Action Apartments Association, Inc.

Facebook Twitter RSS

  • 03/07/2018 8:48 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    The origins of and potential solutions to California’s housing crisis, explained.

    Over the past several years, California has not only produced too little housing, but too little of the right kind of housing. Between 2009 and 2014, the state added 77,000 more households than housing units. The housing it has produced is often located far from jobs and transit, or is too expensive for low and sometimes even middle income people to afford.

    “It’s a desperate situation right now,” said Dowell Myers, an urban planning professor at University of Southern California. “We really have to rethink everything.”

    Read More: https://www.citylab.com/equity/2018/03/in-california-momentum-builds-for-radical-action-on-housing/554768/
  • 03/06/2018 7:47 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    The City Council will learn the scope of the current homeless crisis Tuesday when City Manager Rick Cole reveals the numbers from this year’s January homeless tally during their first meeting in March.

    A new public/private partnership to brainstorm new ways to tackle the homeless crisis also gets off the ground this week. The City’s new Homeless Steering Committee (SMHSC) will meet for the first time Wednesday, March 7 at 6 p.m. at Roosevelt Elementary Auditorium at 801 Montana Avenue. The committee is a gathering of more than 50 public and private partners from local businesses, churches, service providers and elected officials to develop strategies to address homelessness.

    Read More: http://smdp.com/council-will-learn-homeless-count-results-tonight/164764

  • 03/05/2018 8:50 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    At its meeting last night, February 28, the City of Santa Monica Audit Subcommittee met to review the draft staffing and compensation study from the firm Moss Adams. The study, which began in June 2017, reviews policies and practices related to City employee compensation and staffing levels.

    Read More on page 3:  https://www.actiontakesaction.com/admin/website/system-pages/?pageId=1837908

  • 03/05/2018 8:37 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    March 2, 2018 -- It wasn’t long ago that one of Santa Monica’s most aggressive grassroots organizations was best known for challenging the City’s powers that be over the amount of new development it allowed.

    But check in with the Facebook page for residocracy.org these days, and a change is evident:

    Concern about crime and violence is starting to dominate posts there, pushing aside -- for now, at least -- the anger over new building that gave rise to 2016’s Measure LV, which sought public votes for most development taller than two stories.

    Armen Melkonians, who founded residocracy.org in in 2014, said the increasing focus on crime is a natural evolution for the organization as concern about the rise in violent crime intensifies in the community.

    Read More:  http://www.surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2018/March-2018/03_02_2018_Santa_Monica_Slow_Growth_Group_Shifts_Focus_to_Crime.html


  • 03/05/2018 8:02 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    BERKELEY, Calif. — A median-priced one-bedroom apartment in San Francisco rents for nearly $3,300 a month. In the Silicon Valley community of San Mateo, the median home will set you back almost $1.4 million. Even in semi-rural Petaluma in Sonoma County, at least an hour drive from the city, rent for a one-bedroom can reach $2,000 and more.

    To afford a place to live in the Bay Area, stressed workers and students are moving farther and farther out, commuting for hours a day from what used to be farm country. Others pile two and three to a room. In Los Angeles, San Diego and along much of the coast, the picture is much the same. 

    But now the need for more affordable housing is provoking an intense ideological struggle, and in this left-leaning state, one that pits liberals against liberals.

    Read More: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/california-s-housing-crunch-has-turned-liberals-against-one-another-n851401


  • 03/05/2018 8:00 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    The city has proposed two options for spreading tenant rent increases over the course of several years to pay for the work. The first would allow owners to increase rent by a certain percentage following a retrofit if operating income fell below that of a particular year to be determined by the city. That rent increase would be permanent.

    Another option would allow an owner to pass along a certain percentage of the retrofit costs onto tenants over a certain period.

    Read More: http://easternunionblog.com/west-hollywood-considers-earthquake-retrofit-costs-to-owners-renters/


  • 03/02/2018 10:01 AM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    Homelessness affects the lives of all Angelenos, not just those forced to live on the streets. And it does so almost daily, in ways large and small.

    Read More:  http://www.latimes.com/opinion/editorials/la-ed-homelessness-impact-on-others-20180301-htmlstory.html

  • 03/01/2018 12:06 PM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    Tall Hotels Serve Only the Unions, Not Local or Santa Monica Residents

    Local 11 is currently lobbying the Santa Monica City Council to approve a redevelopment plan for the five-acre Bergamot Station Arts Center, which includes a controversial seven-story hotel. Why? Because the hotel developer signed a labor peace agreement with the union, meaning the new hotel could bring with it dozens of monthly dues-payers.

    Local 11 has only one problem: Public opinion. Santa Monicans have sent numerous emails to the City Council, stating their firm opposition to the Bergamot hotel development. One resident writes: "Bergamot is one of the jewels in Santa Monica's

    cultural landscape, and needs to be protected, not over-exploited.

    Read More: http://www.smobserved.com/story/2018/02/28/opinion/as-yet-another-tall-hotel-goes-up-at-7th-and-wilshire-question-union-influence-in-santa-monica/3344.html


  • 02/28/2018 4:24 PM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    Members of the Pasadena Tenants Union, the renters rights advocacy group which launched a rent control initiative petition drive late last year, said they are canvassing seven days a week going door-to-door in virtually every city neighborhood to secure thousands of signatures needed to qualify a charter amendment for the voters on next November’s ballot.

    This charter amendment would authorize a form of limited rent control that is pegged to the rate of inflation and includes “just cause” language that would stipulate landlords must have legitimate reasons to evict tenants.

    Read More: http://www.pasadenanow.com/main/pasadena-tenants-union-members-say-they-are-going-door-to-door-seven-days-a-week-in-campaign-for-citywide-rent-control/#.WpdHekxFyUl


  • 02/28/2018 2:03 PM | Margaret Fulton (Administrator)

    Given an historic shortage of affordable housing, the Board of Supervisors has asked County departments to assess the impact that short-term rentals such as Airbnb and VRBO can have on affordable residential rental housing in the County’s unincorporated areas, home to 10% of County residents.

    Read More on page 4: http://backissues.smdp.com/022818.pdf

Copyright ©2025 ACTION Apartment Association, Inc.

Equal Opportunity Housing
Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software