California
California’s chronic housing shortage explained
In abstract
Two newspaper articles, one within the Los Angeles Instances and one other within the New York Instances, describe how California’s housing disaster developed and why it’s so tough to resolve.
At its greatest, journalism sheds gentle on necessary points in hopes {that a} extra knowledgeable public will press officialdom to confront and resolve them.
California’s power scarcity of housing is one such difficulty and two very latest articles, one within the Los Angeles Instances and the opposite within the New York Instances, delve into how the disaster developed and why coping with it’s terribly tough.
The Los Angeles Instances particulars its metropolis’s historical past of encouraging sprawling single-family neighborhoods whereas packing the poor into confined neighborhoods, the place lethal illnesses comparable to COVID-19 run rampant.
It begins with the demise of Leonardo Miranda, “who rented a shed and shared the kitchen, rest room and eating room in the primary home.”
After COVID-19 attacked Miranda, “it unfold to a person who slept on three crimson cushions within the laundry room. Then to a grandfather and grandson who wedged two mattresses into one room. By the point COVID-19 was completed with the three-bedroom dwelling, shared by eight, Miranda and the grandfather have been useless.”
The article continued, “Extra properties are overcrowded in Los Angeles than in every other massive U.S. county, a Instances evaluation of census knowledge discovered — a scenario that has endured for 3 a long time, with no signal of abating.
“In locations just like the Pico-Union neighborhood, the place Miranda lived, generations of households squeeze into tiny residences. Building employees, seamstresses and dishwashers stay in shut quarters. Day laborers bunk with half a dozen or extra strangers in dwelling areas meant for one or two folks.
“Inside these confines, COVID-19 superior with out mercy: orphaning kids, killing breadwinners and shattering households.”
One of many article’s most poignant passages describes how town’s “leaders bulldozed Mexican neighborhoods in Chavez Ravine, forcing out hundreds with the promise of latest, low-cost, public housing to satisfy the wants of a metropolis exploding in inhabitants after World Battle II. Then actual property pursuits exploited the communist paranoia of the Purple Scare to defeat the housing initiatives, and as an alternative, town gave the land to the Dodgers for a stadium to entice the group’s transfer from Brooklyn.”
By happenstance, the New York Instances article by Ezra Klein picks up the place the Los Angeles Instances’ article ends. Klein lays out intimately why present state and native authorities insurance policies make it so infuriatingly tough to construct the low-income housing that might relieve lethal overcrowding and the homelessness it spawns.
In 2016, Klein notes, Los Angeles voters authorized a $1.2 billion poll measure to construct 10,000 new residences for the homeless and Mayor Eric Garcetti boasted, “The voters of Los Angeles have radically reshaped our future, giving us a mandate to finish road homelessness over the following decade.”
Nevertheless, “Six years later, neither the mandate nor the cash has proved to be almost sufficient. In 2016, Los Angeles had about 28,000 homeless residents, of whom round 21,000 have been unsheltered (that’s, dwelling on the road). The present rely is nearer to 42,000 homeless residents, with 28,000 unsheltered.”
The 2016 poll measure produced simply 3,357 models “and the newest audit discovered the typical value was $596,846 for models underneath development — greater than the median sale worth for a house in Denver. Some models underneath development have value greater than $700,000 to construct.”
Klein particulars the impediments to constructing cost-effective housing and concludes, “That is the paradox of housing growth in Los Angeles and so many different cities. The politics of the reasonably priced housing disaster are horrible. The politics of what you’d must do to resolve it are even worse.”
Each articles needs to be obligatory studying within the Capitol.
California
Caitlyn Jenner says she'd 'destroy' Kamala Harris in hypothetical race to be CA gov
SAN FRANCISCO – Caitlyn Jenner, the gold-medal Olympian-turned reality TV personality, is considering another run for Governor of California. This time, she says, if she were to go up against Vice President Kamala Harris, she would “destroy her.”
Jenner, who publicly came out as transgender nearly 10 years ago, made a foray into politics when she ran as a Republican during the recall election that attempted to unseat Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2021. Jenner only received one percent of the vote and was not considered a serious candidate.
Jenner posted this week on social media that she’s having conversations with “many people” and hopes to have an announcement soon about whether she will run.
Caitlyn Jenner speaks at the 4th annual Womens March LA: Women Rising at Pershing Square on January 18, 2020 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Chelsea Guglielmino/Getty Images)
She has also posted in Trumpian-style all caps: “MAKE CA GREAT AGAIN!”
As for VP Harris, she has not indicated any future plans for when she leaves office. However, a recent poll suggests Harris would have a sizable advantage should she decide to run in 2026. At that point, Newsom cannot run again because of term limits.
If Jenner decides to run and wins, it would mark the nation and state’s first transgender governor.
California
Northern California 6-year-old, parents hailed as heroes for saving woman who crashed into canal
LIVE OAK — A six-year-old and her parents are being called heroes by a Northern California community for jumping into a canal to save a 75-year-old woman who drove off the road.
It happened on Larkin Road near Paseo Avenue in the Sutter County community of Live Oak on Monday.
“I just about lost her, but I didn’t,” said Terry Carpenter, husband of the woman who was rescued. “We got more chances.”
Terry said his wife of 33 years, Robin Carpenter, is the love of his life and soulmate. He is grateful he has been granted more time to spend with her after she survived her car crashing off a two-lane road and overturning into a canal.
“She’s doing really well,” Terry said. “No broken bones, praise the Lord.”
It is what some call a miracle that could have had a much different outcome without a family of good Samaritans.
“Her lips were purple,” said Ashley Martin, who helped rescue the woman. “There wasn’t a breath at all. I was scared.”
Martin and her husband, Cyle Johnson, are being hailed heroes by the Live Oak community for jumping into the canal, cutting Robin out of her seat belt and pulling her head above water until first responders arrived.
“She was literally submerged underwater,” Martin said. “She had a back brace on. Apparently, she just had back surgery. So, I grabbed her brace from down below and I flipped her upward just in a quick motion to get her out of that water.”
The couple said the real hero was their six-year-old daughter, Cayleigh Johnson.
“It was scary,” Cayleigh said. “So the car was going like this, and it just went boom, right into the ditch.”
Cayleigh was playing outside and screamed for her parents who were inside the house near the canal.
I spoke with Robin from her hospital bed over the phone who told us she is in a lot of pain but grateful.
“The thing I can remember is I started falling asleep and then I was going over the bump and I went into the ditch and that’s all I remember,” Robin said.
It was a split-second decision for a family who firefighters said helped save a stranger’s life.
“It’s pretty unique that someone would jump in and help somebody that they don’t even know,” said Battalion Chief for Sutter County Fire Richard Epperson.
Robin is hopeful that she will be released from the hospital on Wednesday in time to be home for Thanksgiving.
“She gets Thanksgiving and Christmas now with her family and grandkids,” Martin said.
Terry and Robin are looking forward to eventually meeting the family who helped save Robin’s life. The family expressed the same feelings about meeting the woman they helped when she is out of the hospital.
“I can’t wait for my baby to get home,” Terry said.
California
California may exclude Tesla from EV rebate program
California Gov. Gavin Newsom may exclude Tesla and other automakers from an electric vehicle (EV) rebate program if the incoming Trump administration scraps a federal tax credit for electric car purchases.
Newsom proposed creating a new version of the state’s Clean Vehicle Rebate Program, which was phased out in 2023 after funding more than 594,000 vehicles and saving more than 456 million gallons of fuel, the governor’s office said in a news release on Monday.
“Consumers continue to prove the skeptics wrong – zero-emission vehicles are here to stay,” Newsom said in a statement. “We’re not turning back on a clean transportation future – we’re going to make it more affordable for people to drive vehicles that don’t pollute.”
The proposed rebates would be funded with money from the state’s Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, which is funded by polluters under the state’s cap-and-trade program, the governor’s office said. Officials did not say how much the program would cost or save consumers.
NEBRASKA AG LAUNCHES ASSAULT AGAINST CALIFORNIA’S ELECTRIC VEHICLE PUSH
They would also include changes to promote innovation and competition in the zero-emission vehicles market – changes that could prevent automakers like Tesla from qualifying for the rebates.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who relocated Tesla’s corporate headquarters from California to Texas in 2021, responded to the possibility of having Tesla EVs left out of the program.
“Even though Tesla is the only company who manufactures their EVs in California! This is insane,” Musk wrote on X, which he also owns.
BENTLEY PUSHES BACK ALL-EV LINEUP TIMELINE TO 2035
Those buying or leasing Tesla vehicles accounted for about 42% of the state’s rebates, The Associated Press reported, citing data from the California Air Resources Board.
Newsom’s office told Fox Business Digital that the proposal is intended to foster market competition, and any potential market cap is subject to negotiation with the state Legislature.
Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
---|---|---|---|---|
TSLA | TESLA INC. | 338.59 | -13.97 | -3.96% |
“Under a potential market cap, and depending on what the cap is, there’s a possibility that Tesla and other automakers could be excluded,” the governor’s office said. “But that’s again subject to negotiations with the legislature.”
Newsom’s office noted that such market caps have been part of rebate programs since George W. Bush’s administration in 2005.
Federal tax credits for EVs are currently worth up to $7,500 for new zero-emission vehicles. President-elect Trump has previously vowed to end the credit.
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California has surpassed 2 million zero-emission vehicles sold, according to the governor’s office. The state, however, could face a $2 billion budget deficit next year, Reuters reported, citing a non-partisan legislative estimate released last week.
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