Five minutes after I read a fresh online item about the Knesset passing the National Planning Committees Act (popularly known as the Vandal Act, based on a word play that defies resistance), I stepped out my front door and found an advertising flier, very glossy, hanging from the doorknob. The timing could not have been appropriate.
The note on my door advertised the grand opening of a luxury full-service apartment development for tourists in Baka, the neighborhood next to mine in Jerusalem. Real estate that could have been used for affordable housing for young families will instead generate high profits through rental to wealthy tourists. In the off-season, the building is likely to be mostly empty. The cost to the developers has already been figured into the rent; the social cost to the neighborhood will be paid by the neighbors.
The Vandal Act (Hebrew text of the bill as it left committee here) provides for establishment of one national and six district committees to approve housing plans under an accelerated process. Benjamin Netanyahu – the man with three homes – claims that the bill will get dread government bureaucracy out of the way and speed construction of new homes. But those bureaucratic barriers that Bibi so despises include the process of opening a plan to public discussion and objections on social and environmental grounds. A much more realistic analysis of the law by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, Bimkom – Planners for Planning rights, and the Association for Distributive Justice, states that establishing the committees