Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said Friday he thinks the city should work with developers to construct more affordable housing as its population increases.

Garcetti spoke at the 2017 Mayoral Housing, Transportation and Jobs Summit, where about 100 business owners and representatives listened to Los Angeles officials and business owners talk about ways to create more affordable housing for the city’s growing population and implement more efficient transit systems throughout LA.

The summit, which was hosted by the Los Angeles Business Council, was held at the UCLA Meyer and Renee Luskin Conference Center.

The Los Angeles County population is projected to surpass 11 million in the next 20 years, said David Nahai, an LABC board member. He added he thinks this will lead to a housing crisis as the population outgrows the number of available housing units in the county.

Brad Cox, senior managing partner at the Trammell Crow Company, a commercial real estate developer, said he thinks the city should reduce the amount of parking in LA County and use that space to build additional housing in areas close to public transportation.

“If you densify 4 percent of the city around our transit, you can solve our housing problems,” Cox said.

He added he thinks the county should rezone primarily low-density, single-family housing into more affordable housing units. Currently, 28 percent of housing sites around transit hubs use less than 50 percent of their zoned capacity. Over time, these sites can be rebuilt to include efficient affordable housing, Cox said.

Phillip Washington, the CEO of the LA County Metropolitan Transportation Agency, said he wants to improve the county bus system’s security, quality and reliability. He added he thinks the system is essential for the lower-income individuals who rely on buses to get around the city.

“We must do things differently, lest we die,” Washington said.

In 2013, Garcetti pledged Los Angeles would construct more than 100,000 new homes by 2021. However, at the event, he said he thinks this is less than 3 percent of what California would need to keep on track with its growing population.

Garcetti said he thinks the city has made progress on constructing affordable housing and improving public transportation by passing Measure M and Measure HHH last year. Measure M gives $120 billion to Metro over the next 40 years, to create new transportation systems and Measure HHH will provide $1.2 billion to house homeless individuals.

Garcetti said he thinks the city should provide more land to developers to construct new housing around public transit. He added he thinks the city should also lower construction costs and reduce wait times for developers to receive construction permits.

“We want your bids, and we have your money,” he said.

 

 

 

Published by David Gray

Gray is the 2019-2020 News editor of the Daily Bruin. He was previously an assistant News editor and a reporter for the city and crime beat. He is also a third-year political science student at UCLA.

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1 Comment

  1. California is overpopulated. Until the government addresses that problem we will continue to be one of the poorest, most over-crowded and drought-susceptible states in the nation.

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