To the editor: As I learn in regards to the debates and conflicts that inevitably observe the complexity of rebuilding the houses misplaced within the Los Angeles fires, I provide this modest suggestion: When single-family houses are allowed to rebuild, town ought to allow and facilitate the addition of accent dwelling items, or ADUs. (“Fires aggravated L.A.’s housing crisis. We need to build homes much faster,” editorial, Jan. 26)
Monetary incentives ought to be supplied to owners within the type of rebates, speedy permits, interest-free or very low-interest loans and different advantages. Constructing an ADU together with rebuilding the first residence saves time (chopping lumber for 2 items at a time as a substitute of twice) and permits straightforward linkage of utilities to the primary residence.
Due to the determined want for leases for therefore many displaced individuals, owners who comply with hire their ADU can be offering not solely a monetary profit to themselves however a neighborhood profit as properly.
Carol Tavris, Los Angeles
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To the editor: Not that a few years in the past, an area wildfire unfold onto our property. Our gratitude to the firefighters who saved our house is as immeasurable as our grief for individuals who have misplaced their houses and lives in Altadena and Pacific Palisades.
A few dozen houses in our neighborhood have been misplaced, a small fraction of the hundreds of houses misplaced within the current fires. Even then, it took between three and 4 years to rebuild.
To expediently get individuals again into their houses — houses that should be earthquake- and fire-code-complaint — is it higher to make use of hundreds of contractors of variable high quality who’re competing for a similar labor and development assets, or to coordinate with just a few neighborhood residence builders with expertise in constructing total neighborhoods?
Sure, the architectural allure imbued into these neighborhoods could also be misplaced, however after the destruction wrought by the wildfires, which may by no means be introduced again.
Michael Nelson, Porter Ranch
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To the editor: Lengthy earlier than the L.A. wildfires, expedited housing growth has been an crucial — one this metropolis has failed to deal with.
Outdated planning codes and byzantine neighborhood plans imply builders should search waivers and regulatory modifications to construct financially possible tasks. This regulatory modification course of, often known as “discretionary evaluation,” requires the L.A. Metropolis Council to vote on particular person mission approvals.
At worst, the method is liable to corruption. At finest — and on the root of our housing disaster — it’s painstakingly sluggish. We have to responsibly depoliticize the method of land-use decision-making to construct quicker.
The governance reform report by my group, Central Metropolis Assn. of Los Angeles, particulars methods different cities have achieved so, amongst them: setting arduous deadlines by which the Council should act, deeming tasks mechanically authorized, and different structural and workers enhancements to the Metropolis Planning Fee and the Planning and Land Use Committee.
Nella McOsker, Los Angeles
The author is president and chief govt of Central Metropolis Assn. of Los Angeles.
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To the editor: Till we all know if the most important insurance coverage firms will write new insurance policies within the burn areas, little or no new development will happen, lenders won’t make new mortgages and actual property gross sales will drop. New plans for the burn space will probably be stymied.
What are our elected officers and new “hearth czar” doing about this primary downside?
Steven Strauss, Corona del Mar