How our government is helping them do it. Hold on to your home if you can and you feel lucky. Saagar details how Wall Street firms such as BlackRock and BlackStone have begun taking over the housing market in an effort to destroy the American Dream of buying a home and raising a family.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Alhambra’s Measure V Explained
By Editorial Board : coloradoboulevard – excerpt
Two years ago, Alhmabra residents organized to place a series of good government reforms on the local ballot via the initiative process.
They gathered over 8,000 resident signatures to have the reforms appear as a charter amendment on the City’s Nov. 3, 2020, election ballot. Yet, even after the initiative qualified for the ballot, proponents had to overcome a series of setbacks and political roadblocks. Alhambrans will finally get to vote on this citizen-led ballot initiative, officially called Measure V, in less than a month.
Measure V consists of election and campaign finance reforms to improve the democratic process in Alhambra by leveling the playing field so that no one group holds disproportionate sway in Alhambra elections or at City Hall.
The meat of the initiative consists of 1) campaign donor limits, 2) by-district elections, and 3) bans on direct campaign contributions to City Council campaigns from developers, city contractors, and Political Action Committees (i.e. the big money folks). All of the reforms apply to Alhambra City Council races. Below is a list of the reforms in Measure V along with some context…(more)
Alhambra has a ban of donations more than $250/person/candidate. Get that in your city regs ASAP: https://www.coloradoboulevard.net/alhambras-measure-v-explained/ They are seeing results!
‘Digital nomad’ rent plan could be next for apartment dwellers
By Jeff Collins : mercurynews – excerpt (via email)
Remote work is changing the habits of America’s renters, leading to new models for how large complexes may be operated in the future, a new industry survey shows.
The National Multifamily Housing Council’s annual renter survey showed apartment dwellers are moving more often, would consider a “digital nomad” rental plan and support a loosening of restrictions on subleasing through Airbnb-type sites.
“Renters of all stripes were on the move over the last 18 months,” said Rick Haughey, the multifamily council’s vice president of industry technology said. “ … That’s kind of a big deal. (With) 40 million Americans in apartments, any type of shift has significant implications.”
The council, an association of large U.S. apartment owners and operators, surveyed more than 220,000 renters at 4,564 apartment complexes in September and October. The council has conducted the renter preference survey annually since 2013.
The survey’s unveiling at the Miami conference of the National Association of Real Estate Editors on Thursday, Dec. 9, gave reporters a sneak peek at data due for a full release in mid-January.
The survey showed 46% of renters said they would consider joining an apartment version of a vacation club, which would allow residents to live in several different cities over the course of a year.
The greatest interest was among 35- to 44-year-olds, with 61% in that age group saying they’d consider joining such a rental membership program. More than half of all adults under 55 also expressed interest.
The industry doesn’t provide such a program yet, but many apartment owners are thinking about it as a way to retain short-term tenants who might otherwise leave after their three-month lease expires, Haughey said.
If they’re going to go somewhere else, some owners say, their portfolios are big enough to have them move into one of their properties elsewhere.
Apartment operators began to consider renter membership plans before the pandemic when digital nomads were a tiny slice of the renter market, he said.
“The question now is how big a slice is that (today)?” he said.
The survey also showed that 60% of respondents moved during the 18 months following pandemic lockdowns. That’s up from 27% of apartment householders moving in 2019, U.S. Census data shows.
In a typical year, most apartment dwellers move because they’re looking for a better deal or better amenities and community space, Haughey said. But of those who moved since the pandemic, 25% did so because their jobs shifted to remote work.
And 73% expect to continue working from home for the same amount of time or more next year.
“That’s going to have a significant impact on how we design apartments moving forward,” he said.
For example, 35% of renters expressed interest in using a shared workspace within an apartment complex.
In addition, almost a third of tenants also expressed support for a plan that would allow them to sublease their apartments on Airbnb and other short-term rental sites.
The practice currently is banned under terms of most leases. But some landlords complained their tenants took advantage of COVID-19 era eviction moratoriums to list their apartments on Airbnb anyway.
The multifamily housing council also got some pushback from other tenants who don’t want strangers coming and going in their neighbors’ units. More than 10% said they wouldn’t rent in a complex where Airbnb rentals were allowed.
That could be enough of a deterrent to keep subleasing bans in place, Haughey said.
“That’s a big deal for our membership that over 10% said they wouldn’t rent if their neighbors were renting out on Airbnb,” he said…(more)
The Case for the “Poor Side of Town”
via email : city-journal (podcast and transcript)
Howard Husock joins Brian Anderson to discuss the problems with urban renewal, exclusionary zoning, and public housing. Husock’s forthcoming book, The Poor Side of Town: And Why We Need It, is a history of housing policy in America…. (more)
What Upzoning Does Not Do
- Upzoning does not create affordable housing – its trickle down Reganomics
- Upzoning is a new & improved method for Wall Street to take your house just like 2008
- Upzoning hurts people of color and working class communities
- Upzoning destroys green space and the environment – less trees, less open space, more waste from demolished homes
- No affordable housing or homeless advocates are cheering for SB 9 & 10 becoming law
2550 Irving Project
The tools we have left will go a lot further if we support each other. A design for improved livability for the families in the building if the authorities at City Hall agree.
Citizens have some limited options for design improvements and this is one of those cases. In the spirit of unity among neighborhoods, the 2550 Irving Community neighbors request your support. The group desires a compromise. They wold like to work with the developer and architect per Gordon Mar’s Amendment.
Sunset Neighbors ask:
1. Write Supervisor Mar and Aide Daisy Quan in support of the compromise design. Gordon.Mar@sfgov.org, marstaff@sfgov.org
2. Attend the scheduled TNDC presentation, ZOOM invite below: Register here in advance.
Housing Element Map 2022
A Drought So Dire That a Utah Town Pulled the Plug on Growth
Jack Healy and Sophie Kasakove : nytimes – excerpt
Groundwater and streams vital to both farmers and cities are drying up in the West, challenging the future of development.
OAKLEY, Utah — The mountain spring that pioneers used to water their hayfields and now fills people’s taps flowed reliably into the old cowboy town of Oakley for decades. So when it dwindled to a trickle in this year’s scorching drought, officials took drastic action to preserve their water: They stopped building.
During the coronavirus pandemic, the real estate market in their 1,750-person city boomed as remote workers flocked in from the West Coast and second homeowners staked weekend ranches. But those newcomers need water — water that is vanishing as a megadrought dries up reservoirs and rivers across the West.
So this spring, Oakley, about an hour’s drive east of Salt Lake City, imposed a construction moratorium on new homes that would connect to the town’s water system. It is one of the first towns in the United States to purposely stall growth for want of water in a new era of megadroughts. But it could be a harbinger of things to come in a hotter, drier West.
“Why are we building houses if we don’t have enough water?” said Wade Woolstenhulme, the mayor, who in addition to raising horses and judging rodeos has spent the past few weeks defending the building moratorium. “The right thing to do to protect people who are already here is to restrict people coming in.”… (more)
State legislators write more anti-single family housing bills and add more threats and punishments for non-compliance
New documents that describe the growing number of threats the state is using to override the constitutional jurisdiction of local government. Share them with your city and county councils.
Forward the docs below to your City Council or neighborhood association. Use public open time during a CC meeting to distribute and talk about your concerns re: top-down mandates. Write about them in a Letter to the Editor of your local paper. Circulate them along with the video of the RHNA Town Hall.
Growing Movement To End Single-Family Housing Zones
Lseter Holt : NBC – excerpt (includes video)
California’s Bay Area, home to major tech companies, is among the most expensive housing markets in the country. There is a divide over how to address the affordable housing crisis, and whether denser housing options, which are restricted by zoning laws, could help…(more)
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