DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

L.A. City Council passes ordinance to streamline affordable housing

December 9, 2025
in News
L.A. City Council passes ordinance to streamline affordable housing

During her first week in office three years ago, Mayor Bass issued a sweeping directiveto speed up affordable housing applications. Now, that plan is permanent.

The L.A. City Council unanimously voted Tuesday to adopt the Affordable Housing Streamlining Ordinance. Essentially, the ordinance takes Bass’s housing initiative, known as Executive Directive 1, and incorporates it into the L.A. Municipal Code, so the streamlined process will stick around even after Bass leaves office.

Under the ordinance, developers get fast-tracked city approval for projects that include 100% affordable housing. Reviews for such projects typically take six to nine months, but under the directive, they’re required to be approved within 60 days.

The expedited processing works by stripping away many of the discretionary review processes that typically bog down housing projects: city council hearings, environmental reports, neighborhood outreach meetings, etc. As long as projects comply with certain criteria, including zoning and design review standards, they qualify for streamlined approval.

Bass introduced the directive to make good on her campaign’s promise to address the city’s affordability and homelessness crises. It also serves as a response to housing developers, who have long complained about the city’s complex permitting process, in which projects languish for weeks or months while navigating the red tape of reviews and inspections.

Affordable housing applications have been pouring in under the directive.

As of November, 490 projects have been streamlined, accounting for more than 40,000 affordable housing units, according to the Planning Department. Of those, 437 projects have been approved, with an average application process of 22 days.

It’s unclear how many of those projects are actually being built. At a December city council meeting, Planning Department officials said that as of July, 44 streamlined projects had been started, accounting for roughly 2,500 units. But there’s no data on how many have been finished.

Maria Patiño Gutierrez, deputy director for policy and advocacy at the non-profit Strategic Actions for a Just Economy (SAJE), celebrated the decision to make the directive permanent, but said she hopes to see changes to the process down the road.

“We want this ordinance to work and bring affordable housing, but we also want to make sure it doesn’t displace tenants,” she said.

The directive has become increasingly watered down over the last three years as Bass carved out more and more areas from being subjected to streamlined applications. In June 2023, Bass exempted single-family zones from the directive, which accounts for 72% of land in L.A.

A year later, she exempted historic districts — including areas of Highland Park and Lincoln Heights — as well as” very high fire hazard severity zones,” which include parts of Silver Lake and Hollywood Hills.

To make sure streamlined projects weren’t displacing renters, Bass also exempted ones that would replace rent-controlled apartment buildings with 12 units or more.

These exemptions will carry into the newly adopted ordinance, though they may be tweaked in the months to come. In a Dec. 2 meeting, City Councilmember Ysabelo Jurado argued that the exemption to preserve rent-controlled buildings should shrink from a minimum of 12 units to five units, claiming such projects could displace tenants in neighborhoods such as Boyle Heights and Lincoln Heights.

Jurado said the current ordinance exempts 19% of rent-controlled buildings, but if the minimum threshold is set at five units instead of 12, it would exempt 36%.

Housing groups are pushing for amendments as well. A public comment letter published by Public Counsel and SAJE argued that maximum rents for streamlined projects should be cheaper than they’re allowed to be under current rules.

The directive defines “100% affordable housing” as 80% low-income units and 20% moderate-income units, but the non-profits claimed that those rates, which would still let a “low-income” two-bedroom apartment be rented for as much as $2,726, are still too expensive for many Angelenos.

The post L.A. City Council passes ordinance to streamline affordable housing appeared first on Los Angeles Times.

Vance Addresses Claims He and Usha Got Into Restaurant Blow-Up
News

Vance Addresses Claims He and Usha Got Into Restaurant Blow-Up

by The Daily Beast
December 10, 2025

JD Vance has spoken out about that viral photo of him supposedly berating his wife, Usha. The vice president, 41, ...

Read more
News

This video proves Trump has completely lost the plot

December 10, 2025
News

JD Vance savagely claps back at trolls claiming photo shows him yelling at wife Usha inside restaurant

December 10, 2025
News

‘Fallout’ Showrunner Praises Crew for Finishing Season 2 Despite Losing Homes to LA Wildfires

December 10, 2025
News

I went on a monthlong nomad cruise. The travel disappointed, but the community onboard didn’t.

December 10, 2025
For Real, a Natural History of Misinformation

For Real, a Natural History of Misinformation

December 10, 2025
CoreWeave CEO: Despite see-sawing stock, IPO was ‘incredibly successful’ after challenges of Liberation Day tariff timing

CoreWeave CEO: Despite see-sawing stock, IPO was ‘incredibly successful’ after challenges of Liberation Day tariff timing

December 10, 2025
Seattle Plans Pride Match at Soccer World Cup, Infuriating Iran and Egypt

Seattle Plans Pride Match at Soccer World Cup, Infuriating Iran and Egypt

December 10, 2025

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025