Saturday, August 19, 2023

The Biggest Fight Emeryville Residents Are Ignorant of But Should Know About

 'YIMBY California' and 'Our Neighborhood Voices' Battle It Out For Control Over Emeryville

The Battle is Unheard For Most Emeryville Residents

It Should Be Loud

No Coincidence The Fight Is Quiet

News Analysis

The most fateful and far reaching story in Emeryville not currently being told is the quiet but tenacious battle for Emeryville’s housing policy fought between two outside organizations: YIMBY California and Our Neighborhood Voices.  The internecine battle between two disparate visions of the public’s role in public policy has been taken up by our City Council members serving as proxies.  Council member Kalimah Priforce serves as the dissenting voice representing the democratically focused grassroots push for a ballot initiative supportive of local housing policy advanced by the group Our Neighborhood Voices (ONV) versus the other Council members who are more or less represented by the corporate dark money funded lobbying Goliath, YIMBY California.  Notably, the YIMBY side (Yes In My Backyard) is trying to forward anti-democratic government housing deregulation and also to stop the ONV ballot initiative slated for November 2024.

YIMBY, flush with billionaire money and fronted by the authoritative lobbying giant YIMBY California, has been working to derail local democracy for housing policy using several strategically placed California legislators in its orbit, notably State Senator Scott Weiner.  Here in Emeryville, YIMBY California has two agents on our City Council, Mayor John Bauters and Vice Mayor Courtney Welch, both of whom receive support from the organization.  A public records search revealed Vice Mayor Welch received $2000 cash outright from YIMBY California, drawn from its ‘victory fund’.  

In a controversial action and illustrative of the clout YIMBY California now has in our City Council chambers, Mayor Bauters and Vice Mayor Welch led a drive to appoint Sacramento’s YIMBY California Policy Director and new Emeryville resident Ned Resnikoff to our Housing Committee.   Perhaps no single action surpasses that in terms of showing how our City Hall has been rolled by an outside business lobbying organization.  

Housing Committee Appointee
Ned Resnikoff
YIMBY California's Policy Director

With the Council majority's help
he leapfrogged onto our Housing
Committee after moving to Emeryville
only two months earlier.

The YIMBY organization seeks to take away our own democratically crafted housing policy and override our General Plan.  Specifically, we are supposed to be getting parks in trade for all the new housing developers are building.  But because that would cut into the profit margin of developers, Mayor Bauters, Vice Mayor Welch and YIMBY California want to make it so developers will be off the hook and the people left without a green respite from all the massive density coming Emeryville's way.  Oblivious to hubris, Mayor Bauters felt so strongly that we should override our General Plan and let developers off the hook for providing park space, he came right out and said it at a City Council meeting.

Our General Plan protects us against an onslaught of rental only housing, the most profitable kind of housing development to build.  The General Plan provides that Emeryville build ownership housing over rental housing.  And so YIMBY and their City Council sycophants want to override our General Plan to help the developers maximize their profits by building nothing but rental housing towers.  Families build wealth when they own their own homes, especially people of color and working class families.  This fact has been shown to be not impressive to the City Council majority despite our General Plan's recognition of this basic principle.

Also left unsaid by the YIMBY supporters on the City Council is the inconvenient truth that Emeryville doesn't need more housing (affordable housing excepted).  Whereas the greater Bay Area region does in fact need more housing, here in Emeryville, we have been using defacto YIMBY policy here for more than a decade, even before YIMBY was born.  The Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG), of which Emeryville is a dues paying member, conducts jobs/housing needs assessments every few years and every time, unlike our neighboring cities, Emeryville is shown to supply more than 100% of ABAG recommended housing.

Brentwood City Council member
Jovita Mendoza

She helped form Our Neighborhood Voices.
Ms Mendoza is concerned for Emeryville
and its YIMBY driven trajectory.

For its part, YIMBY supporters, fearing popular pushback over the lopsided billionaire corporate funded bully image, have begun to steal progressive language to try to confuse voters.  Some have expressed a ‘supply and demand’ argument to claim housing will become more affordable if we just give in to developer’s demands to take over municipal housing policy.  But Our Neighborhood Voices backer Jovita Mendoza cautions against buying all the YIMBY talk of trickle down hosing affordability, “Housing affordability has become a sound bite that Sacramento pretends to care about. Since 2016 there have been over 100 bills that have made housing more expensive and gentrified our POC and low income families she told the Tattler.  Ms Mendoza, a Brentwood City Council member, says she has been following what YIMBY California has been doing in Emeryville with interest.  She said Emeryville residents should be aware of what is happening [here] and they should “take back control over land use and let democracy come first” adding, “That is exactly what the Our Neighborhood Voices initiative will do”.

The local democracy movement, a popular grassroots presence in California, seeks to protect local housing policy by allowing cities to continue to decide for themselves what’s best.  The movement is using Our Neighborhood Voices to forward the ballot initiative process to stop the YIMBY California money juggernaut; people power versus corporate power.  A supporter of local democracy, City Councilman Priforce told the Tattler, "YIMBYism and their real estate lobby-backed gentrification strips away people-powered efforts to create real affordable housing rather than trickle-down luxury market-rate rentals. Restoring that power back into the hands of neighborhoods that can hold their local officials accountable is Local Democracy - taxation with authentic representation”.  Councilwoman Mendoza concurred, “There should be no more giveaways to campaign donors at the expense of the people, she said.  “Let’s stop the gentrification that is occurring as we speak in areas like where I grew up in Oakland and Emeryville and let people build the types of cities they want to live in, she added.

Mayor John Bauters and Emeryville Housing Committeeman Ned Resnikoff were contacted for this story but they both refused to comment.

8 comments:

  1. Why won't the mayor and the housing YIMBY guy speak about this? Too embarrassing for them?

    ReplyDelete
  2. It’s time to stick it to the YIMBYs - start organizing resistance measures now to garner support for Neighborhoods. YIMBYs are a sham.

    ReplyDelete
  3. This sort of dollar pressure on politician's and causes could be halted with a commonsense law stipulating that individual and organizational donations must remain anonymous.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I looked up YIMBY California and there's nothing remotely there about stopping parks or ownership housing. Also, why is a Brentwood city councilwoman featured? What do we care about what she says?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Keep the adage in mind, 'Watch what they do, don't listen to what they say'. They don't say it because that would tend to undercut what they're trying to do. It's 1980 all over again at YIMBY California....it's all Ronald Reagan deregulation trickle down.
      Councilwoman Mendoza is featured in the story because she is one of the three progenitors of Our Neighborhood Voices. We reached out to her for the 'local democracy' side and Ned Resnikoff for the YIMBY side. No surprise, the side that represents democracy spoke to the press but the side representing business interests didn't.

      Delete
  5. There are two very large projects nearby, one just across the tracks from Bay Street, and one at the Ashby off ramp of I-80
    (maybe Berkeley ?), coming very soon. They should absorb lots of demand. Why can't we just wait to see how they fit in, and hold off on fighting. Let's assess the reality, which is being handed to us
    on a silver platter! We don't need to fight about anything.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Emeryville is the worst city in the East Bay as far as parks go. We have over 500 residents per acre of park now and that number gets worse every year. The General Plan calls for no more than 333 residents per acre of park. We are supposed to get three acres for every 1000 new residents (more for day workers) and that is just to break even. To catch up with all the park acreage we’re missing, we’ll have to provide a lot more. In fact, Emeryville will need more than 50 acres of park by the sunset of the General Plan in 2030. Right now we have less than half that.

      We should not hold off fighting. We need to fight to get the city we all said we wanted when we crafted our General Plan. The City Council majority isn’t taking it seriously and instead they’re playing at emulating 1980s Republicans, saying YES to every developer that strolls into town. We can get the development, but we need to also get the infrastructure to offset the impacts on the residents as the General Plan dictates. We going to have to fight to get the town we want.

      Delete
    2. Are you a housing developer? What kind of resident writes to complain about a story that shows their town isn't getting the parks they're supposed to? What's wrong with the people getting what they want? Jeeze. What gives? I'm thinking you're not a resident.

      Delete