tejon Ranch project on hold,” April 9

The legal ruling against the Centennial project gives Los Angeles County supervisor­s another chance to reject the Tejon Ranch Co.’s plan to build a sprawling city larger than Griffith Park on beautiful, fire-prone wildlands.

As people with two of the organizati­ons that raised these issues with the county and before the court, we believe Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff ’s ruling is a signal that local officials across California must consider the serious risks of building in highly fire-prone areas. About 95% of wildfires in California today are caused by human sources like power lines.

As California struggles with destructiv­e wildfires and a climate emergency, building sprawl projects like Centennial increases ignition risks, puts more people in harm’s way and destroys irreplacea­ble habitat. L.A. County supervisor­s should reject this destructiv­e project and embrace safer, environmen­tally friendly land-use policies.

J.P. Rose Los Angeles Nick Jensen Sacramento

Rose is a staff attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity; Jensen is the conservati­on program director of the California Native Plant Society.

California does not have a housing crunch. There is plenty of luxury housing. There is plenty of housing too far from jobs and transit centers. The crunch is with housing that people can afford.

In the city of Los Angeles, the median household income is about $62,000; in the Antelope Valley, where the Centennial developmen­t will be built, it is $52,000. The Antelope Valley has the highest percentage of empty housing in Los Angeles County.

A typical household spending the recommende­d 30% of its income on housing in the Antelope Valley probably cannot afford a two-bedroom apartment there; in Los Angeles, a median-income family definitely cannot afford a two-bedroom apartment.

According to Apartments.com, there are nearly 18,000 apartments available in Los Angeles. Unfortunat­ely, the average rent for two bedrooms is $3,620, equating to an annual income of more than $130,000, twice the median.

We have plenty of housing. It’s just too expensive. The last thing we need is more expensive housing.

Katherine Gould Glendale

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States