To the editor: Los Angeles tenants are not only losing parking out of the street, we are losing basic principles of democracy (“A Koreatown parking protest: tenants sit in the loss of parking loss to give way to Adus,” September 9).
Grandma's flat legislation It was built by Angelenos Like one To help families take care of older parents. Now, the city of Los Angeles has twisted the accessory housing unit that allows it to an escape from the back room to take advantage of corporate owners, quickly tracking the parking transition out of the street and stolen tenant courtyards in units of efficiency of the size of the holding cells without parking, without exterior space, without audiences and without public comments.
In my 25 -year -old stabilized complex, tenants accidentally learned that those allowed to erase our outdoor space and most out of public roads have already been approved of 85% in secret sessions without public contributions. The plan doubles the number of units into this small property.
The recent history of Los Angeles Times is about a complex in Koreatown, but this is not an isolated incident. The city is leaving its poor management by working in Angels in Los Angeles. This is not housing justice. It is the city that sells its tenants to corporate gain, pretend that overcrowding and reducing services are compassion. If Mayor Karen Bass really believes in this model, maybe Getty House should give up her entrance path for some efficiency units.
Jeffrey Reeves, Los Angeles