Soft-spoken and fierce, LA City Councilman Paul Koretz led City Hall against SB 50. He joins us Saturday to discuss Scott Wiener's SB 1120. SB 1120 is a reckless rewrite of SB 50 that would kill single-family "zoning" to let speculators jam 4 costly rental homes where 1 home stands now.
SB 1120 is the worst of the Nine Bad Bills (at bottom) that destroy stable communities to erect costly housing — but very little affordable. Mr. Koretz will join us partway through the morning.
The League of Cities and big newspapers wrongly describe SB 1120 as a "duplex" law. It is NOT a duplex law. SB 1120 is a "subdivision bill" that creates two lots and then allows this:
Do Westsiders know Sen. Ben Allen voted YES? Do Valley residents know Bob Hertzberg voted YES? Do South LA and Mar Vista residents know Holly Mitchell voted YES? Go here to see the shocking names of senators who buckled to Scott Wiener and voted YES.
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The Assembly Housing Committee votes on SB 1120 on Aug 11. Call in to testify. Follow the rules stated in bullets on this state site, or they will ignore your call! Transparency, right?
Go to our ACT page to learn what you CAN DO RIGHT NOW – how easy it is to MEET & ZOOM with your legislators – a MUST in early August. And Zoom with your senators who voted YES, because the entire senate must vote again. Your community pressure can change their mind.
This week recap: SB 1085, one of the Nine Bad Bills, was approved by the Assembly Housing Committee. Chairman David Chiu of the Bay Area, a Wiener fan, cut off the mics of those opposed after a few words. On an up note, under public pressure, author Skinner amended the bill to add affordable housing that she had slashed in HALF. We'll keep you posted on SB 1085.
Next week: Call to testify Aug 6 in Senate Housing: 5 of the 9 Bad Bills, heard in this order. The state won't provide the 800 number until that same day, on this site. Transparency, right?
Here's your call-in info for 10 a.m. Saturday Aug. 1 (Read up on the Nine Bad Bills below): Via Computer: https://zoom.us/j/6377599629 Dial in: +1 720 707 2699 Meeting ID: 637 759 9629 One tap mobile: +17207072699,,6377599629#
Summaries of The 9 Bad Bills (or read our in-depth OPPOSE letters here): SB 1120 (by Scott Wiener and Toni Atkins) Crushes single-family zoning in California, a threat to 8 million homeowners at all income levels. Wiener has called yards and single-family homes “immoral.” SB 1120 allows 4 market-rate homes where 1 home now stands (theoretically it allows 8 units, if cities have local granny flat laws). Requires NO affordable units! No garages! Opens California to broad speculation. This bill has been misreported by some media as a "duplex" law. That is WRONG, Wiener misdirection. SB 902 (by Scott Wiener): Allows any city council to overturn voter-approved ballot measures that protect open space, shorelines and other lands — killing a 108-year-old voter right. AND allows any city council to rezone “any parcel” to approve 10-unit luxury apartments, overriding zoning including single-family, and inviting gentrification into older, diverse, multi-family areas. Requires NO affordable units. Opens California to broad speculation. SB 995 (by Wiener and Atkins): SB 995 is a favor to well-heeled developers that “fast tracks” large commercial projects to let them get around CEQA, our environmental law. It dubs big buildings “Environmental Leadership Development Projects” even if they lack transit. To sell this attack on CEQA, the authors include a paltry 15% affordable housing — another reduction in the 2020 legislature’s commitment to affordable housing.
SB 1085 (by Nancy Skinner): Today, developers are rewarded a 35% increase in apartment building size — a Density Bonus — if 40% of units in the building are affordable to moderate-income households. SB 1085 slashes to just 20% the required moderate-income units. Author Nancy Skinner has amended this outrageous part of her bill. We are still awaiting that language. SB 725: (by Buffy Wicks and Scott Wiener) A severe threat to 400+ cities who have not attracted enough housing to hit state growth dictates known as “RHNA,” AB 725 brings density and upheaval to both single-family and dense areas, whose residents have never heard of “RHNA.” RHNA was once a helpful population-forecasting tool. Now it’s used (especially by Wiener) as a state weapon to force crowding and upheaval on communities. AB 1279 (by Richard Bloom): A year AFTER this radical bill becomes law, an obscure committee will THEN identify upscale “Opportunity Areas” where 50-unit to 120-unit projects could be built, overriding local zoning if affordable units are included. But if developers don’t want to build affordable projects, they can pay an “in lieu” fee, and build a profitable 10-unit luxury building! This is purely a gift to developers. AB 2345 (by Lorena Gonzalez and David Chiu) Lets developers add 50% in “Density Bonus” size to a project if they agree to provide just a TINY bit more affordable housing units than now required. As a reward, developers can ignore well-planned city controls on height, open space (courtyards), parking, design review, setbacks, side yards, trees and other standards. Developers would become their own planners. AB 3040 (by David Chiu): It’s a “Sophie’s Choice”: Cities can choose to comply with AB 3040 by sacrificing single-family homes older than 15 years — think South L.A., East L.A., and diverse older suburbs — to satisfy state growth dictates known as “RHNA.” OR cities can try to meet the growth dictates by relying on the Density Bonus program. Stay with us, folks: Unfortunately, the state Density Bonus program is a FAIL, preventing more than 400 cities from approving even close to the number of affordable units required by “RHNA.” When those 400+ cities fail, a punitive law by Scott Wiener, SB 35, will let developers ignore local rules, to build as they wish, in most cities. AB 3107 (by Richard Bloom and Phil Ting): Wreaks havoc by allowing tall apartments where neighborhood cafés or shops are now, even if adjacent to homes. The towers would contain 20% affordable units. Each city faces a different fate because AB 3107 randomly increases height based on the tallest commercial or residential height allowed ½ mile away. In L.A. it means 9-story towers on retail land citywide. In Inglewood, it means 75-foot towers near some neighborhoods. In Manhattan Beach, it wipes out a citywide 30-foot residential limit and allows 99-foot towers where retail is today.
Livable California is a non-profit statewide group of community leaders, activists and local elected officials. We believe in local answers to the housing affordability crisis. Our robust fight requires trips to Sacramento & a lobbyist going toe-to-toe with power. Please donate generously to LivableCalifornia.org here.
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