It's not pro development - it asks for a thing that is impossible. The
thing they want is not on offer.
The thrust of the article is "stop the WSOP." The WSOP makes development
easier. You can't be pro development and anti a way for it to happen.
This isn't my first rodeo. The only result of this kind of rhetoric is to
slow and stop some building. Then the city is poorer for not having been
able to fully take advantage of the wave of capital.
Look at sf - people have been blocking apartment building for decades. What
has it got us? The buildings these people's predecessors blocked in the 60s
and 70s would be 40 and 50 years old now. A lot of it would be rent
controlled. We have less affordable housing now due to this type of
political rhetoric and organizing than we would have had with out it.
On Saturday, May 17, 2014, Romy Snowyla <romy(a)snowyla.com> wrote:
Sonja you haven't read the article at all.
It's pro development it just
questions what kind of development .
I'm not sure what interests you represent but the article is a fair and
balanced point of view that needs to be heard . You don't even discuss
anything in the article but bash app makers - we need to talk about social
impact and the human lives of people who live in osklsnd right now
Sent from my iPhone
On May 17, 2014, at 12:17 PM, Sonja Trauss <sonja.trauss(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Saturday, May 17, 2014, Andrew Lowe <andrew(a)lostways.com> wrote:
Sonja, no one is saying we shouldn't build new housing. But, this has
nothing to do with population increases. Its about attracting more people
from the outside to Oakland and attracting not just more people, but more
rich people.
The causation is backwards here. The rich people are coming/ here no
matter what. THATS WHY developers and cities want to build. They see an
opportunity and they want to take advantage of it. Cities are playing the
long game: all cities go through periods of investment and growth then
years of disinvestment and abandonment.
We live in the result of yesterday's, yesterday's growth. The building I
live in is 150 years old.
Capital wants to build. Money is here trying to turn into infrastructure
and housing. There is no other way this stuff gets built other than through
private capital. Even when cities build things, what do they do? They float
bonds - private capital has to decide a city is worth investing in.
Let them build. The crash will come. The money, the bullshit app, will
disappear. The new housing will still exist.
There is no need to build expensive condos on San Pablo . no one in the
neighborhood wants that but the landlords. A long time resident (more than
30 years I believe) on my block ( which is in this plan) was just evicted
and the landlord for another place on the street is trying to raise the
rent 50% in order to kick out my friends so he can build lofts.
Suburban living is the solution to population increase,
What
not urban development. But again population increase isn't the problem the
city is trying to solve. Their problem is that SF is rolling in tax income
and they want a piece of the pie.
On May 17, 2014 9:30 AM, "Sonja Trauss" <sonja.trauss(a)gmail.com> wrote:
This is an Orwellian notion of anti-displacement.
In the face of increased population these people seek to build nothing
new. I really can't understand what they think is going to happen when the
population goes up but the housing stock doesn't.
Sf tried that! Look what's happening there! It sucks!
This is the saddest thing to me because all efforts like this do, is make
building more expensive and difficult. That means the only things that get
built are at higher price points. Or, if they're slightly successful,
whole projects are blocked, and they miss the opportunity to get capital to
build something useful, instead of something stupid like a new calendaring
app.
On Friday, May 16, 2014, Romy Snowyla <romy(a)snowyla.com> wrote:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/04/18/18754399.php
WOSP – City of Oakland’s Plan for Gentrification: A Target For
Anti-Displacement Activity : Indybay
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