Unassigned

'Major Milestone’: Home in Pacific Palisades Receives Final Approval From the City

Here's big news from California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. A week before Thanksgiving, Bass announced that a four-bedroom house in Pacific Palisades had received final approval from the city, making it the first house to be rebuilt after wildfires destroyed 13,000 homes back in January.

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What's this? It had already started the permitting process?

But wait, there's more!

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It's a model house, so no one will be living in it.

Liam Dillon reports for Politico:

But Bass didn’t mention the family that would be moving back into the finished property.

That’s because there isn’t one.

A homebuilding company, Thomas James Homes, owns the parcel. Before the fire, it sought permits to bulldoze the vacant home on the site and build a new one. The fire took care of the demolition. The new house isn’t planned as a place to live, but rather will serve as a model property for what the company could build for Palisades residents who’d lost their homes.

Reaction to Bass’ celebration was swift. Wildfire survivors called the mayor’s announcement tone deaf and claimed the project shouldn’t count as a wildfire rebuild. By the next morning, Bass had deleted her social media posts touting the development.

Unbelievable.

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You get what you vote for, and this is what Californians keep voting for.

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