- by Joel Kotkin – OpEd in the LA Times
At first blush this seems a bit off topic for a blog about public education – until one confronts and connects the dots.
There are the dots in the article: "Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's campaign to control the
"For example, Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) gave $125,000 to the mayor's Committee for Government Excellence and Accountability, set up to lobby for a bill that would have given him significant control over L.A. Unified, and to Partnership for Better Schools, which spearheaded Villaraigosa's successful drive to win a majority on the school board. Other contributors to the two committees included developer J.H. Snyder Co. ($100,000); AP Properties, a JMB Realty affiliate ($100,000); Astani Enterprises ($100,000) and Westfield ($100,000)."
The very next paragraph continues: "Term limits also may encourage developer-driven politics. Before voters limited their time in office to two consecutive four-year terms in 1993, council members often represented their districts for decades without having to worry much about challengers. Bernardi, for instance, served 32 years on the City Council.
"But in the era of term limits, ambitious council members facing the end of their terms have to begin fundraising for their next race for elected office almost immediately after election day. Given the high cost of modern campaigns, they have no incentive to alienate wealthy developers who could bankroll them. True, individual contributions to political campaigns are capped. But big developers have subcontractors, lobbyists and lawyers who can add even more dollars.
This may partly explain why the City Council -- even those members who represent the Valley and
Another dot: The council also voted unanimously last year to support the mayor's LAUSD takeover attempt – due to a pretty well known if not documented quid-pro-quo agreement for the mayor's support of term limit relaxation ballot measure.
For more shenanigans, detail and dots see: Connecting the Dots | Following the Money - FRIENDS IN HIGH-RISE PLACES: Developers make big plans for Westside, write big checks for Antonio. by David Zahniser | LA Weekly - 2Aug06 | 4LAKidsNews 6Aug06
Supervisor Yaroslavsky in Kotkin's article, "recently told a gathering of neighborhood councils that 'the gulf' between City Hall and the community over land use and development 'gets wider every day'."
Neighborhood Councils, elected bodies created in the city charter to advise and consent on just these kinds of planning and land use issues have been routinely and deliberately ignored in the process. As a branch of city government NC's are blocked from filing suit ….so until they unite in protest – action the Orwellianly named Department of Neighborhood Empowerment discourages – they are easily ignored.
Not even mentioned: NBC/Universal's huge planned expansion in Universal City – a project the mayor is already on record as favoring that requires a good deal (…or perhaps 'a bad deal?') of permit, planning and code waivers.
Dots connected, let's tie up some loose ends. The largest developer in the city, bigger than AEG , Broad and
It is doubtful that the Community College building program will be able to meet the challenge, LAUSD's is somewhere between challenged and in trouble.
Until and unless there is real long term strategic growth and infrastructure planning in Los Angeles – planning driven by the public rather than private interest – LA is doomed to overpay and be underserved.
- smf
WHY THE RUSH TO MANHATTANIZE
by Joel Kotkin – OpEd in the LA Times
The new rules are only the latest move toward the Manhattanization of Los Angeles. There's also the renewed interest in extending the Red Line subway to the ocean. And there's billionaire Phil Anschutz's plan to create a
Such development is peculiarly suited for
At the very least, such a dramatic change should be the topic of serious debate among politicians, city officials and the public. But so far, the debate about higher density in
Why is this happening? One reason for the city's apparent lock-step march to Manhattanization is that big developers are increasingly dominating and politicizing land-use decisions, much as they do in
"You can't stop [big developer] interests unless you have equally powerful interests on your side," said urban historian Fred Siegel.
Similar developer-driven politics is becoming increasingly common in
That leaves the field largely to big developers with deeper pockets, more lawyers, better political connections and diversified interests that enable them to wait out the city regulatory process. "A decade or two ago," said Robert Scott, who served on the Los Angeles Planning Commission from 1993 to 2003, "you could still build pretty much by the existing code. But the process has become less and less accessible" to smaller players.
In part, that's because city policies have promoted, at least in principle, such social goals as affordable housing and "smart growth" -- building condos and apartments near commercial areas and transit lines. But the side effect of these policies has been to make the development process impenetrable to all but the most well-heeled, Scott says.
What opposition there is to Manhattanization is relatively isolated -- like the citizen recall effort against Westside City Councilman Jack Weiss, who is considered by some of his constituents to be too friendly with big developers. Weiss alienated them when he embraced construction of two 47-story condominium towers in
But only a handful of local politicians -- including, most notably, Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky -- seem to recognize that some Angelenos think that adding density to our already crowded region won't necessarily improve the quality of life. He recently told a gathering of neighborhood councils that "the gulf" between City Hall and the community over land use and development "gets wider every day."
The paucity of official opposition to Manhattanization reflects, in part, changes in
Today, small developers, who often had local supporters, are out, and citywide and national players are in. Prime examples are New York-based Related Cos. (Grand Avenue), Anschutz Entertainment Group (L.A. Live), JMB Realty (condo towers in Century City), Astani Enterprises (downtown condos), J.H. Snyder Co. (NoHo Commons), as well as the shopping-mall giant Westfield, which has proposed building in the west Valley what would be one of the largest malls in Southern California.
These companies, along with other developers, have become substantial contributors to the campaigns and causes of local politicians. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's campaign to control the
For example, Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) gave $125,000 to the mayor's Committee for Government Excellence and Accountability, set up to lobby for a bill that would have given him significant control over L.A. Unified, and to Partnership for Better Schools, which spearheaded Villaraigosa's successful drive to win a majority on the school board. Other contributors to the two committees included developer J.H. Snyder Co. ($100,000); AP Properties, a JMB Realty affiliate ($100,000); Astani Enterprises ($100,000) and Westfield ($100,000).
Term limits also may encourage developer-driven politics. Before voters limited their time in office to two consecutive four-year terms in 1993, council members often represented their districts for decades without having to worry much about challengers. Bernardi, for instance, served 32 years on the City Council.
But in the era of term limits, ambitious council members facing the end of their terms have to begin fundraising for their next race for elected office almost immediately after election day. Given the high cost of modern campaigns, they have no incentive to alienate wealthy developers who could bankroll them. True, individual contributions to political campaigns are capped. But big developers have subcontractors, lobbyists and lawyers who can add even more dollars.
This may partly explain why the City Council -- even those members who represent the Valley and
There is nothing necessarily wrong with unanimity. The problem is the lack of rigorous debate or much public discussion. For instance, the council's decision last week to change downtown's zoning rules involved virtually no debate at all.
Ever higher density downtown -- and in other parts of the city -- may be one answer for
But the current Manhattanization poses many risks. Traffic congestion is likely to get worse before it gets better because the city's transit system is not sufficient to get people out of their cars now or in the immediate future. Too much construction of expensive high-density space, particularly downtown, could create a glut, which could dampen prices and force developers to seek renters rather than buyers. Already, the trend is toward rentals, rather than sales, in the downtown market.
Ultimately, it comes down to whether
Joel Kotkin is a presidential fellow in urban futures at
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