Editor’s Note: Mayor Terry Tornek’s office sent the following to our newsroom.
GUEST EDITORIAL

Mayor Terry Tornek (Photo – W.K.).
Two academics have written and now twice rewritten a study, A Tale of Two Cities III, describing Pasadena as “one of California’s most unequal cities”,… “now characterized by a widening income gulf, low wages for many, and high rents”.
By Terry Tornek
While this description is partly true, I feel compelled to comment on its distortions by their further statement that:
“This harsh reality is not simply the result of inevitable market forces. Decisions made in City Hall – particularly about jobs and housing – contribute to Pasadena’s widening income gap and the hardships encountered by a significant number of families.”
I am not an academic. I am a part-time elected official who has formerly served the City as Planning Director, Planning Commissioner and City Council member, as well as a long-time volunteer with an agency devoted to providing affordable housing, so I have some experience in these matters.
Pasadena’s “wide economic divide” is a fact. However, I would describe it as economic diversity, offering opportunity for mobility and social cohesion, not an embarrassment. Another academic who did a study of our minimum wage policy explains: “As is the case for many affluent cities, a local low-wage labor force provides services that mainly cater to the more affluent residents”.
Indeed, A TALE documents that low wage earners are concentrated in food services, hotels, health care, job sectors that are growing in Pasadena which was never a high wage manufacturing center.
Continuing, A TALE notes that during the period 2013-2017:
“The percentage of low-income households remains the same, while the percentage of households with incomes over $200,000 increased. This trend results in a hollowed out middle class.”
In fact, their study shows that the percentage of households with incomes over $200,000 increased by only 1.5% and the percentage of those earning between$25,000 and $200,000 decreased from 69.8% to 68%. So it is inaccurate to say that that the middle class is “hollowed out.” Besides, why are gains in income that move middle class households up the income ladder characterized as a bad thing for them, or for the City?
But the most outlandish conclusions of “A TALE” are related to housing. Housing prices, both homes and rentals are certainly increasing at a rapid rate. This is a regional phenomenon.
A TALE posits that “The housing developments approved by the City have exacerbated the situation” because they are market rate/ expensive. How? Their postulate is that “As the city adds more high-end housing, landlords in the existing rental units raise rents to get closer to the rents in the pricy new apartments”. Really? There is less support for this trickle-up theory than there is for the counter theory that adding more supply will exert downward pressure on rents (“filtering”) which the authors dismiss.
Worse, A TALE discounts Pasadena’s 17 year old inclusionary ordinance which requires that 15% of new units be allocated to low or moderate income households. This ordinance has in fact produced 577 new affordable units. They describe a “huge Loophole” which allow developers to pay a small in-lieu fee rather than providing the units on site. This “small fee” is actually hundreds of thousands of dollars per project and it has yielded up to $5 million in a single year which has been invested in producing other affordable units throughout the City.
Pasadena is an affluent city with a diverse population. This diversity is a strength and demonstrates that a non-homogeneous community can succeed. We must overcome very real problems that confront many mid-sized American cities, including rising rents, homelessness, violence and under-resourced public schools. However, the representation that Pasadena is Dickensian community with an uncaring government is intellectually dishonest and simply not true.









I have to call bull**** on this. In the past seven years I’ve seen the rent on my crappy one-bedroom apartment go up by 50%. My landlord has done nothing besides a few basic plumbing jobs — nothing that could possibly justify such an increase. The only logical conclusion is that they are gouging me.
We have to fight City Hall on this! Luckily we have some scrappy community groups in the fight like Pasadena Tenants Union (http://www.pasadenatenantsunion.com) and Pasadenans Organizing for Progress (https://poppasadena.org/).