After the Ashes: A Beautiful Altadena Podcast
We're back after a two-month hiatus. Between travel [https://beautifulaltadena.substack.com/p/a-note-from-portugal], Sacramento, and the landmark 18 months post Eaton Fire, there's a lot to catch up on. .Yes... we run long again. 18 Months Later This week marked 18 months since the fire and the latest numbers paint a sobering picture. Drawing from reporting by CBS News and Los Angeles Times [https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-05-07/nearly-40-of-la-fire-survivors-face-crisis-as-temporary-housing-funds-dry-up-survey-finds] on research from United Policyholders and Department of Angels, we look at where recovery really stands: • Nearly two-thirds of survivors remain displaced • About 100 homes rebuilt and nearly 1,800 structures under construction • Nearly 3,000 permits issued, including more than 1,200 ADUs • Nearly half of survivors have lost—or expect to lose—their insurance within the next year • Just 28% believe they'll fully recover • Nearly half of burned lots have reportedly been sold to developers We also revisit the rebuild itself, asking how many of those ADUs are intended for family use versus rentals, and unpack LA County's restrictive short term rental rules [https://planning.lacounty.gov/long-range-planning/short-term-rentals-ordinance/] and tax requirements. Who's Rebuilding Altadena and the Palisades? We look at the County's affordable housing initiatives, nonprofit acquisition strategies [https://laist.com/news/housing-homelessness/los-angeles-county-board-supervisors-community-opportunity-to-purchase-act-vote-apartment-building-sales-renters-landlords], and what increasingly looks like a nonprofit-led model for redevelopment. We also discuss what may be the biggest story no one is covering: a $250 million Private Activity Bond package in the Palisades for a newly created nonprofit called Uplifters to create affordable housing... with 65 $4 million dollar homes? If that's happening there... when does it come to Altadena? We revisit Shawna's Substack on rebuilding without an urban or economic development plan [https://beautifulaltadena.substack.com/p/the-growing-threat-to-altadenas-recovery]—and Steve's earlier Substack, The First Rumbles [https://altapolicywonk.substack.com/p/the-first-rumbles], which now feels increasingly prophetic. Community, Representation & Power The Eaton Fire Collaborative announced its Long Term Recovery Group (LTRG) Board appointments. Spoiler, neither Steve nor Shawna nor the Altadena fire survivors they campaigned for were elected, reinforcing concerns that recovery decisions continue to be driven by organizations rather than survivors. We also discuss: • PUSD tree removals [https://pasadenanow.com/main/pasadena-stop-work-order-alleges-pusd-removed-trees-without-required-permits] and the governance questions raised • Prang's tax promises and a local builder's cautionary tale • The heartbreaking CBS story [https://www.instagram.com/reel/DajPTO8PLdx/] of Mark Rodriguez, who died by suicide amid rebuilding struggles, and why these losses deserve to be counted. Legislation Watch The biggest story of the past several weeks has been SB 1090. We recap the community outrage [https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-07-01/altadena-residents-unify-behind-bill-preserving-single-family-lots], the press conference [https://www.pasadenastarnews.com/2026/06/30/as-altadena-rebuilds-state-housing-bill-fuels-debate-over-density/], the trip to Sacramento [https://substack.com/@beautifulaltadena/note/c-286526056?utm_source=notes-share-action&r=3i0ev1], and Beautiful Altadena's position. We support SB 1090—with the amendment, with the urgency clause, and without the 180-day vesting language for outside developers – not as it is currently written. We also discuss SB 9, SB 1123, SB 1116, and AB 2005, how they intersect, what's coming, and why the fight over Altadena's future is just beginning. The broader lesson? Our community still lacks infrastructure, including meaningful communications structure. Too many residents don't know what's being proposed or decided until it's already happening and too late. That's why Beautiful Altadena Alerts is coming soon. What's Next Shawna jokes that this chapter has been so demoralizing and depressing she now takes refuge in working on her dreaded inventory because even that's less soul crushing than this. (Be the dog, not the cone [https://www.instagram.com/reel/DY2b4ATgXB2/]). We close with the question that ties this entire episode together. Follow the money. Disaster recovery funding can become cover for a multitude of sins. It can be used to quietly fund priorities that have little to do with survivors—from legal settlements to nonprofit windfalls—while communities continue to struggle to understand where recovery dollars are actually going. We'll continue following the money, tracking the legislation, and connecting the dots in next week's episode. Small Biz Shout Out This week's shout goes to the growing list of Altadena small businesses that are open and need our support (and I'm still talking about espresso tonics!). Stop by Altadena Watch, where Shant is back, and make a point of shopping local whenever you can. Every dollar spent locally helps rebuild the community we love. Check out Austin Scott's newest mural at George's Convenience (formerly George's Liquor), where community painting days are underway. Rebuilding isn't just homes it's preserving the culture and spirit that make Altadena, Altadena. Don't forget Beautiful Altadena Office Hours, happening every Wednesday from 11am–1pm at rotating Altadena coffee shops. Check the Beautiful Altadena Instagram, Facebook page, or group for the latest schedule and locations.
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