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Time to Rethink Housing Market

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It is hardly surprising that it is so difficult to rent an apartment in California (“Least Affordable Rents in Nation Found in State,” Dec. 21).

Well-intended but counterproductive affordable-housing measures such as rent control and below-market set-aside requirements have distorted the housing market and strongly discouraged the construction of new rental units.

Meanwhile, “not in my backyard” attitudes toward increased density have produced a severe housing shortage in urban areas, resulting in traffic- and pollution-generating sprawl. I imagine that 90-minute commutes to dusty, smoggy desert exurbs do not figure into anyone’s vision of the “California Dream.”

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This state cannot accommodate 50 million people without seriously rethinking its policies on development and transportation. Liberals will have to accept that some of their most cherished programs are folly; conservatives will need to understand that the California of old cannot survive.

Peter McFerrin

Palms

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