A single committee vote just unlocked millions in relief for Palisades Fire survivors. If the full council follows through, Los Angeles will waive every city permit fee for rebuilding—an admission of failure and a lifeline all at once.
The Budget and Finance Committee sent a blunt message on Tuesday: Los Angeles will not profit from its own failures. By advancing a resolution to waive all city permit fees for Palisades Fire victims, the panel moved one step away from forcing displaced families to pay for the privilege of rebuilding homes the city could not protect.
What the waiver actually covers
- Plan-check, building, and demolition permits
- Septic, electrical, and mechanical approvals
- Historic-review and coastal-zone exemptions where applicable
- Administrative surcharges that can top $15,000 on a 3,000-square-foot home
The measure applies retroactively to any Palisades Fire survivor who has already pulled a permit and prospectively to every owner who files within the next three years. City analysts peg the forgone revenue at roughly $12 million—a rounding error in a $13 billion budget, but a life-changing sum for households already underwater on insurance payouts.
Why this was never a slam dunk
City Hall’s first instinct after the January blaze was to offer fee “deferrals,” not waivers. Homeowners would still owe the money—just later. Councilmember Traci Park torpedoed that idea, circulating a memo that called deferrals “a second disaster” and marshaling support from Westside neighborhood councils, the Building Trades Council, and even the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, which rarely backs giveaways. The coalition flipped seven colleagues in 10 days, forcing Tuesday’s vote.
The backstory: a city caught short
The Palisades Fire destroyed 1,124 structures after the LAFD failed to pre-deploy specialized brush rigs and water tenders ran dry because hydrants drew from a reservoir that had been drained for earthquake retrofits. An internal Fire Department audit confirmed those lapses last month, giving Park the moral leverage to argue that fee collection would amount to “charging arson surcharges to the arsoned.”
Political ripples beyond the burn scar
The waiver vote lands as Mayor Karen Bass struggles to deliver on a separate promise: repealing Measure ULA, the “mansion tax” that skims 4–5.5 percent from commercial and residential sales above $5 million. Real-estate lobbyists warn that stacking ULA on top of fire losses will crater Westside land values, drying up the very property-tax revenue Bass needs to fund homeless services. Expect council progressives to trade their ULA repeal votes for even broader fire-recovery concessions—possibly extending the fee waiver to Eaton Fire victims in the Valley.
What happens next
- Full council vote: scheduled for January 28. Passage requires only eight of 15 members; 11 have already signed on as co-authors.
- City Administrative Officer report: must certify that the waiver will not trigger a deficit; preliminary numbers show a $4.3 million surplus in the building-and-safety fund.
- Implementation ordinance: if adopted, the city clerk has 72 hours to notify every affected property owner by mail and email.
- State backstop: California’s Department of Housing and Community Development has pledged to back-fill any shortfall in permit-revenue bonds, removing the last fiscal obstacle.
The bottom line
Los Angeles is about to trade $12 million in short-term revenue for hundreds of millions in long-term tax base—and for the priceless currency of public trust. If the full council seals the deal, the city will finally admit that its own mistakes lit the fuse, and that the bill for recovery belongs to City Hall—not to the people who lost everything.
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