To the editor: San Diego has certainly laid out the welcome mat for condo builders and their buyers (“San Diego exhibits what occurs when a metropolis really lets builders construct,” Jan. 20). However my metropolis’s laissez-faire strategy to improvement has failed to provide really reasonably priced housing whereas just about ignoring the apparent want for added parks, colleges, hearth and police stations and parking for car-dependent, working-class households.
A few of these new rental tasks supply small studios for $2,500 per thirty days and one-bedrooms for $3,000. Parking, when obtainable, can value $300 a month extra. The so-called reasonably priced items required by town in a few of these high-density buildings nonetheless value greater than $2,000 per thirty days, properly past the attain of our low- and really low-income residents.
Our mayor and his building-industry allies now declare their fast-track approval processes — which disregard neighborhood considerations concerning the detrimental impacts of those high-density/high-rise tasks — are pushing down rental charges. However in line with knowledge from RentCafe.com, the latest 1.85% drop in month-to-month rental charges equates to simply $55 per thirty days in financial savings and a nonetheless costly $2,938 common month-to-month hire.
In the meantime, bike lanes and on-street parking restrictions have led to diminished parking spots. Builders are discovering it a lot more durable to hire items with no off-street parking. Emptiness charges are regular or growing, which can tamp down new building, inflicting rental charges to renew their upward climb.
Our metropolis doesn’t have a rental housing “disaster.” However we do have a extreme scarcity of really reasonably priced housing. Our elected officers’ love affair with building {industry} execs who fund their political campaigns proves that the non-public sector and free-market methods is not going to clear up that drawback.
Paul Krueger, San Diego

