Los Angeles Times

Who loses from less parking?

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Re “L.A. wastes precious space on parking,” Opinion, Jan. 5

Interestin­g article by Michael Schneider on abolishing minimum parking requiremen­ts for commercial and multifamil­y residentia­l projects. There’s one caveat to keep in mind.

Accessible parking requiremen­ts for people with disabiliti­es are tied to the number of spaces provided on a project. If you reduce or eliminate the number of parking spaces in a project, you will end up with less or no parking for people with disabiliti­es.

Careful considerat­ion should be given to ensure that our disabled citizens have a place to park. Winston Ward

Redlands The writer is assistant director of community developmen­t and building official for the city of Chino Hills.

People can whine about cars and parking requiremen­ts from today until tomorrow, but folks will always be driving in Los Angeles, and there will always be parking.

I for one would like the sidewalks to be given back to the folks who lost them during the pandemic. How about giving the publicly owned sidewalks back to taxpaying pedestrian­s before they are completely taken over by restaurant­s and scooters?

Our aging population needs clear, clean and safe sidewalks. How about doing that?

Peter David Harris Los Angeles

Assembly Bill 2097, the state law that abolishes all parking minimums near mass transit stops, may work for larger cities such as Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego.

But it does not work in smaller areas.

Decisions are being made at the state level that cater to large cities. Many housing and parking decisions do not take into account the unique qualities of individual cities, thus usurping local control and changing the ambiance and desirabili­ty of many smaller communitie­s and harming tourism.

The leadership in Sacramento needs to stop using one-size-fits-all solutions to our housing needs.

Carol Spector Ventura

Yes, parking spaces are a sad waste of space that could be put to much better use. Planting space for trees and shrubs. Parks. Playground­s.

But until we get serious about effective and efficient (not to mention convenient and inexpensiv­e) mass transit, we’re putting the cart before the horse.

Alison M. Grimes Yorba Linda

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