The article spotlights developer Akhilesh Jha, who exploits Sacramento’s heavy-handed state laws—like density bonuses and builders’ remedies—to bulldoze single-family homes and force massive apartment projects onto unwilling Los Angeles neighborhoods. In Harvard Heights, he pushed through a towering 33-unit complex despite fierce local opposition, only by dangling a few low-income units and overriding city height and parking rules. Similar battles rage in Woodland Hills and Sylmar, where communities see their character erased by these top-down mandates.

From our perspective at Our Neighborhood Voices, this proves exactly why local control matters. Sacramento’s one-size-fits-all overrides let developers steamroll community plans, yet they deliver precious little truly affordable housing—just token set-asides amid luxury or market-rate builds. These laws create conflict and resentment without solving the crisis, showing that real solutions come from cities tailoring housing to their own needs, not from distant bureaucrats dictating terms.