Rahasia Mahjong Wins 3 Pola Gacor Profit Besar Mahjong Wins 3 Top508 Pola Bandar Terbongkar Auto Cuan Strategi Menang Mahjong Wins 3 Pola Jitu Top508 Pola Rahasia Mahjong Wins 3 Top508 Teknik Auto Profit Pola Mahjong Wins 3 2024 Trik Ampuh Raih Profit Top508 Pola Mahjong Wins 3 Top508 Buka Rahasia Bandar Menang Mudah RTP Mahjong Wins 3 Top508 Pola Bandar Paling Akurat Rahasia Menang Mahjong Wins 3 Top508 Pola Terbukti Gacor Pola Mahjong Wins 3 Top508 Terbaru untuk Profit Maksimal Strategi Mahjong Wins 3 Top508 Bocoran Pola Terbaik Rahasia Mahjong Wins 3 Pola Gacor Menang Besar Tanpa Rugi Strategi Ampuh Menang Mahjong Wins 3 Pola Jitu Top508 Pola Mahjong Wins 3 Terbaik Rahasia Sistem Bandar Top508 Terungkap Pola Mahjong Wins 3 Top508 Kalahkan Strategi Bandar Pola Mahjong Wins 3 Rahasia Sukses Menang Besar Top508 Jackpot Mahjong Wins 3 Top508 Pola Rahasia Menang Konsisten Mahjong Wins 3 Gampang Menang Pola Terbaik Pemain Pro Top508 Pola Mahjong Wins 3 Paling Gacor Rahasia Keuntungan Besar Top508 Pola Mahjong Wins 3 Paling Akurat Rahasia Auto Profit Top508 Cara Ampuh Menang Mahjong Wins 3 Pola Gacor Maximal Cuan Top508 Mahjong Wins 3 Akun Pro Server Kamboja Modal 100K Jadi 12 Juta Mahjong Wins 3 Rekor Top508 Akun Pro Server Indonesia Modal 100K Raih 14 Juta Kejutan Mahjong Wins 3 Andi Ubah 100K Jadi 18 Juta Mahjong Wins 3 Jackpot Top508 Akun Pro Server Indonesia Siska Raih 11 Juta Mahjong Wins 3 Budi Untung 13 Juta Top508 Akun Pro Server Kamboja Mahjong Wins 3 Jackpot 17 Juta Akun Pro Server Indonesia Mahjong Wins 3 On Fire Bayu Untung 16 Juta Top508 Kamboja Rizky Untung 19 Juta Mahjong Wins 3 Akun Pro Server Indonesia Top508 Geger Mahjong Wins 3 Fajar Untung 10 Juta Akun Pro Server Kamboja Mahjong Wins 3 Meledak Dinda Untung 13 Juta Top508 Akun Pro Server Indonesia
  • pagcor slot
  • pagcor slot online
  • tol777
  • slot tol777
  • tol777
  • slot tol777
  • tol777
  • slot tol777
  • rom88
  • slot rom88
  • Squatters’ Blues

    jesus esteban A8VgJZDaMFQ unsplash

    Unlike homelessness and poverty, squatting isn’t one of California’s most pressing – and well-known – problems. But it is one of the more squatter-friendly states, with squatters needing to live in a home for only five consecutive years before staking their claim, as long as property taxes are current. That’s the shortest required occupancy period in the country, and with the nation’s largest homeless population, things could go bad in a hurry.

    “California homeowners are facing an ongoing squatter crisis across Los Angeles,” Newsweek reported in May. Based on comments from Daniel Yukelson, executive director of the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles, Newsweek said that “thousands of homes are being invaded by squatters who live in them without paying rent, and many cause major property damage or even physical injury to property owners.”

    And it can happen in the best neighborhoods, even in the famed 90210 Zip Code, the “​​most exclusive” in the country – LeBron James’ neighborhood. “Just a few doors down from James’ home,” the Los Angeles reports, “a group ‘squatting’ in 1316 Beverly Grove Place” had been “throwing parties reminiscent of Burning Man” in the quiet neighborhood “at all hours of the night,” complete with DJs and rave lights. The squatters were eventually evicted, but it was a long, uneasy process.

    There are roughly 1.2 million empty homes in California, second only to Florida, where 1.7 million are unoccupied. California also has the fifth-lowest vacancy rate. At the same time, no other state has as many homeless (more than 181,000), nor does any other contribute to the problem quite like California – 28% of the country’s homeless are in this state.

    If homeless advocates, those activists who make up the homeless-industrial complex and made California’s cities hostages of the homeless while normalizing their behavior, ever began to direct the unhoused to vacant homes, then trouble inevitably will follow. Don’t think that they would never do that. These are people who have little invested in civil society. Their mission is not to administer a remedy for homelessness and the factors that drive it but to empower the homeless in their wretched conditions, as if they are endangered species who cannot be moved from their natural habitat.

    If the advocates are willing to protect the “rights” of their “clients” to occupy and defile public spaces, and they are, then appropriating private property is not a giant leap.

    To their credit, lawmakers passed and Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation, Senate Bill 602, that is intended to curtail squatting.

    But is it enough? Apparently, some don’t believe it is. Just a few weeks ago, almost a year after SB 602 became law, a company that buys homes with cash was still warning property owners that “​​squatters in California possess a range of rights and privileges that are far broader than those in many other states.”

    Rather than always looking within, maybe California could look outward to Georgia, which has had one of the worst squatting problems in the country. The case count there “jumped from three in 2017 to 50 in 2021 – to 198 in 2023,” says the Pacific Legal Foundation. In response, legislators passed a law that sharply expedites the process. The repossession time has been cut from eight months to 10 days.

    “Homeowners,” says the Pacific Legal Foundation, “have expressed delight with the Georgia Squatter Reform Act.” Kyle Sweetland, PLF’s strategic research manager, suggests that “other states should follow Georgia’s lead.”

    It could happen here. The Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles recounted in May “a recent lobbying visit to Sacramento,” in which its “delegation discussed the need for anti-squatter legislation with approximately a dozen legislators.” Several, said Daniel Yukelson, the group’s executive director, “expressed interest in investigating the matter further for the 2024-2025 legislative session.”

    If it doesn’t happen, expect to see more “squatter busters” at work. They “barge in on squatters” while armed, says Yukelson, or wait for them to leave before moving in themselves. “Their plan: live with the squatter, install cameras, dirty the bathrooms, take the ‘best’ spot on the couch, eat the squatter’s food, and make things uncomfortable for the squatters until they eventually leave.”

    They are more effective, less costly and faster than the legal process. But sometimes situations turn ugly, even violent. If lawmakers want to avoid future carnage, they need to enact civil measures to better protect property rights.

    Kerry Jackson is the William Clement Fellow in California Reform at the Pacific Research Institute.

     

     

    Nothing contained in this blog is to be construed as necessarily reflecting the views of the Pacific Research Institute or as an attempt to thwart or aid the passage of any legislation.

    Scroll to Top