YIMBYs on their heels as race for mayor heats up

YIMBYs on their heels as race for mayor heats up

By Gabe Greschler
March 27, 2024

After a March primary election that was dominated by public safety, the upcoming mayoral contest appears to be quickly pivoting to another issue San Franciscans often disagree on. You guessed it: Housing. And, for now, the people clamoring to build more of it are on the back foot.
On Tuesday, seven supervisors stood behind Board President Aaron Peskin and his legislation that seeks to preserve a handful of blocks in Telegraph Hill, an area home to some buildings dating back to the Gold Rush era.

Are California Housing Mandates Ending Community Involvement And Character Of Cities? | Amy Kalish | Lydia Kou

Are California Housing Mandates Ending Community Involvement And Character Of Cities? | Amy Kalish | Lydia Kou

Siyamak Khorrami
March 24, 2024

“The goal is to densify every town in the state. To densify it so that’d be walking around, not driving. In some places, it doesn’t work. But this whole policy has been applied as “one size fits all” with no complaining.”

Siyamak sits down with Amy Kalish, with https://citizenmarin.org/. She’s been studying what the Housing Mandates are for different cities in California. Amy’s going to tell us what’s happening with California communities.

Speculators and Affordability, not NIMBY and YIMBY

Speculators and Affordability, not NIMBY and YIMBY

LINCOLN MITCHELL
MAR 23, 2024

The discussion of housing in San Francisco remains mired in the inane polarized labeling of NIMBY and YIMBY. Neither of these terms are accurate and both obscure much of the nuance around a debate that is about much more than whether or not to build more housing.

Judge: Huntington Beach likely to lose housing case, must approve development projects

Judge: Huntington Beach likely to lose housing case, must approve development projects

By MICHAEL SLATEN |
PUBLISHED: March 22, 2024

Huntington Beach is likely to lose its state housing lawsuit for its refusal to plan for more housing and must approve new housing projects that come before it, a San Diego Superior Court judge ruled Thursday, March 21.
The judge suspended some of Huntington Beach’s development authority in a ruling that prevents the city from rejecting housing developments that meet state density requirements.

New bill may boost state enforcement powers over housing law

New bill may boost state enforcement powers over housing law

by Ruth Dusseault and Bay City News Service
March 22, 2024

California’s attorney general may be getting more muscle to discipline local governments that have violated state housing law via a new bill that would allow fines to be levied more quickly.
Under Senate Bill 1037, announced Wednesday by Attorney General Rob Bonta and state Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, the attorney general could seek new penalties to be assessed from the date of a violation.