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

Effort to exempt new apartment buildings in L.A. from ‘mansion tax’ moves forward

June 17, 2026
in News
Effort to exempt new apartment buildings in L.A. from ‘mansion tax’ moves forward

An effort to exempt new apartment buildings in Los Angeles from the so-called mansion tax moved forward Wednesday, amid concerns that the tax is suppressing housing construction and making the affordability crisis worse.

In a 9 to 5 vote, the City Council directed the City Attorney to draft a ballot measure that would ask voters to change Measure ULA, which funds subsidized housing construction and homeless prevention efforts by taxing nearly all property sales over $5.3 million.

Once the proposal is drafted, it must come back to council for a final approval to make it onto the November ballot.

Wednesday was the deadline for the council to take the vote and stay on track to make the ballot this fall, said Councilmember Katy Yaroslavsky, who introduced the proposal along with Councilmember Tim McOsker.

“We should protect what is working and fix what’s not,” Yaroslavsky told colleagues before the vote. “If we fail to act today, that door closes.”

The ULA tax, approved by voters in 2022, is known as the mansion tax but applies a 4% tax to nearly all properties — whether they are mansions or not — if they sell for more than $5.3 million, increasing to 5.5% for sales at or above $10.6 million.

Under the proposed ballot measure, the ULA tax wouldn’t apply to multifamily buildings sold within 10 years of construction. There would also be some more technical changes put before voters, including to allow ULA money to be spent on temporary housing for homeless people.

Since ULA passed, apartment construction in Los Angeles has plummeted. Some studies have found that the additional tax on property sales has played a big role in the drop-off by adding extra costs for developers.

That’s led to fears that the tax, in some ways, is making the affordability crisis worse by suppressing new supply.

A coalition of business groups and pro-development activists have been pushing the council to amend ULA, in part hoping that the effort will blunt another possible measure on November’s ballot that would cancel ULA and other similar taxes altogether.

ULA supporters, however, have fought the exemption for new construction and say that other factors — like high interest rates — are the reasons for the multi-year construction drop-off. They also point to a surge in new building during the first three months of this year to argue that it’s too early to know ULA’s long-term impact.

Also on Wednesday, the council, in a unanimous vote, directed the City Attorney to draft a separate ballot measure that would exempt homeowners impacted by the Palisades fire from paying the ULA tax for five years, retroactive to Jan. 7, 2025.

“ULA has been an impediment to the Palisades recovery, leaving properties sitting empty and people mired in tax and regulatory hell,” City Councilmember Traci Park, who represents Pacific Palisades, told colleagues before the vote. “We need to move forward with this exemption.”

Similar to the broader ULA changes, the Palisades changes must receive a second council approval to make the ballot.

The post Effort to exempt new apartment buildings in L.A. from ‘mansion tax’ moves forward appeared first on Los Angeles Times.

Trump officials admitted to Congress their new Iran plan is financing terrorists: report
News

Trump officials admitted to Congress their new Iran plan is financing terrorists: report

by Raw Story
June 18, 2026

President Donald Trump’s administration admitted to Congress that Iran was still directly involved in financing terrorist activity, at exactly the ...

Read more
News

Critics argue Trump’s profane tirade shows he is jealous of Barack Obama

June 18, 2026
News

Georgia Republicans Shelve Redistricting Amid Mounting Protests

June 18, 2026
News

‘Supergirl’ Exclusive Clips Land on Spotify for Fans Who Can Solve In-App Scavenger Hunt

June 18, 2026
News

Trump Demanded Iran’s ‘Unconditional Surrender.’ He Got a Surprise Instead.

June 18, 2026
Trump admin frantically scrambling to clean up murky Reflecting Pool: report

Trump admin frantically scrambling to clean up murky Reflecting Pool: report

June 18, 2026
Daveigh Chase, ‘Lilo & Stitch’ Voice Actor and ‘The Ring’ Villain, Dies at 35

Daveigh Chase, ‘Lilo & Stitch’ Voice Actor and ‘The Ring’ Villain, Dies at 35

June 18, 2026
Trump’s Deal With Iran Opens New Rifts in G.O.P.

Trump’s Deal With Iran Opens New Rifts in G.O.P.

June 18, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026