Following four days of widespread scorn after attempting to block a new state law allowing duplexes on single-family lots by declaring itself a “mountain-lion habitat,” the wealthy Silicon Valley enclave of Woodside has backed down.
At the end of a town emergency Town Council meeting Sunday night, almost all of which was held in closed session to discuss potential litigation, city officials announced they would begin accepting applications for new duplexes.
— LA Times
Woodside’s tired attempt at circumventing two of the most important and proactive laws in favor of affordable housing in recent memory drew an incredible amount of ire online before being withdrawn Sunday night following a letter from Attorney General Rob Bonta warning the town that “there is no valid basis” to its broadly disproven claims as an animal sanctuary.
The scheme was first exposed in a local newspaper and then picked up by the LA Times in addition to several additional national outlets, which amplified the pressure on the town. Woodside is an 11-square-mile showcase for luxury architecture, frequently listing noteworthy real estate for top-of-market prices while playing host to the dream homes of tech titans like Google CEO Larry Ellison, whose 23-acre replica Japanese emperor’s palace complex was completed in 1999 at a cost of $200 million (or about $340 million today).
1 Comment
In re affordable housing in Woodside, CA....that's oxymoronic if i ever heard one. Woodside is probably the most expensive land in San Mateo County. Wouldn't it be better to build duplexes in an area where one could build a dozen of such projects for the cost of one lot in Woodside?
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