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Cake day: March 28th, 2025

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  • Sacramento is hijacking local planning, stripping away neighborhood voices, ignoring safety and infrastructure, and handing the keys to corporate developers,” said Councilmember Traci Park, whose district includes the Pacific Palisades and who introduced the resolution to oppose SB 79 alongside Councilmember John Lee of the San Fernando Valley.

    Stuff like this is why that high speed rail project is so behind and over budget. In the past local control was fought for because in the past highways were rammed straight through poor neighborhoods but then that local control decentralized it all so much that there became a huge amount of points for NIMBYs to prevent new construction

    That plan left areas zoned for single-family homes — representing 72% of the city’s residential land — untouched. An analysisfrom the advocacy group Streets for All, which supports SB 79, found that 45% of the land surrounding L.A.’s “high-quality transit stops” is zoned for single-family homes, duplexes, or parking lots

    Though this too is interesting. I’d guess also because of the decentralization of housing and transit authority throughout the state, it’s not very feasible to tie together public transit expansion and upzoning of housing so upzoning near major transit stops probably also primarily effects poorer neighborhoods rather than the public transit light wealthy suburbs. Somehow public transit has to expand into the wealthier suburbs and those wealthier suburbs be upzoned too