Los costos de vivienda extremadamente altos son una realidad para los californianos, lo que incluso lleva a algunos a mudarse fuera del estado. Examinamos por qué cuesta tanto vivir aquí y qué podría hacer el estado para que la vivienda sea más asequible.
For years Laurel LaMont has fought for better options for what she calls the “missing middle,” often referred to as workforce housing. Now she is being evicted.
As voters weigh whether to allow local governments to expand rent control, elected officials in San Francisco and Los Angeles have already shown interest in doing so. In other cities, local laws could automatically cap annual rent increases on some single-family homes and newer apartment buildings if Prop. 33 passes.
The Yes and No on 33 campaigns have collectively spent more than $140 million. CalMatters fact checked some of the more pervasive claims made by both sides.
La mitad de los hogares del estado luchan por conseguir un techo sobre sus cabezas. Esto es lo que necesita saber sobre uno de los problemas más desconcertantes de California.
California allotted half a billion dollars to help community land trusts across the state. But budget cuts and bureaucracy have land trust advocates back where they were in 2020: seeking state aid to preserve affordable housing.
In Los Angeles County, where more than 75,000 people have nowhere to call home, voters will decide whether to tax themselves to help get people off the street.
The mayor of Norwalk said the city enacted its far-reaching ban on shelters and other low-income housing and businesses out of frustration with the state.
Kamala Harris se compromete a construir 3 millones de viviendas y apartamentos asequibles en su primer mandato como presidenta, pero el gobernador Newsom no ha cumplido una promesa de campaña similar en California. ¿Qué lecciones puede aprender?