Showing posts with label hud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hud. Show all posts

Sunday, October 25, 2009

People Organized for Westside Renewal (POWER) Invite You To PUBLIC HUD (Housing & Urban Development) Meeting THURSDAY with HUD's Bessy Kong. from D.C.

[Pictured: Maybe these are some of the people waiting for the HUD vouchers they keep saying are on the way. Meanwhile, the banks have been bailed out, but more of Steve Perry's "street light people" seem to be taking to the streets in Marina Del Rey, not too far from Thursday's HUD meeting about the Westside. Picutre taken 10.18.09]

Fr: POWER (People Organized for Westside Renewal)
Re: Upcoming HUD meeting with D.C. Asst of Policy Bessy "King" Kong

Join us to discuss the human right to housing with Assistant Secretary of Policy, Bessy Kong (she's KING!) from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Demand an end to demolition of public housing! Thursday, October 29, 2009: 6:00-7:30pm - Mar Vista Gardens Gymnasium, 4901 Marionwood Dr., Culver City, CA [ZD hears about 500 people expected. Need to be there with my "ZumaCAM!"]

  • In 1998 Congress began funding the HOPE VI program to demolish and “redevelop” public housing…
  • Around 80% of tenants who have been evicted from public housing have never come back to their communities.
  • There are currently about 1 million public housing units in use. These homes are making the difference between success and destruction for the millions of Americans who live in them.
  • We are working with Congressional leaders to pass real housing reform...
  • HUD can help us! We need a moratorium on the demolition and disposition of public housing!

LISTEN TO THE ZUMA SHOW ON THE BLUE "BLOG TALK RADIO" WIDGET TO THE RIGHT (or click here: Bill from POWER on HUD Meeting 10.29.09) FOR AN INTERVIEW WITH BILL FROM POWER ON THIS UPCOMING "HUD" FORUM WITH REPRESENTATIVE FROM WASHINGTON, D.C. FLYING IN FOR THIS EVENT! Bill Przylucki Organizer People Organized for Westside Renewal (POWER) bill@power-la.org 235 Hill St. Santa Monica, CA 90405

MORE AT PoliticalActionNow.com.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Did Wendy Greuel's Political Ally Andrew Cuomo Cause The Subprime Mortgage Crisis (Hence, U.S. Economic Meltdown?)

[Pictured: Eric waits in the wings for Zuma Dogg to do the dirty work that will bump HIM up a notch in the mayoral talent pool. (Using the term "talent" figuratively.)]

THIS, is the guy (Andrew Cuomo) that City Controller-elect Wendy Greuel is in bed with, politically, as she used her "Councilmember" title on an Andrew Cuomo fundraiser in LOS ANGELES??? What does SHE care? She's controller and is perfectly wealthy (as a career civil servant.) But I guess I am not surprised to hear the only guy Villaraigosa can get to swear him in is Cuomo. (But maybe all of this "hoopla" will put the cabash on it.)

Andrew Cuomo and Fannie and Freddie

How the youngest Housing and Urban Development secretary in history gave birth to the mortgage crisis

By Wayne Barrett

-Andrew Cuomo, the youngest Housing and Urban Development secretary in history, made a series of decisions between 1997 and 2001 that gave birth to the country's current crisis. He took actions that—in combination with many other factors—helped plunge Fannie and Freddie into the subprime markets without putting in place the means to monitor their increasingly risky investments. He turned the Federal Housing Administration mortgage program into a sweetheart lender with sky-high loan ceilings and no money down, and he legalized what a federal judge has branded "kickbacks" to brokers that have fueled the sale of overpriced and unsupportable loans. Three to four million families are now facing foreclosure, and Cuomo is one of the reasons why.

-What he did is important—not just because of what it tells us about how we got in this hole, but because of what it says about New York's attorney general, who has been trying for months to don a white hat in the subprime scandal, pursuing cases against banks, appraisers, brokers, rating agencies, and multitrillion-dollar, quasi-public Fannie and Freddie

- Cuomo wasn't only stifling data that HUD could use to keep the GSEs out of trouble. He also went against his own recommendation—in a report issued jointly with the Treasury Department a few months earlier—that called for a prohibition against the GSEs purchasing loans "with high costs and/or predatory features." Instead, Cuomo decided without explanation to adopt rules that prohibited nothing.

-Just a look at the New Yorkers tied to the GSEs must have impressed Cuomo, who, after all, would soon return to New York politics. Harold Ickes, the former Clinton chief of staff and a Democratic power broker in this state, was on the Freddie board. Tom Downey, the former New York congressman who would later donate $21,894 to Cuomo, was a Fannie lobbyist. And Al D'Amato, the former banking committee chair who'd shepherded Cuomo's appointment through the Republican Senate, was a Fannie consultant.

-Two of Cuomo's aides who had also worked for his father, Howard Glaser and Todd Howe, left HUD to take top jobs at the association in the middle of the GSE rule-making (the MBA parted company with both once Andrew was out of HUD). In 2000, a year after Howe joined the association, he described how he had helped build a grassroots MBA effort to pressure Congress and others into supporting HUD in what he described as the "battle" being "waged against Fannie Mae." Glaser's Harvard alumni biography says he "played a key role in negotiating a multi-billion-dollar increase in GSE affordable-housing goals." He and Howe—who insist they had "no contact" with Cuomo on the MBA's behalf—have given $3,000 to Cuomo in recent years.

-The MBA also retained Brad Johnson, another ex–Mario Cuomo aide described as his "eyes and ears" in Washington, to lobby HUD while Andrew was secretary. Three other long-term HUD staffers who worked there under Cuomo—including the lawyer who was the contact person listed on the GSE rules—also ended up at the MBA or one of its lobbying firms. Angelo Mozilo, the CEO of Countrywide who's become the face of the subprime scandal, was at one point the MBA's president and a member of its executive committee throughout Cuomo's HUD tenure. He and other MBA leaders became Cuomo donors, with Mozilo donating $1,000 twice—in 2002 and 2006.

-FM Watch's lobbyists during the Cuomo years at HUD included Tony Podesta, the brother of Clinton's chief of staff, and the law firm Akin Gump, where Cuomo has so many allies that his campaign committee has collected $67,550 in contributions there since he formed it in early 2001. Joel Jankowsky, head of the Akin lobbying group that represented this single-issue group, gave $7,500 to Cuomo—most of it within weeks after the formation of Andrew's committee in 2001. Jankowsky is a close personal friend of Dan Glickman, who joined Akin when he stepped down as agriculture secretary just as Cuomo left HUD in 2001. Glickman's wife Rhoda was Cuomo's deputy chief of staff, and the two Glickmans donated $10,500 to Cuomo. They also covered $23,900 of their own expenses traveling and fundraising for the campaign, which listed that as an in-kind contribution.

- Cuomo was, in some respects, the last chance that borrowers had before the crisis hit. The grand ambitions unleashed when he orchestrated his father's win at such an early age propelled him to HUD's helm at a similarly early age, and convinced him to run for governor before he was ready. He seems more comfortable at 50 in the state attorney general's office than he has ever appeared in his public life, but the country will be living with his HUD mistakes, ill- or well-intended, for a long time.

CONFLICTED, CORRUPT, AND FAILED

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

LA Daily Blog HEADLINES For March 11, 2008 - Stocks To Soar Today, Villaraigosa Video on Hannity & Colmes and MASSIVE News Updates!

First of all, the big news today is on Wall Street as the Fed stepped in early this morning to take measures to increase liquidity to ease the credit crunch in the face of inflation. Oil was at $109 at the time (8am EST) and the market may have sunk 500 points or more. Now, with this move, look for a 200-300 point gain today on the opening bell to get the party started! (Click here for the LA Daily Blog WALL STREET News Wire) BIGGEST DAY IN A HELLA-LONG TIME! (I'm just glad Erin Burnett is happy today!)

ZUMA DOGG BLOGGING RECORD: Monday 3/10/08 was a HUGE news day with Obama striking back at Clinton ("I'm not running for V.P."), Spitzer and his hoes, Madonna scaring Zuma Dogg with her new face that she debuted at R&R Hall of Fame ceremony last night, Villaraigosa taking HUD money and handing it over to Jeff Carr, the Sojourner/Gang Czar of L.A. behind people's back, Schwarzenegger's California teacher layoffs, LAS VILLAS Community Opposition, Board of Supervisors Executive Office Budget Bonanza (no financial crisis there)...AND SO MUCH MORE. In other words, a record amount of threads blogged by ZD for one 24 hour period.

HERE IS A SUMMARY OF RECENT POSTS ON LA DAILY BLOG.COM:

Monday, March 10, 2008

LOS ANGELES CITY ALERT!!!: Los Angeles City Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa To Place HUD Money In Hands Of Gang Czar And Out Of Sight From Public



Laura Chick is going to make a presentation at the LAUSD special meeting, Tuesday at 10:00 AM in the blue room on Villaraigosa's plan to take the HUD money and put it directly in the hands of Jeff Carr, the Sojourner leader/L.A. Gang Czar -- bypassing City Council and all community input. The Community Development Department (HUD funding money) is usually told by City Council how to spend the money and where. Now Villaraigosa wants to hand this Housing development money right over to the gang intervention/gang czar Carr, who will be working directly out of the mayor's office. This is being done with no public hearing at all except what is being presented at this special meeting for the school board.

Villaraigosa's strategy will allow him to consolidate control over non-profits by putting a stranglehold on their funding if they don't support him for re-election.

All of this will be announced by City Controller Laura Chick, Tuesday 3/11/08 at 10:00 AM in the Blue Room for the special LAUSD board meeting, that Zuma Dogg's invitation was lost in the mail, along with the rest of the public.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Los Angeles Mayor Villaraigosa Needs To Do More Address Skyrocketing Rents (But That Would Mean Less Money From Powerful Developers)

David Lazarus wrote an article in LA Times called, "Renters priced out of L.A.". As I read, it reminded me of a lot of things I learned doing research for the article on SCAG (Southern California Association of Government) that ran in LA Weekly (2/14/07).

Here's an excerpt from the article that sets up the "Renters" LA Times piece.

Planning For Disaster
by Zuma Dogg

L.A. has settled into its role as a region filled with lesser-paying jobs and influxes of low-end workers, but housing costs are skyrocketing. Pisano concedes, “You can’t find a condo for under $500,000. The problem is, we need to build an economic base so people can afford to live here. That’s our problem. I don’t disagree that condos and housing are expensive everywhere in the region, not just L.A. If you can’t afford it, you’re gonna be angry.”

Chang Ping, author of SCAG’s annual State of the Region report, used in handing out lumps of coal each winter to the cities and counties SCAG finds most uncooperative, explains, “Manufacturing has gone overseas to China. The world’s financial market is over in New York. Many of the high-quality service jobs are in New York — and those on the West Coast are in San Francisco rather than here — like banking, retail, legal services, engineers, consultants, ad agencies.”

Because Los Angeles allowed the high-end and blue-collar companies to slip away to other cities, its overly expensive housing is now “a barrier to luring in the high-paying jobs provided by such service industries,” Ping says. “Sure, housing costs are higher in San Francisco. But the higher-paying, high-end jobs that were already there — fueled in part by Silicon Valley — have offset the high cost of housing.”

Vasishth slams L.A. City Hall’s shortsighted planning, saying, “You just can’t have the rich living downtown in expensive lofts and the poor people living further and further out.” Cities are going on a “density” kick as some kind of solution — yet there are plenty of skeptics out there.

High-density housing is not a desirable goal for space-loving Southern Californians, Vasishth says, arguing that room to breathe is one of the few pluses still on offer here: “All this new infrastructure, whether it comes from state bonds or from SCAG’s dreamy projections, would simply create more density.” Kotkin is even more dismissive, saying, “Density is a push by big developers to create very expensive housing with some pieces included for the poor — and nothing at all included for the middle class.”

Excerpt from:
Renters priced out of L.A.
by David Lazarus/LA Times
March 9 2008

(It's a) harsh reality for thousands of working-class people priced out of one of the priciest cities in the world. From housing and food to energy and entertainment, Los Angeles is increasingly out of reach for those living paycheck to paycheck.

"It's a crisis," said Gil Duran, a spokesman for Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. "We have to have a city of mixed incomes with affordable housing for workers."

Easier said than done. But planning and public-policy experts say steps can be taken to protect the city's social and economic diversity. It's just a question of priorities.

Any discussion of getting priced out of L.A. has to begin with housing, by far the biggest expense for most people. Never mind buying. Even with the real estate market on the ropes, buying a house or condo remains a fantasy for the majority of Southern Californians.

The real story here is rentals. About 60% of L.A. residents are renters, according to the National Multi Housing Council, an industry group. That compares with a nationwide average of 32%.

The Department of Housing and Urban Development says families shouldn't spend more than 30% of their annual income on housing. But here, many people pay up to 50% of their income for an apartment.

Runaway housing costs, in turn, tend to push wages higher, which can cause the price of just about everything else to climb as businesses seek to recoup their expenses.

One reason housing prices are so high is a requirement that newly built multiunit dwellings (and condo conversions) provide at least one -- usually two or three -- parking space per unit. This inflates the cost of each apartment and discourages construction of smaller, more affordable units because developers would be required to provide even more parking.

One solution would be to waive the parking requirement for smaller apartments, thus creating an incentive for developers to place more such units on the market. And because there'd be no parking cost built into the rent, such units would (in theory) be cheaper than apartments that come with extra room for vehicles.

This could have the added benefit of increasing demand for public transportation -- presuming, that is, people would trade car ownership for reduced rent. Increased demand would hopefully spur development of commuter-friendly projects like a long-delayed Westside subway line.

But Gail Goldberg, L.A.'s planning director, said any proposal that includes cutbacks in parking tends to go nowhere. "People feel like there's already not enough parking and that people are intruding into their neighborhood. This is a difficult discussion to have."

Meanwhile, a coalition of community, religious and business interests called Housing L.A. is pushing City Hall to require developers to include affordable housing in new projects and to slow the conversion of rental units into condos.

These are worthwhile goals, but they're strongly opposed by deep-pocketed developers and real estate firms. So good luck with that.

full article

Recent LA Daily Blog posts (Summary Page)

zumadogg@gmail.com
david.lazarus@latimes.com

Thursday, March 6, 2008

3/6/08 HEADLINES: UTLA settles suit; LA city coffers stung by housing slump; Status of truckers is big hitch in port plan; HUD raises mortgage limits

From Zuma Dogg's LA DAILY BLOG News Wire (Click here for these stories and more)


LA city coffers stung by housing slump, economy

By Kerry Cavanaugh, Staff Writer
03/05/2008

With the weak real estate market and slowing economy, the city of Los Angeles will bring in $90 million less revenue than expected in the fiscal year ending June 30, according to estimates released Wednesday by the city controller.

The latest estimate puts city revenues this year at $4.246 billion. And as sales tax and property tax revenues drop further, revenue for the next fiscal year - beginning July 1 - will likely fall $11 million to $4.235 billion.

Over the last month, city budget officials have warned that revenue would be lower than expected and city leaders face cutting programs immediately to balance the budget.

The report by Controller Laura Chick came with another warning.

"Now comes one of those moments of truth," said Chick. "We need to rein in our spending, continue to build and maintain a healthy reserve fund and ensure the people of Los Angeles that they can rely on the quality delivery of essential services."

Economists who advise the controller in setting the revenue estimates do not predict a recession. They expect the local economy will pick up in late 2008 or early 2009.

However, the housing market and foreclosure crisis could lead to distressed neighborhoods, empty buildings and urban blight. Chick recommended the city develop a strategy to deal with boarded-up houses now.

Status of truckers is a big hitch in port plan

L.A. and Long Beach mayors agree on all other key aspects of the clean-air strategy.
By David Zahniser and Louis Sahagun, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
March 6, 2008

The mayors of Los Angeles and Long Beach have spent nearly a year marching in lock-step, crafting a groundbreaking $1.6-billion plan for removing nearly 17,000 exhaust-spewing diesel trucks from the nation's two busiest harbors.

With remarkable ease, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Long Beach Mayor Bob Foster spurred their respective ports to pass initiatives that would have been unthinkable a few years ago: first a ban on older trucks moving through the ports; then a $35 fee on each cargo container to pay for newer, cleaner trucks.

But last month, Foster broke ranks with Villaraigosa by rejecting the plan's final piece, a proposal backed by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters to require independent truck drivers at the Long Beach harbor to be employees of trucking companies, a move that would make it easier for them to organize.

Villaraigosa and his allies argue that truck drivers, most of whom are now independent contractors, need to be well paid in order to take care of the new trucks that the ports plan to help them buy. On the other side, Foster and his supporters say the union-backed provision will attract lawsuits and be difficult to defend in court, delaying the clean-air plan by two to three years -- or killing it altogether.

HUD raises mortgage limits
By Marcy Gordon, The Associated Press
03/05/2008

The government on Wednesday raised the mortgage limits for loans guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administration in Los Angeles, Ventura and a dozen other high-cost California counties.

The Department of Housing and Urban Development released the new limits for California, which is now suffering the worst home-price declines in the nation. The limits, with the maximum at $729,750, are derived from median home prices in each county.

UTLA settles suit over payroll snafu


L.A. teachers who were underpaid will get interest on late payments and those who protested will not be disciplined.
By Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
March 6, 2008

The teachers union has settled a lawsuit with Los Angeles school officials over a malfunctioning payroll system that overpaid or shortchanged teachers for much of last year.

The settlement will provide teachers who were underpaid 8% interest for up to six months on late payments. Teachers also will face no discipline for having boycotted staff meetings to protest payroll problems. As part of the settlement, the L.A. Unified School District will drop a separate unfair labor practice charge filed in response to the United Teachers Los Angeles-backed boycotts.

The school board approved the settlement after a discussion in closed session Tuesday. The union filed the lawsuit in April, seeking timely paychecks issued in the correct amounts, comprehensible pay statements and emergency pay centers, among other demands.

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