CA bill to let LA buy fire-destroyed lots for low-income housing - Conspiracy theorists proven right once again

By Kenneth Schrupp | The Center Square
15 hrs ago

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FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell and California Gov. Gavin Newsom walk through a neighborhood impacted by the wildfires in Los Angeles County on Friday, Jan. 10, 2025. The two were accompanied by FEMA Region 9 Administrator Bob Fenton and other FEMA staff. Visual Imagery FEMA | DVIDS

(The Center Square) - The California Senate passed a bill to allow Los Angeles County and other municipalities to use property taxes to fund “Resilient Rebuilding Authorities" that would have to use at least 40% of their funding for building low-income housing. Senate Bill 549 now has a hearing in the state Assembly scheduled for Wednesday.

As a funding mechanism, the bill would allow the RRA for the Los Angeles wildfires to “Issue, receive, and administer funds, including, but not limited to, tax-increment financing, federal loans and grants, state loans and grants, and philanthropic grants, to support recovery.”

RRA-LAW would then be able to use taxpayer funds to oversee most of the construction process, and would be granted the power to “Purchase lots at a fair price for land banking,” “purchase critical construction materials in bulk,” and “Support the reconstruction workforce by partnering with trades, facilitating training and workforce development, and creating temporary workforce housing.”

RRA-LAW would also “Facilitate reconstruction of lost rental housing stock, including by promotion of accessory dwelling units, senior-serving housing, and replacement of affordable housing lost in the fires.”

The remaining funding could be used for “multifamily affordable housing projects,” “transit capital projects,” and “transit-oriented development projects.”

Wednesday's hearing is set for just over a week after Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the allocation of $101 million in taxpayer funds for “multifamily low-income housing development” in communities in Los Angeles devastated by the Palisades, Eaton and Hughes wildfires.

In conjunction with the governor’s funding announcement, which provides per-unit funding of up to $450,000 in loans and up to $90,000 in grants, funding from RRA-LAW could make it easier for more income-restricted housing to be built in the Los Angeles area.

In Los Angeles, 73% of city planning applications for new units are for income-restricted housing. In the previous four years, income-restricted housing represented only an average of 30%, meaning the latest data reflects a precipitous drop-off in production for standard, market-rate housing.

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How much corruption is going to be involved these contracts?
All of it. But the amount of bullying to get the land will be something else entirely.
I wonder if citizens with enough money to buy it are even allowed to buy it, or if they just shat I mean sat on it until this popped up?
The government will make up bullshit about enviromental hazards or ground pollution or other bullshit, so that the land can go to black rock.
 
this looks like White People Scheming.

this policy decision comes at a time when California has been approaching insolvency, when higher income Whites and higher paying jobs have been leaving California, when tightening credit over the past couple of years has made real estate difficult to sell at as high of a price, and when these particular lots have recently been shown to be embarrassingly vulnerable to fire.

in swoops the state of California, forcing its taxpayers to bail out these homeowners "at a fair price".

and they're using the Diverse / Historically Underwhatever as a convenient excuse to bail them out.

the wise will take the money and GTFO California.
 
How much corruption is going to be involved these contracts?
Do you even have to ask?

I'm geezing now, but can actually remember a time when CA could do things right and reasonably cost-effectively. Now...you've got to be shitting me, just look at the bullet train to nowhere.

This will be a clusterfuck from the word go, guaranteed. Zillions will be pissed away and not much low-income housing will be built. Also suggest any permits from homeowners wanting to build an upscale residence on their lot will be slow-rolled forever.
 
Do you even have to ask?

I'm geezing now, but can actually remember a time when CA could do things right and reasonably cost-effectively. Now...you've got to be shitting me, just look at the bullet train to nowhere.

This will be a clusterfuck from the word go, guaranteed. Zillions will be pissed away and not much low-income housing will be built. Also suggest any permits from homeowners wanting to build an upscale residence on their lot will be slow-rolled forever.
Do you think they're just gonna give up and sell it to private ownership, like landlords or something?
 
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