Ohio Pastor Criminally Charged for Letting People Sleep In Church. Again.
Plus: California's landmark law ending single-family-only zoning is struck down, Austin, Texas, moves forward with minimum lot size reform, and the pro-natalist case for pedestrian infrastructure.

Happy Tuesday and welcome to another edition of Rent Free. This week's stories include:
- A Los Angeles court overturns the California law ending single-family-only zoning and allowing duplexes everywhere.
- Is the cure for screen-addicted kids more pedestrian infrastructure?
- Fresh off legalizing triplexes everywhere, Austin, Texas, considers shrinking minimum lot sizes.
But first, our lead story about yet another case of zoning laws versus the Good Samaritan.
Ohio Pastor Criminally Charged for Sheltering the Homeless…Again
An Ohio pastor is once again being brought up on criminal charges for sheltering people in his church.
On Friday, the city of Bryan, Ohio refiled charges against Chris Avell, the pastor of Dad's Place, for fire and zoning code violations related to his operation of a 24-hour "Rest and Refresh" ministry at the church's downtown building.
The city argues the church's 24-hour ministry is in fact just a residential homeless shelter, which is not allowed at the commercially zoned property. The fire code violations make it not only unauthorized but also unsafe. Each violation, if not corrected, is punishable by a $1,000 daily fine.
You are reading Rent Free from Christian Britschgi and Reason. Get more of Christian's urban regulation, development, and zoning coverage.
"We appreciate that Dad's Place has tried to help people in need," said Bryan Mayor Carrie Schlade in a statement. "But putting these people's lives at risk in the case of a fire or other dangers is not helping them."
"Here we are with the pastor facing new criminal charges for caring for people inside his church," First Liberty Institute attorney Jeremy Dys, who is representing Dad's Place, told Reason in an interview on Friday.
Reason covered Avell's case back in January when he was first charged with 18 criminal counts for similar zoning and fire code violations.
In response to those charges, Dad's Place filed a federal lawsuit against the city, arguing that its sheltering of people in the church is part of its religious mission and therefore protected by the First Amendment and federal law that safeguards religious land uses from zoning restrictions.
"It may not look like St. Paul's cathedral, but it is in every sense a church," said Dys.
Since Avell was first charged, a federal district court judge mediated an agreement between the city and the church. The city agreed to drop charges against Avell in February and also to hold off on any enforcement actions against the church. In exchange, Dad's Place agreed to cease "residential operations" and fix all fire code violations the city had identified at the property.
"We removed the washer and drier they asked us to, we removed the stove they asked us to. We stopped cooking with anything that would splatter grease," says Dys. "We've been doing whatever we can do to be reasonable with the city. And what we're met with is inspections at 5 am by the Fire Chief."
According to Dad's Place's court filings, after an early March inspection at 5:30 a.m. by Bryan's fire chief, the city issued a new demand for sprinklers to be installed at the church. That visit also found people sleeping in the church, which the city contends violates its agreement to cease "residential operations."
Dys says that Dad's Place has gone out of its way to cease residential operations at the church, including by moving a congregant and volunteer who experienced regular seizures out of the church and into an apartment rented by the church. The man died earlier this month after having a seizure while alone in his apartment.
The city contends in a press release that the Dad's Place unauthorized shelter is taxing police resources and that police have been called to the property 51 times over the past year.
Dys says that Dad's place and the city will have a status conference in the federal lawsuit today. Avell will have a hearing on the latest criminal charges sometime in May.
(You can read some of Reason's past coverage of the problems zoning creates for homeless shelters here.)
Los Angeles Judge Rules California Law Ending Single-Family Zoning Unconstitutional
California's landmark law ending single-family-only zoning has been struck down by a Los Angeles Superior Court judge as irrational, overreaching meddling in cities' local control.
S.B. 9 was one of several Yes in My Backyard (YIMBY) bills to pass in 2021 with the goal of liberalizing local zoning restrictions on "missing middle" housing like duplexes and garden apartments.
The law requires localities to "ministerially approve" duplexes and lot splits in single-family-zoned neighborhoods. That means local governments don't have the discretion to say no to these projects, nor can they subject them to public hearings and endless processes either.
After the law passed, several Southern California cities sued to block it because it interfered with their power as charter cities to set their own zoning laws.
The California Constitution gives charter cities the power to govern their own "municipal affairs" and restricts the state government from interfering in their home rule.
On the other hand, the California Constitution allows the state government to preempt local laws and set policy on matters of statewide concern. The Legislature also has pretty wide discretion to decide what's a matter of statewide concern.
The text of S.B. 9 explicitly declares that "ensuring access to affordable housing is a matter of statewide concern and not a municipal affair," so this would seem to be a pretty open-in-shut case in favor of the law's constitutionality.
Not so, says Los Angeles Superior Judge Curtis Kin.
In his ruling, he argues that S.B. 9's reference to "affordable housing" means specifically below-market-rate housing—where rents or sales prices are deed-restricted to be affordable to low-income people.
Because S.B. 9 doesn't require new duplexes legalized by the law to be below-market-rate, the law's zoning preemptions are an irrational means of creating more below-market-rate housing, reasoned Kin.
The law's potential to increase housing production generally can't save it either, he said.
"The Legislature cannot rely on a potential, eventual decrease in prices resulting from increased housing supply to demonstrate that S.B. 9 would increase the supply of affordable (i.e. below-market rate) housing," wrote Kin.
The ruling has provoked sharp criticism from some California housing law scholars.
"While there are many state laws that use the term 'affordable housing' to refer to below-market-rate housing, this is not one of them. There are also many state laws that are intended to promote relatively affordable market-rate homes, of which this is quite obviously one," says Christopher Elmendorf, a law professor at the University of California Davis Law School.
If the Legislature's obvious intent was to create only below-market-rate affordable housing with S.B. 9, it would have included below-market-rate mandates in the law, says Elmendorf.
Other California courts have also endorsed the notion that state preemptions designed to increase market-rate housing production can further the state's interest in affordable housing.
The 2nd District Court of Appeals—of which the Superior Court of Los Angeles is a part—recently rejected a lawsuit arguing that S.B. 10 (another zoning reform law passed alongside S.B. 9) wasn't addressing statewide affordable housing concerns because it didn't mandate new housing be below-market rate.
"There is a direct link between the affordability of housing and the supply of housing. Under basic economic principles, prices go up when demand exceeds supply," reads the appeals court decisions. "The increase in housing prices at all levels reasonably supports the Legislature's finding that there is a shortage of housing at all of those levels."
Elmendorf says the best interpretation of Kin's ruling is that it was intended to get the Legislature to more affirmatively state that its intent is to spur the production of market-rate housing.
"The judge wants to say to the legislature, 'Did you mean it?'" he says. "It's a way of testing the Legislature's stamina for promoting market-rate development in single-family-home neighborhoods."
Kin's ruling currently applies to only the five cities that sued the state over S.B. 9. As a superior court opinion, it can't be cited as precedent either. In that sense, its legal impact is modest.
The practical impact of the ruling will be modest as well. Despite the fanfare surrounding S.B. 9's passage, the law has produced few new duplexes. A primary reason is that local governments have proven adept at blocking duplexes by other means—often by charging duplex builders high fees or by expanding historical protections to more neighborhoods.
A silver lining in Kin's decision for housing supply advocates is that if it does force the Legislature to amend S.B. 9 to make it clear that the state wants more market-rate housing, that would create an opportunity to close additional loopholes in the law.
The Pro-Kid Case for Walkable Neighborhoods?
Is America's lack of walkable suburbs helping to create today's "anxious generation" of helicopter-parented, screen-addicted children? Yes, writes Timothy Carney in The Wall Street Journal:
Today's kids roam less than in earlier generations. Overscheduling and parents' safety fears are part of the reason, but it's also true that American suburbs built in the past 30 years are less walkable and bikeable than older neighborhoods.
Walkability is seen mainly as a concern for urbanites, who want to be able to stroll to a cocktail bar, grocery store or museum. But walkability in suburban neighborhoods is a far more important issue. It requires building sidewalks, bike trails, playgrounds, and crosswalks that are safely usable by kids. We know that is possible because much of the world already does it.
There's probably a lot to this idea. It's also true that federal spending on pedestrian and bike infrastructure has quintupled since the 1990s, right when teen walking began its precipitous fall.
It's possible/probable that much of the money paid for pedestrian infrastructure that fell short of real walkability. One could also argue federal pedestrian infrastructure spending is trying to make up for suburban communities that weren't built with walking in mind and are hard to reserve engineer into perambulatory paradises today.
Adopting zoning reforms that allow developers to create denser, mixed-use areas where there are people and things to walk to would conceivably add more walkable whimsy to kids' lives. Or it could just confirm that it is the screens, not the built environment, that's the problem.
Austin Moves Forward With Minimum Lot Size Reform, Transit-Oriented Development
Today, the Austin Planning Commission is scheduled to vote on a proposal to allow developers to construct taller, denser buildings near the city's planned light rail line if they include below-market-rate units in their projects.
This follows the Planning Commission's vote last week to recommend shrinking minimum lot sizes in residential areas to just 2,000 square feet, down from the existing 5,000 square feet.
The minimum lot size reforms are part of the city's HOME Phase Two reforms. Late last year, Austin passed HOME Phase One reforms which allowed developers to build up to three units on residential parcels citywide.
The Austin City Council is expected to vote on the HOME Phase Two reforms in mid-May.
Quick Links
- Bernie Sanders' old stomping ground of Burlington, Vermont, recently approved a suite of zoning reforms that allow four units of housing on residential parcels citywide, and taller, denser buildings in some zones.
- Marshfield, Massachusetts, voters rejected a plan to allow multifamily housing in more areas of the community, as required by the state's MBTA Communities Law. Milton, Massachusetts, similarly rejected an upzoning plan mandated by the law and is now being sued by the state.
- There's a pretty straightforward story one can tell about how zoning and burdensome local approval processes drive up the costs of housing by limiting new construction. A January 2024 paper from several notable housing economists argues that land use regulations also drive up construction costs by reducing the size of home-building firms. Smaller firms invest less in innovative technologies and can't take advantage of greater economies of scale, they argue.
- After seeing legislation limiting its authority to say no to new housing pass last year, the California Coastal Commission is tooling up. Politico reports that they are hiring more lobbyists and legislative staff to fight bills that would make it easier to build in coastal zones. Read some of Reason's past coverage of the Coastal Commission's anti-housing record here.
- The Wall Street Journal's Editorial Board argues federal housing regulators' new energy standards will drive up the costs of homebuilding.
- Another win for the "supply and demand" theory of housing. Home sellers are slashing prices in Florida and Texas because of excess inventory.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Why should fire codes be overlooked when bums are involved?
When 'fire codes' start pretending problematic AFCI outlets are more important than property rights or having shelter itself?
If I have to follow the stupid rules, why should hobos get away with stuff?
Neither should have to follow "the stupid rules".
The "stupid rules" in question apply only to businesses that are open to the public or employ people outside the family. The intent is to allow for easy egress with one simple motion to open a door. They only are applied in municipalities that approve a fire code and it's enforcement. A lot of places don't bother or create so many exceptions for historic buildings and such that the code may as well not exist. We have a lot of that around here. Deadwood is a nightmare to bring buildings up to marginal life safety guidelines.
A church is a public building and one easy motion for egress at every marked exit is important, even if there is no legal reason to do so. If it is being used for overnight occupancy then it should be up to the codes for said buildings even if the law isn't enforced or doesn't exist. It's just a good idea. Failing to do so endangers the lives of occupants.
Fire Codes are a lot like Building Codes. They typically are just good ideas to implement no matter what the law requires. I've seen a lot of homes in places without any enforced building or fire codes and they are very dangerous to the occupants. People can chose to live there if they wish of course. However when you are dealing with a public space you are endangering more than your own life. While fines and other such crap are not libertarian, endangering lives by putting them in unsafe conditions show a lack of responcible property management.
It's just amazing anyone survived those horribly dangerous pre-building codes era!!! /s Heck they might of even had houses back then that didn't cost 30+ years of straight labor.
"Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."
I'm not saying the fines are reasonable or right. I'm saying the codes exist because in the past houses and businesses were built badly and people died because of it. So the industry has learned from those mistakes and has been updating the codes as time goes by, each time learning from the mistakes of the last generation.
Following the codes, even if you aren't being forced, is just common sense.
I don’t think bureaucracy knows how to “learning from the mistakes of the last generation”. I think free-people who actually know something besides how to dictate with guns can do that though. Enter a whole slew of free-people creating standards that literally makes the internet work without the ‘gun’ dictators. Enter OSI and UL etc, etc, etc… Then contrast to ‘government’ competence.
Never-mind the very process of learning anything is by trial and error. When you 'gun' those processes away you literally take-away any learning than can happen and end up 'indoctrinated' and brainwashed.
“Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.”
Indeed. But those who are coming in off the street are not necessarily free to choose their safety/liberty, or qualified to determine what is safe/unsafe. A person offering housing to others should be held to account for standards of safety unless that person is also living in the same space/conditions, in which case he/she/it is sharing in the risk.
You're not wrong. Those homeless people are doing exactly that. Trading their liberty to wander the world without anything tying them down for the security of a locked building with a roof overhead and a comfortable bed.
Wow. That was a big circle of crap. It's not the one's "off the street" trying to set (or expecting) certain safety standards and it's not the "owners" responsibility to meet 'bureaucrats' (3rd party) standards.
It is every individuals self-responsibility to either accept or deny the standards of which they enter choosing to sleep there of their own free-will. Otherwise 'bureaucrats' would be blamed for having sub-standard living conditions inside trash cans instead of the homeless person who chose to sleep there.
Bryan is a small city. Undoubtedly there are unzoned townships, like the one I live in, nearby. The pastor should put up a pole building on land in a nearby unzoned township and stop bothering the good people of the town.
I note that the Reason article gives no time at all to the complaints of residents and business owners around the church, and they definitely do exist, though you have to search up some local papers to find any willing to cover them and their concerns.
He's being a nuisance and acting as if he doesn't have to follow the same rules everyone else in town does. The entitled little shit should get out of town.
If that be the case the neighbors need to file reports against the homeless that are being a nuisance not the outfit itself.
He's on a mission from gawd. He doesn't need any earthly permissions.
Does he own the place or not? Who's the 'owner' suppose to seek permission from to allow guests to spend the night? His parents?
Odds are the pastor does not own the building. Typically such religious organizations have a kind of board of directors who "own" the property, make decisions on its use and any upgrades they will make. My father served on such a board of directors of the church our family attended.
He’s being a nuisance and acting as if he doesn’t have to follow the same rules everyone else in town does. The entitled little shit should get out of town.
At the very least, his operation should not be tax-exempt. Nor should any church/religious facility.
According to their schedule, people are in that church every day but Saturday for religious services, prayer groups, Bible study, etc. Wonder why that's not a fire code violation?
My guess would be that it's an assembly space for church service purposes, which has a much larger occupant load than your typical shelter. So, having people stay there in a shared sleeping room situation wouldn't necessarily be a problem as far as egress capacity. However, there are different fire separation requirements between assembly and residential (sleeping or dwelling unit) occupancies, which might trigger something.
It is/was a fire code violation. Thus the stove and washer/dryer were removed.
Once again, this was covered previously. The area is zoned light commercial which means they actually can house people but, as indicated, they still have to conform to other laws and residential requirements. That is, you can't just install a propane grill in a kitchen the size of a closet with no other egress and invite people to show up and cook there or purchase a property next to an elementary school or daycare, declare yourself a Church, and then invite a bunch of pedophiles over to hand out and leer at the children.
It would be nice that if, of all places, Reason could avoid this level of fundamentally morally-bankrupt dishonesty, but that's not the universe we live in. We got Reason "Don't Say Gay"/"Transgender Bathroom Panic"/"Borders are just imaginary social constructs"/"Our Bible says Good Samaritans help to block speech they find offensive" Magazine.
Change the name from Reason to Virtue-Signals.
Clearly, because "reason" has been replaced with "emotion".
Some places allow a door to be locked in a way that it cannot be opened from the inside as long as the building isn't occupied.
With small groups in for short periods at scheduled times and an office person on site such locks are fine. But putting people in overnight is not safe.
Sure they are homeless people and the church isn't likely to get sued by their families when they die in a fire started by some idiot smoking in a bathroom but basic human decency should implore them to change the door locks and anything else the fire department recommends to make those people safe.
There's nothing safer than living under a rock! /s
Stone buildings are much more fire resistant than wood that is true. But furnishings typically will burn so taking precautions even then is a good idea.
Do you think all those homeless people have stone building and furnishings? You're trying to make a solution that isn't in the supplies.
Reason runs cover for a Pastor running cover for homeless people harassing local employees and businesses... again.
Also, why should others have to shoulder the burden to make the pastor feel better?
Christians are not supposed to force others to pay for their beliefs.
Is anyone who provides shelter a 'burden' on everyone else? What do you think this pastor is the 'government' out doing 'armed-theft' on everyone?
There is a reason hotels are not built in residential areas. The increase in traffic and the noise associated with such buildings make them unpopular neighbors. Churches are typically built in residential areas and are good neighbors because they don't make noise or traffic after a certain hour.
Nothing says a "good neighbor" like running off the "unpopular neighbor" with a Gov-Gun. Maybe such temperamental neighbors need to setup an HOA so at least they have some agreement between who the "unpopular neighbor" is they want to run-out or purchase all the property they want control of.
Ok, in libertopia zoning and building codes would not exist and everything would be buyer beware.
But that's not the situation we are in. We have zoning, building codes and fire codes. We have a long ways to go to get rid of those thing. Probably about the same time as we get to privatize the roads. People want their property values protected. That's why we have zoning and code enforcement. As such we need to deal with the reality of the situation and not the dreams of what it will be like when we become a major party.
"People want their property values protected." ?
... or more to the point ...
People want to control property they don't want to pay for and really like using criminal Gov-Gun gangs to take interest in that property from the one who labored endlessly to purchase it.
If that was not the case; They'd be willing to trade some of their own property interest (hut-hum: HOA) or flat out buy the property they wanted control of and Gov-Guns wouldn't be part of that equation. TAKING/STEALING is the very purpose of those 'Guns'.
It all goes back to the mentality of "The [WE] mob RULES!"
ok, the motives of this “pastor” are good and pristine. (sigh) But why would the code requirements for a the “good pastor’s” homeless hotel be any different than a for-profit hotel? Are the risks different? The hazards? the nuisance to the neighborhood?
I AM a Christian and this pastor is wrapping himself in clothes of virtue and demanding the the rules not apply to him. Bullshit.
But you're assuming that I am trying to give this one single instance a pass all on it's own. That's not what I'm after. I'm after CUTTING/LIMIT an oppressive government that always seems to sprout excuses for it's oppression every-time some group wants to control something they have no earned interest in.
"Each violation, if not corrected, is punishable by a $1,000 daily fine." Um... I'm not seeing the part where that money is forked over to the heinous victims as, you know, restitution or reparations or something. Was that part uncorrected?
It’s a church. Rent you gong to scream about ‘mystical bigots’?
If religious people are minding their own business we don't typically give a shit about them. It's when they get all pushy and try to force their ideas on others that we don't like them.
"they are hiring more lobbyists and legislative staff to fight bills that would make it easier to build in coastal zones." To Jell with casting a bunch of libertarian spoiler votes giving the cartel politicians notice their jobs are in jeopardy. That's the difference between polls and lobbying and actually voting for a healthy Libertarian platform valued by men and women alike. Only one of these alternatives packs clout and repeals bad laws.
I don’t think you have any real idea what constitutes a ‘libertarian platform’. Since you sound like a far left Democrat anti religious bigot.
I think you are fishing for oppression. You just can't stand it if someone doesn't hate you for something.
"But putting these people's lives at risk in the case of a fire or other dangers is not helping them."
Yeah... Rocks don't burn. Go live under a rock! /s
Only political bureaucrats get away with such stupidity.
Only the 'Guns' poking at you will save you! /s
There is not just a risk to the illegal residents of the good pastors homeless hotel. When it catches fire, it will throw cinders into the air to start other roofs on fire. The outside walls in a city downtown will heat the walls of adjacent buildings to the flash point.
My father, who often sounded pretty libertarian, said my rights ended at the end of my neighbors nose. Fire Codes are intended to keep you from lighting your NEIGHBORS house on fire.
Okay. Explain in reasonable context that most would agree with how this example specifically is so much of a fire risk to the NEIGHBORS that it will "probably" cause a massive city fire in which the pastor wouldn't be able to be held accountable for it?
That's right; The common-sense you claim has no bearing.
The mentality behind your argument is to take away Liberty “just in case” a crime might happen somewhere, anywhere just to be ‘safe’. It’s a pre-mature prosecution for a crime that has not been committed. Frankly; It’s reasoning goes right along with the drug war. Take the Liberty away “just in case” a crime follows.
I’d prefer to keep Liberty and charge crimes when and only when they actually happen. Not sell it out to pre-emptive dictation. Or at the very least address the pre-emptive strike with some amount of justification instead of whatever excuse can be made up.
"But putting these people's lives at risk in the case of a fire or other dangers is not helping them."
"And don't even get me started about putting children's lives at risk in the case of a public-school shooting!"
To say nothing of the recurring danger of a public-school shooting by a GIRL perp!
Lanny Friedlander was prescient. Today's version would be: "Kill a commie for Christ," cries one side. "Off a fascist pig for Mohammed," cries the other. Religious credulity and its attendant social toleration have really come a long way since 1970.
Poor Hank, he passionately hates Xtians but he's all for indigent flop houses POing the plebs. This is going to be a tough one.
Being a leftist (Hank is definitely a leftist, despite his gibbering to the contrary), Hank is capable of simultaneously holding two diametrically opposed positions. Look at the preponderance of hebrews that still vote democrat.
Surely by now, the pastor has realized the need for 24 hour security from the city fire marshals, and 'employed' as many guards as needed on a night by night basis?
And if one or more of the guards falls asleep on the job, that is merely an HR issue to be resolved internally.
Just wondering - which fire code; commercial (the zoning), religious (the use), residential (the city claimed use)?
And why were these violations not noticed before?
Perhaps the fire marshal need to be fired/retrained.
And why were these violations not noticed before?
This was covered in the comments before. They weren't noticed prior because homeless drifters weren't harassing local businesses before. The actual homeless shelter that operates legally in the community actually observes other laws and doesn't unduly burden LEOs by have sex offenders sleeping in their cars in front of other peoples' businesses.
Once again, we're talking about Bryan-fucking-Ohio. None of us live there, why do we give a shit except for Reason to project their moral righteousness about freedom of religion, homelessness, and open borders while offloading the cost on the the plebs of Nowhere, USA? Pretty openly advertising that they don't really care about any of the principles involved as long as it scores a political W and doesn't cost them anything directly out of pocket.
Reason should be called Emotional Moral Preening.
Fire Code applies to commercial properties open to the public. It applies differently depending on what it is being used for. If you change the usage you need to change the hardware. That can include doors, locks, windows, fire extinguishers, sprinkler systems, lighting, emergency lighting... and a shit ton I can't remember now. I haven't done that work in over a decade so it's not fresh in my head.
Fire Codes apply to ALL buildings. Under the ICC what those actual codes ARE depends on the building use, occupancy, etc.
I am sure, if the city of Bryan was trying to be difficult (and they clearly are not) they could require the good pastor put in dressing rooms for all the sexes (lol), more bathrooms, showers, and more to meet the balance of the codes.
I slept through a ton of church I figured I’d pay later-later
Yeah, at first reading of the headline, it looks like many of the country’s white churches would be in danger of being closed.
Puts you ahead of all the Reason writers who, apparently, were somehow only awake for the parts where false prophets declared themselves morally righteous and not the admonitions against and acts that happened afterwards (and somehow forgot their entire take on the history classes they totally didn't sleep through where the Dark Ages didn't really exist and the worst parts of human history were when Christians got all self-righteous).
FFS, once again, even the Good Samaritan took the traveler to a pre-existing motel and put him up there at his own expense. He didn't found a tax-exempt homeless shelter and put out an "All Is Welcome" shingle.
Maybe the pastor should reframe this as a protest against homelessness, and if that doesn't work put up some end Gaza occupation signs.
Why would he do that? He's already got Reason pretending like they give a shit about his religion in order to negate property rights and erode borders.
When Ron D. did it with immigrants in MV it was horrible and despicable despite the fact that MV advertised they were a sanctuary city. When a pastor comes in and does it, unsolicited, to this no name community and Reason elevates it to a national-level news story under some auspice of pastors or churches or religions or good will (and totally not divisive, marxist, open-borders-corrosion-of-property-rights redistribution), it should just be assumed that they're in the right.
After all, What Would Jesus Do about the zoning laws in Bryan, OH?
The main reason there are fewer kids walking is that there are fewer kids.
All those abortions add up.
Imagine the poverty numbers of they all were alive today.
Not to mention the property tax rates!
Section 8 housing gets special rates.
Big victory for the NIMBY grifters who use Government to artificially inflate the prices of their real estate. Proposition 13 was the beginning of this. It is a major reason why people leave California. Yet the dishonest right wingers blame the one guy who has been trying to do something about this.
BS. Prop 13 has been a stabilizing force both for government and homeowners. Governments have been forced to diversify their sources of income - a good thing. Sales taxes are much more 'progressive' since rich people spend more.
https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/3497
Government hates God and demands that all worship be directed towards the State. All Hail Godvernment from whom all things flow!
Get permission before you help the homeless, get permission before you help the widows, get permission before you help the infirm. No kitchens, no beds, not bandages without asking the Almighty State permission first.
^THIS.
BS
Follow the building codes when you decide to run a hotel.
rephrased, "Get permission from the State before you offer *YOUR* own shelter to anyone else."
Yep; Right on target.
The only way to ensure availability of affordable housing is for there to be market rate affordable housing. If only below-market housing is affordable, that implies the existing affordable housing is insufficient to meet demand.