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Comment 185 for 2013 Investment Plan for Cap-and-Trade Auction Proceeds (2013investmentpln-ws) - 1st Workshop.
First Name: Dean
Last Name: Toji
Email Address: Dean.Toji@csulb.edu
Affiliation:
Subject: Affordable Housing is needed for success of SB 535 implementation
Comment:
Dean S. Toji, Ph.D. Affiliations: Little Tokyo Service Center, member, Board of Directors. Asian Pacific Policy and Planning Council, Environmental Justice Task Force, committee chair (EJTF purpose: To increase Asian American and Pacific Islander engagement with global warming & other environmental issues). EJTF is a member of the 535 Coalition and endorses its Principles. I will focus on the implementation of SB535 and the need for the investment program to secure plentiful and permanently affordable housing. There is a problem that needs to be addressed. SB535 directs programs to be located in, or to benefit, “disadvantaged communities.” These communities have been operationalized as places (zip codes) selected for the demographics and exposures of their current populations. The SB535 programs that will go to these places will bring many improvements, such as: good public transportation, energy efficient buildings and clean energy generated on-site or nearby, and urban forests & parks. There will be: cleaner air, shade, walkability. The neighborhoods will look good. Which will attract new retail, services, offices, jobs, & other amenities. They’ll be nice places to live. They will also be magnets for gentrification: More affluent residents move in. Rents will go up. Buildings that have low rents now will be torn down and replaced. Low income residents will be forced out. The zip codes will have gotten the benefits, but not the communities that once lived there. Could this actually happen? It is happening now around fixed rail transit oriented development. We’ve seen it happen before with redevelopment, which destroyed neighborhoods and evicted thousands of low income residents in California. It took major conflicts to bring about the reforms that added affordable housing as a requirement for redevelopment projects. In order to meet the goals SB535: 1. The investment programs have to generate LOTS of affordable housing. I’m sure you have received other comments on the need to have large amount of affordable near transit in order to effectively reduce net greenhouse gas emissions. The extreme social need that could be addressed by the increase of affordable housing is a profound co-benefit. 2. The housing must be PERMANENTLY affordable, especially because the market forces generated by the new infrastructure will always threaten displacement. The investment programs should fund the non-profits that build, own and operate affordable housing. They are dedicated to that purpose, and won’t flip the housing for profit. 3. We also need to PRESERVE EXISTING affordable housing. For example, thousands of units in the Los Angeles area are in danger because the affordability agreements that came with the subsidies are expiring. The funding programs can and should be targeted to save such housing near transit and in the 535-designated areas. In summary: If the investment program does not secure affordable housing it would defeat the purpose of SB535. In order for the implementation of SB535 to actually benefit disadvantaged communities, the investment program must secure affordable housing, lots of it, and permanently.
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Date and Time Comment Was Submitted: 2013-03-08 12:40:42
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