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Local and national news, NPR, things to do, food recommendations and guides to Los Angeles, Orange County and the Inland Empire

Why the 1986 World Cup was a turning point for me San Diego’s North County is Southern California’s new culinary powerhouse Activists, supervisors debate use of chemicals in Orange County’s flood control channels Embattled LA County judge loses seat in primary election U.S. and Iran peace deal within reach, Pakistan's prime minister says Duarte students uncover the history of a community buried by freeways To loved ones, murder victim Zackery 'Turdle' Melton was far more than just 'unhoused' HUD halts federal homeless dollars to LA-area's lead agency, citing mismanagement LA's World Cup Fan Festival opens. Here’s a look inside the official celebration More than 250 tax-funded LA apartments sit empty under key Mayor Bass homelessness strategy How to choose a preschool in Los Angeles Why aren't hotels full for the World Cup — and what does it mean for LA? How Cheech Marin helped the ‘Godfather of West Coast graffiti’ break into the art world US military says it's striking 'multiple targets' in Iran in 2nd day of renewed fire Homicides are on decline in LA but shooting deaths of unhoused people remain disproportionately high Homicides are on decline in LA but shooting deaths of unhoused people remain disproportionately high July 1 brings big student loan changes. Here's what you need to know Large south swell brings massive waves to SoCal beaches Got a letter about the signature on your ballot? It's an election safeguard, not a rejection Measure ER backers celebrate passage of half-cent sales tax for healthcare FBI executes search warrant at site of Garden Grove chemical meltdown scare Inflation tops 4% for the first time in 3 years on spike in gasoline prices Israeli leader who pulled out of Lebanon warns against getting stuck again ICE denies having a protester database. But a letter to Congress sheds more light With Phillips 66 oil refinery closing, some South Bay residents worry they’re being left out ICE is now funded through end of Trump's term, raising worries about oversight Deadline looms for a proposed LA city ballot measure to extend local voting rights to noncitizens Your new favorite World Cup spot is hidden inside a downtown LA loading dock Best things to do this week in Los Angeles and Southern California: June 8-11 Where to eat near SoFi Stadium during the World Cup FilmWeek: ‘Masters of the Universe,’ ‘Renoir,’ ‘Scary Movie,’ and more! Hezbollah rejects ceasefire deal agreed on by Israel and Lebanon California youth on track to make up a larger share of 2026 primary electorate USC faculty vote to unionize as the university makes another legal challenge Where LA ranks on Uber's list of most 'forgetful' cities and the strange items people leave behind One OC Supervisor embraces victory, another falls behind: Live election results Hilton edging past Becerra to a runoff for California governor, and other state election results Bass advances to a fall showdown, with Pratt right behind her as votes continue to come in The race for LA County sheriff is shaping up to be Luna Vs. Villanueva all over again Understanding why declaring winners in California may take a minute LA County’s beloved backyard bat survey returns this summer. What bat lovers should know Getty Center joins growing list of LA landmarks hosting World Cup watch parties LA County sheriff: ICE will be at the World Cup in LA but agents won’t do enforcement California overhauls carbon market — critics say it’s a giveaway to oil Remote work — not AI — has sidelined recent college graduates, research finds Pratt is accusing Mayor Bass of celebrating K-town's destruction in 1992. What really happened Did California’s regulators miss signs of the Garden Grove toxic tank meltdown? More candidates are using their personal wealth to campaign than ever before. Should voters care? State law will put more housing near transit stops. This SoCal map finally shows where Will Huntington Beach concede defeat in state housing feud? Best things to do this week in Los Angeles and Southern California: June 1-4 Does LA now have its very own Jackie and Shadow? A bald eagle couple spotted nesting here LA's independent publishers want readers to know they're putting out plenty of great books Stay or go? An Altadena pet groomer faces a lease deadline after the Eaton Fire A band of artists skips the gallery to paint murals at LA schools. Their glue: a 5th grade teacher Ziggy Marley on his first song about Bob Marley — and why he wrote it now Free record shop for LA fire survivors to celebrate grand opening LA City Council committee sidelines ballot measure to cut ‘mansion tax’ rate Trump's name must come off of the Kennedy Center, judge rules This LA County judge wants your vote even though he’s accused of violating several ethics rules Former Arcadia mayor pleads guilty to acting as a secret agent for China Follow the money: Who’s backing California’s next governor — and why Services for older adults in LA at risk as state leaders consider funding shift Three Pigs in Long Beach makes the best Japanese food you haven’t tried LA slept on Guatemalan food. These 5 restaurants prove it was wrong What does rebuilding mean? These fire survivors showed us LA Metro Board approves nearly $10 billion budget What’s next for neighbors living near Garden Grove factory at center of chemical scare? Home is where the restaurant is: Long Beach's MEHKO moment has arrived Trump wants a gas tax holiday. There's a much bigger problem looming Best things to do this weekend in Los Angeles and Southern California: May 29-31 Is there a facility like the Garden Grove chemical tank near you? How to find out Ditch the mega concerts. Here’s where to catch live music in LA if you’re new here Trump DOJ mass-deletes info on Jan. 6 riot cases, including violent assaults on cops California launches trust fund for foster, COVID-bereft youth Prospects fade for imminent end to Iran war as attacks restart Lawmakers stripped the Board of Equalization of power. Now they’re fighting to join it Last chance to see the La Brea Tar Pits before they close for 2 years Altadena volunteers clear Eaton Fire lots before fire season — they need your help This man operates Angels Flight every Saturday — and will tell you all its secrets Republicans call off vote on Iran war resolution that was on the verge of passing LAUSD celebrates graduating seniors who experienced homelessness Civics education is struggling. How one South LA school teaches ‘nitty-gritty’ work of democracy Inflation jumps to its highest level since 2023. Here are 3 things costing a lot more California State Assembly Board of Equalization Los Angeles County sheriff California Insurance Commissioner Superintendent of Public Instruction California Lieutenant Governor Governor of California Los Angeles mayor Measure ER: What you need to know about the proposed sales tax hike in LA County Orange County superintendent of schools Los Angeles County Superior Court judges Orange County Superior Court Judges Orange County assessor LA city attorney LA City Controller California State Senate
In the race for LA mayor, voters face starkly different choices on city’s approach to housing
David Wagner · 2026-05-22 · via Local and national news, NPR, things to do, food recommendations and guides to Los Angeles, Orange County and the Inland Empire

Survey after survey shows that the cost of housing is a top concern for Los Angeles voters. And the issue sharply divides candidates vying for mayor in the June 2 primary.

Mayor Karen Bass says her efforts to fast-track affordable housing are working. But few apartments have been built so far. She has fought to keep new apartments out of most of the city’s residential neighborhoods, pleasing homeowners but angering some housing advocates.

City Councilmember Nithya Raman has said her different vision for tackling housing affordability was pivotal in her decision to run against Bass. Citing unaffordable rents and home prices, Raman has promised to accelerate building in more parts of the city.

Raman’s housing platform has won her the backing of many in the Yes In My Backyard (YIMBY) movement. But critics say her support of density could drastically transform some single-family neighborhoods.

Learn the ins and outs behind L.A.'s housing crisis.

Sign up for Building Your Block, a seven-issue newsletter course from LAist that explains the obstacles around housing development in L.A. and what you can do to make things better.

Political outsider Spencer Pratt has promised a downtown L.A. housing boom once he “gets rid of” tens of thousands of unhoused people. But he has been called out for spreading false information about state housing legislation.

Other candidates have presented their own ideas about the city’s housing affordability issues, but they’re behind in the polls.

Here are where the top three candidates stand on housing in L.A.

What Bass says she’s accomplished so far

When asked what she has done to bring down rents, Bass has pointed to a program she created in her first week in office: Executive Directive One. It speeds up city approvals of 100% affordable apartment projects.

By some metrics, ED1 has been a major success. After the program launched, developers flooded the city with applications.

L.A.’s Planning Department has received plans for 43,360 apartments since ED1 launched in December 2022 and has approved 34,298 of them. Under the directive, developers must agree to keep all units in these buildings affordable to low and moderate-income Angelenos.

A Black woman with brown hair and glasses wears a blue suit and white shirt and smiles.

Karen Bass

(

Courtesy of the campaign

)

But few of those units are actually getting built. The city’s Building and Safety Department says 8,058 apartments have been issued building permits. Only 298 have received certificates of occupancy, the last step in getting an apartment ready to rent to tenants.

In a recent mayoral debate, Bass said some variables are out of her control.

“Some of the factors are the price of construction materials, just the general economy,” Bass said. “We are doing everything we can to make sure we are able to fast-track that housing.”

Bass has also said the city’s adaptive reuse program, which allows office buildings to be converted into housing, has enabled the creation of more than 43,000 potential units.

The Building and Safety Department told LAist it could only find two units that have received certificates of occupancy since she took office. However, the city-wide expansion of this program, building off an older program limited to downtown L.A. and some other urban cores, only took effect in February 2026.

Do apartments belong in single-family neighborhoods?

Bass has scaled back ED1 from its original design. She banned projects in historic zones and on many lots with existing rent-controlled apartments. She also blocked projects in the nearly three-quarters of residential land reserved for single-family homes.

Bass says new housing belongs on commercial main streets, so homeowners in single-family zones don’t have to see apartments going up next to their lots. That’s one of the reasons she asked Governor Gavin Newsom to veto Senate Bill 79, a major new state housing law allowing taller, denser apartment buildings near transit stops, including in some single-family zones.

Raman has said she views this issue differently. She has said all kinds of neighborhoods need to accept denser housing. She defended an ED1 project in a single-family neighborhood in her district, even as city leaders tried to kill it. Courts eventually ruled the city fought that project illegally.

A woman smiles into the camera wearing a blue coat and black blouse

Los Angeles City Councilmember Nithya Raman announced Saturday that she is running for mayor.

(

Raman Campaign

)

Joining a minority of City Council members, Raman voted not to oppose SB 79. She has said young families are leaving L.A. because they can’t afford housing, and the city should do more to plan for increased density throughout the city, including in some single-family neighborhoods.

“We desperately need this housing,” Raman said in a recent debate. “What I want to do is go out here and not lie to you that we can keep everything the same, and Sacramento will not intervene. That is not possible.”

Raman has said that as mayor, she’ll make departments respond to zoning-compliant housing applications within 60 days.

Pratt’s plan for a downtown building boom

On his Substack, Pratt has said that L.A.’s housing supply shortage is “a myth.” But the former reality TV star also promised on a recent podcast to “speed up building” and work with architects to “bring Art Deco back.”

In a recent debate, Pratt said as mayor he’d get up to 20,000 apartments built in downtown L.A. by removing unhoused people.

“I’m gonna have 40 blocks when I get rid of all the drug addicts that are sleeping on the sides of all these empty buildings,” Pratt said. “We will have so much high-density… We have plenty of places to build. We don’t need to put a seven-story cement structure in a single-family neighborhood with no parking.”

A white man with reddish-brown hair wears a tan suit with a black shirt and smiles.

Spencer Pratt

(

Courtesy of the campaign

)

Last year, Pratt drew attention on social media for opposing SB 79. He said the law would bring high-rises to the Pacific Palisades, where his home burned down.

Critics pointed out that was never true, because there are no qualifying transit stops in the Palisades.

What about the city’s controversial 'mansion tax'? 

In 2022, L.A. voters passed Measure ULA, perhaps better known as the city’s “mansion tax.” It has taxed the sale of real estate valued at $5 million or more. It applies not just to single-family mansions, but also to apartment buildings and other commercial real estate.

Economists argue the tax has led to a slow-down in apartment construction at a time when L.A. needs more housing. Defenders say it has raised more than $1 billion for affordable housing construction and tenant aid programs.

Raman surprised many of her colleagues earlier this year when she proposed putting a measure on the June ballot to ask voters to exempt apartments built within the last 15 years. That effort failed, but Raman has continued to push for changes to Measure ULA.

Last year, Bass asked state lawmakers to pull a last-minute bill aimed at similar reforms, saying more tweaks were needed to get the policy right.

Pratt has said he would push for a full repeal of Measure ULA. The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association has qualified a measure for the November ballot that, if passed, would do just that.

Where do the candidates stand on rent hikes and tenant protections? 

As housing committee chair, Raman has said she pushed the council to pass the first update to the city’s rent control limits in 40 years. She has also said her efforts to pass new tenant eviction protections and legal aid programs are helping keep vulnerable renters housed.

Bass also supported the city’s new, lower rent hike limits. She says she’s been working with the Mayors Fund, an outside nonprofit, to provide eviction defense services to many tenants.

Pratt has said that state and city tenant protections amount to “squatter’s rights.” He has said he will work with the city attorney to streamline evictions and remove tenants within 72 hours.