Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

L.A. Metro

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Angeles County Supervisor and L.A. Metro Board Member Sheila Kuehl.

The examples of transitcau­sed gentrifica­tion are many.

In Highland Park, the Gold Line (now the L Line) has fueled increased rents, and the members of its longtime Latino community are being displaced because they can't afford the higher monthly rents. Old buildings are torn down and replaced by high-end housing encircling the light-rail station. The housing is being rented or purchased by profession­als who can ride the train to and from work into downtown Los Angeles and avoid the hassle of freeway gridlock.

In Pasadena, luxury apartments and fine dining eateries have sprung up next to the Del Mar and Memorial Park stations of the L Line. The proximity to the light-rail station is a selling point to future tenants who can afford toplevel rents. And in North Hollywood, the Red Line (now B Line) subway station set off a commercial and residentia­l boon. It boosted the local economy, but only for those who could afford higher rents and inflated prices of goods and services nearby.

L.A. County Supervisor Holly Mitchell, also a Metro board member, voted for the land banking plan because she's concerned about communitie­s in South L.A. along Slauson Avenue being priced out of apartments and shops once Metro builds its Rail to Rail project, a pedestrian and bikeway with links to transit and room for future housing.

Many in the heavily Black and Brown working-class community worry that the 5.1 mile bike and pedestrian path, which would link up to the Blue Line (now A Line) and the not-yet-completed Crenshaw/LAX transit line, (K Line) would compound existing gentrifica­tion forces.

“Some community members are concerned about what that investment will do to their ability to afford rent in their community,” Mitchell said.

Metro is also concerned about gentrifica­tion along a planned light-rail line that would connect downtown Los Angeles to southeast L.A. County, known as the West Santa Ana Branch (named after an old Pacific Electric Line's Santa Ana route in L.A. County). It would serve the cities and communitie­s of downtown Los Angeles, unincorpor­ated Florence-Graham, Vernon, Huntington Park, Bell, Cudahy, South Gate, Downey, Paramount, Bellflower, Cerritos and Artesia.

Another area of concern includes land speculatio­n along the Los Angeles River, something the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s voted to address recently.

L.A. County allocated $50 million for the land bank to begin buying up land. It has identified 22 new potential project sites along the 51-mile-long river corridor. The idea is to acquire land for affordable housing and housing for homeless people, so-called

“green banking.”

“To ensure residents do not get displaced from their communitie­s as a result of new investment­s in infrastruc­ture, it is critical that we establish a land bank for the region to acquire, manage, and redevelop properties for community developmen­t,” said Supervisor Hilda Solis, who is also an L.A. Metro board member, in a prepared statement after the Board of Supervisor­s' vote.

“This will preserve affordable housing and increase affordable housing next to transit,” said Alfonso Directo, Jr., advocacy manager with the Alliance for Community Transit.

Metro is studying a partnershi­p with Los Angeles County's Community Land Trust Partnershi­p Pilot Program. It would work as follows: The county would be buy the land near a Metro project. Metro would hold and manage the land, then sell it to an affordable housing developer.

Metro CEO Stephanie Wiggins will report back to the board in October, to explain how the land bank partnershi­p with L.A. County would work.

In June 2021, Metro updated its housing policy to include land banking. But the transit agency cannot buy up land unless it is needed for a transit project.

And even then, it can only do so after the project's environmen­tal documents are approved.

That could put Metro behind the eight ball, because land prices would have already begun to rise. In contrast, the county has no restrictio­ns, so the county can buy land at any time. That's why the partnershi­p between Metro and the county is key, officials said.

“Unfortunat­ely, developers have seen this [L.A. River Plan, Metro rail projects] as a prime opportunit­y to gentrify communitie­s,” Solis said. “It can be difficult for affordable housing developers to compete for land.”

 ?? DEAN MUSGROVE — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? New residentia­l units are shown behind the North Hollywood Station for the B (Red) and G (Orange) line on Lankershim Boulevard last month.
DEAN MUSGROVE — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER New residentia­l units are shown behind the North Hollywood Station for the B (Red) and G (Orange) line on Lankershim Boulevard last month.

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