QuickTopic (SM) free message boards QuickTopic (SM) free message boards
Skip to Messages
  Sign In to access your topic list  |New Topic |My Topics|Profile
Upgrade to Pro   Customize, show pictures, add an intro, and more:   QuickTopic Pro...and check out QuickThreadSM
Topic: Antelope Valley (around Palmdale & Lancaster, California)
Views: 2060, Unique: 1632 
Subscribers: 9
What's
this?
Printer-Friendly Page
Subscribe to get & post, or stop messages by email Subscribe
About these ads
Who | When
Messagessort recent-bottom   
Post a new message
 
Ann  39
09-05-2009 08:01 AM ET (US)
Wow...I wonder how I came across this? Interesting to read Jenny from Dec. '05 suggest that it may be a good idea to move to Iowa if the changes in AV arent to your liking. I lived in Lancaster from 1959 to 1994, when I moved to Iowa. I moved away because my beloved hometown no longer exists. I don't mean it simply changed, grew...the place actually ceased to exist. Someone slapped the old town names on top of an entirely different world. It's a world of poverty, desperation and fear. I go back to visit because I have family there and once in awhile I still smell the wet alphalfa in the early morning. Sometimes the poppies are so incredible it's possible to mistake it for home. I mourn for the days when no one wanted anything to do with that God-forsaken windy, dusty little town in north L.A. County....but those of us who lived there wanted everything to do with each other.
Jordan  38
05-10-2009 12:01 AM ET (US)
Stop complaining about the crime, it's everywhere now. We live in Los Angeles county, get used 2 it. I agree with jenny. If u dont like this place, MOVE. Nobody told you u have 2 live here, and there are cheaper places to live elsewhere anyway. So don't let that be your excuse on why not to move. Another thing, as the world population goes up, the population of Lancaster/Palmdale goes up, Therefore more industrialization/ urbanization will be brought here, so stop complaining about the cities getting to big. Matter a fact, let them get bigger. If you really want to stay in the Antelope Valley, and not worry about crime and city life, MOVE TO MOJAVE, or some other unincorperated city, i'm tired of people that sit & complain and do nothing about it. If you dont know what to do, take my advice. (stay or leave). By the way mic, if I were you, I would live on the eastside. Why? There are 2 reasons why. 1) the west side of Palmdale is mainly on a faultline. dont let ur eyes fool you. check the geogrphy of the land. And 2) there is still crime on the westside, so just think about it, all the cops will pay attention to the east and not the west, the stations are in the eastern portion of the A.V. anyways, so think about how long it would take the cops to get to your residence if a crime were to have happen in your area. So to all the haters in the valley, God bless. ( written by a 16 year old who has some sense)
cbxweb  37
11-28-2008 05:11 AM ET (US)
It seems like the same thing is happening all over again here.
Rodolfo  36
12-15-2007 01:13 AM ET (US)
How much does a 1 acre lot cost nowadays in Antelope Valley?
anonymous  35
12-14-2007 07:55 PM ET (US)
Whats the crime rate in the AV? It can't be as bad as some other places right? I know there's a site that shows all the city's crime rates but I don't remember the site's name. I hear a lot from people that AV isn't a great place to live, but I sort of like it. One of the main arguments from these said people is the crime rate is high, but I'm sure it's not as bad as some places right?
Bill  34
12-06-2007 03:39 AM ET (US)
Old Palmdale Cemetery. Who owns it now? The City? I had been told that someone bought it for back taxs. I find that hard to beleve. I am very interested in this Cemetery as both of my Great Grandparents and my GrendParents are buried there.
Robert Tapia  33
06-18-2007 05:27 AM ET (US)
Subversion of Rural Innocence and/or The raping of the Antelope Valley

https://www.avenue-s.org/flashfraudalert.html
https://www.avenue-s.org/theponzi.html
https://www.avenue-s.org

and who gets to pay for their crimes? we all do!!!
Matt Jalbert  32
02-21-2007 03:51 PM ET (US)
Edited by author 02-21-2007 03:52 PM
I'm now blogging the Antelope Valley on Le Blog Exuberance:

http://leblog.exuberance.com/antelope_valley/

Photos and discussion of L.A. County's Antelope Valley. Feel free to comment on posts!
Matt Jalbert  31
12-30-2006 12:12 PM ET (US)
The web location of the original article has changed:

http://radicalurbantheory.com/mjalbert/AntelopeValley/

(rut.com is no longer used; update bookmarks to http://radicalurbantheory.com)
Dave  30
12-27-2006 07:37 PM ET (US)
A very intriguing article and discussion. I share sentiments about the amount of natural resources that are being consumed in the Valley, especially water. It seems like while the issues related to crime could be more prone to occur in certain areas, the problems with high water use may be caused in greater proportions by residents in different areas who are trying to maintain large lush green lawns in a dry, hot and windy environment. I don't think many people would argue policing dollars are better spent to control crimes against humanity rather than citing residents who waste water on their yards, but aside from that type of enforcement I wonder what it will take to reduce the amount of water that is being used to maintain the appearances of the "nicer" areas. I'd like to hear from others who live in the Valley of the efforts government or the water companies could take or messages that would provoke change in residents to curb the unusually high amounts of water that average families use.
Jenny McCallister  29
12-06-2006 09:05 PM ET (US)
All I can say is, amen Matthew.

I am so insulted. Have you people ever lived anywhere else, besides one room apartments housing TVs constantly tuned into MTV Cribs or Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous? There isn't a community in California with a population size and comparable individual income like ours that is any better off. Give me the name of a city that doesn't have a meth lab and gangsters in it that wasn't built up in the last five years and then you can complain to me about how the AV hasn't lived up to your ridiculously idealistic expectations. The AV isn't the ONLY PLACE that has changed since the 70s--the whole rest of the world is in the 21st century now. There are cops in OTHER so-called "NICER" areas and the sort of crime they deal with every day is the same.

My point is, compared to the rest of Southern California, it is NOT that bad. If you're counting on something like the Big Bad Earthquake of Doom to take you out, move to Iowa, to another less-than-ritzy location you can pick apart because you don't have anything better to moan about. If you don't like it, LEAVE.
   28
10-28-2006 04:54 AM ET (US)
Deleted by topic administrator 10-28-2006 01:30 PM
Matthew JalbertPerson was signed in when posted  27
10-10-2006 11:17 PM ET (US)
Deleted by author 12-30-2006 12:14 PM
Rodolfo  26
05-24-2006 03:27 AM ET (US)
I had purchased a 2.5-acre land in Avenue C 42nd Street West.
Could somebody provide me any details or development going on around that area?
Brandy  25
05-18-2006 06:37 PM ET (US)
I was born and raised in the Antelope Valley so, I have seen the changes first hand. Growing up in Palmdale in the 70's was fantastic, we not only knew our neighbors, we were friends! In the summer parents would sit outside on the front lawn together while all of us kid's would play baseball or football in the street.Palmdale has changed since then. The racial dynamic has changed, the tension is unbearable. The housing boom and the Urban Sprawl is not what scares me or makes me angry. It is the illegal dumping of trash, it is the Meth. labs, it is the 400 child molesters that have been relocated to th AV, and it is the racial anger that I feel when I am their. My husband and I moved to Arizona 4 years ago and we are now thinking about moving back, for the simple fact that both of our families still live there and most of our childhood friends are still there. BUT my question is, Is the AV making a turn for the better? Is crime down? Is something being done about the gangs, the dumping of trash? The 400 child molesters? The social unrest?
And how do I get involved to help clean up the city???????
mic  24
05-11-2006 11:58 PM ET (US)
Claudia,
I am moving to palmdale in a month- got a job in aero. I spent hours driving around Palmdale/lancaster and figured out a few things with the help of some of the locals that I know.
1) don't even look on the east side for your residence. That's where all the rif-raff is and all the crime. Just read the AV Press online, watch where the crimes occur, it is almost always on the east side.
2) W. Lancaster has some cute communities by the college, but be careful if you are buying not to get too close to the prison. Inmates families move near the prisions that they are at, and you probably don't want to live next to a murder or a child rapist's mom. You don't want that guy as a neighbor when he gets paroled.
3) W. Palmdale is the best. I like it because it is newer and it is prettier because it is closer to the mountains. I was there in february when there was snow very close on the mountains- absolutely gorgeous.
4) If you want to go all-out on the best communities they are the Rancho Vista area (most of these homes built from about 1989-present) or you can go to the brand new AnaVerde community. Everything in AnaVerde is new. It is a master planned community and they just finished phase one of I think 3 or 4 phases of homes. It will eventually be about 5,000 homes. Parks here and there and shopping will be put in soon. Only thing is that the property taxes are a little higher because they need to pay for the infrastructure to be built, it is extremely close to the fault line, and it is also very close to a dump! But it is still really pretty!

I am waiting another year or so to buy a home. It's not that I can't afford it, it is that I have been studying the real estate market for a few years now and I believe we will see another dip/crash in home prices in the AV between %10-%30. Imagine if you could get that half million dollar home for only $400k? That is what I am waiting for. The rental market, in the meantime, is flooded. Take a look in the AV Press and on any given day there are about 125 ads for rental homes (if it doesn't say west side, don't bother calling- they would have said in the ad if it was, and if it says section 8 ok, don't call them either, just trust me.) I just put a deposit on a 3bed 2 bath rental home on a cul-de-sac in the Rancho Vista area yesterday and my rent there will equal my rent in my one bedroom apartment in Santa Clarita!

DOn't worry about the crime. If you stay in the right neighborhood, you will be fine.

As for this article, I really enjoyed reading about the history of the area where I am going to raise my future kids. THe history of the land prices and economy just confirmed what I already believed about the housing boom and subsequent bubble burst we are about to see in 2006-2007. I had been wondering why the grid system suddenly changes direction, and now I know why! Some local told me last week that it is because of the earth's curvature and I did not think that the grids were large enough for the curvature of the earth to force the grid to have that "wrinkle" in it.
   23
04-19-2006 06:27 PM ET (US)
Deleted by topic administrator 04-19-2006 06:52 PM
Claudia  22
04-06-2006 07:23 PM ET (US)
I'm thinking of moving to Palmdale because the houses are affordable and you seem to get more bang for your buck. I can't find a 3000 sq ft house anywhere in los angeles for less than $1 million, which makes Palmdale so attractive.

My question is, is it really that bad? Everytime I go up there, it seems okay. It doesn't seem like a bad place to live.

Is crime generally everywhere, or is it centralized to certain locations?
Pat  21
03-17-2006 05:52 PM ET (US)
Ok, we're closing escrow on our very first home in west lancaster, what's really going on over there?
David Brian  20
03-15-2006 09:57 PM ET (US)
In the Antelope Valley alone, Beautiful homes are being built everyday, while recreational youth programs are being put on hold. The population in this Valley is rapidly rising to a high 20,000 people, and almost half of them are teenagers with little to do. With little recreation teenagers get board and turn to drugs, alcohol and violence to balance out their some of their basic needs. The violence in this community will continue to rise until something is done. Only miracles happen overnight, and I’m not asking for a miracle. I just want change.
Debbia  19
03-02-2006 11:02 PM ET (US)
John, everyone is entitled to their opinion. One can only hope that we learn from past histories.
John  18
03-01-2006 02:13 PM ET (US)
Debbia wrote this: "I wondered what the Native American ancestors would be thinking now if they saw what we are doing to their land. They lived here for thousands of years and the white man has only been here for what?! A couple hundred?! And look what we have done to the earth and the ecosystem in that short time!!"

Debbia, you are a real idiot. Native Americans also did damage to the earth and devastated animal groups. It's a matter of the number of people occupying a particular space - not their race and skin color. Grow up.
Debbia  17
02-26-2006 11:22 AM ET (US)
I stumbled on this site after checking for Ritter Ranch sites. I agree that the development of this area has resulted in a large scale raping of the land. I recently took some pictures from a ridge overlooking a large expanse of land to be developed by Ritter Ranch. I took those pictures for historical purposes for the future generations of Leona Valley or anyone else that would be interested. As I looked out across Boquet Canyon Road to the east I wondered what the Native American ancestors would be thinking now if they saw what we are doing to their land.

They lived here for thousands of years and the white man has only been here for what?! A couple hundred?! And look what we have done to the earth and the ecosystem in that short time!!

I recently moved here from the Central Coast where some of the cities have adopted a growth policy, partly due to the water availablility. A.V. and LA County seems to be water greedy and have begun implementing policies to rob the american farmer/rancher of their way of life. All so the developers can build more houses and cause a downward spiral in the quality of life for everyone and everything that lives here. This is disgusting and a crime against God and humanity!
Michael  16
02-15-2006 08:39 PM ET (US)
The Antelope Valley is growing quickly with the City of Palmdale approaching a 200,000 person population. The nieghborhoods are smartly planned, streets are clean and well organized, houses are big and nice, and the quality of life is better than ever! ;) so long Los Angeles!
Real Estate Professional  15
11-28-2005 05:47 PM ET (US)
I think anyone who is considering a move to the Antelope Valley (especially if a home purchase is a consideration) should visit and carefully read every article on this web site.

I purchased a home in Lancaster in 1989 and watched the property values decline year after year. Since residing in the Antelope Valley I have observed many negative factors. I have inspected hundreds of boarded-up foreclosures; observed neighborhoods in which almost a third of the homes appeared vacant; and resided next door to two boarded-up foreclosed homes. At one time, my home was worth about 50% of what I had paid for it.

Although times have changed, one simply should not forget the past. Your thesis topics of SOCIAL FRICTION AND CRIME as well as THE RESPONSIBILITY OF CAPITAL are factors that have affected my everyday life.

In the real estate profession, I have firsthand knowledge of a buyers purchase price, downpayment, and the comparables sales in the area. The most striking feature I noted lately when conducting my course of business is that almost every home purchaser in the Antelope Valley is putting no money down on a home. They will obtain a second trust deed to avoid paying PMI (Primary Mortgage Insurance). This is most common at the lower end of the area price range. To me, this spells trouble in the future if property values stabilize or decline.

It appears that the home purchasers (usually inexperienced first time homebuyers) are assuming that if a Mortgage Broker approves them for a loan, then that means that they have received professional advise from a certified financial planner and should take that loan. From the lenders standpoint, they can simply sell that loan to Fannie Mae or other agencies of the secondary mortgage market and relieve themself of any future liability of that loan.

As a prior resident of the area (I recently moved out of the area for reasons I will now explain), I have experienced the SOCIAL FRICTION AND CRIME firsthand. I moved to a nice westside location in 2001 only to be assaulted by a neighbor because my wife told his kids to stop loitering in a water retention basin. Also, the Antelope Valley may be booming in terms of single family housing construction but this is not being matched by industry. Approximately 30% of the employed population commute out of the area for employment. The AV's reliance on aerospace has not changed much since the last downturn in the real estate market. It only makes sense that if the head of household is not home during most of the day to supervise their children, the children have plenty of time to do whatever they want, including vandalism and gang activity.

I am not saying that the Antelope Valley is going to hell in a handbasket. However, factors such as lack of industry, evidence of crime/gang activity, a declining water table-shifts in the ground level, and a possible earthquake at a fault located really closeby are reality that should not be overlooked simply because one can snatch up a brand new home of their own at a really good price.

I think your thesis may appear to paint a negative picture of the Antelope Valley if you have a biased opinion of the area, however, I think you are providing a reader with information essential for their understanding of the area. Please keep us updated on future discoveries!
   14
03-20-2005 12:51 AM ET (US)
Deleted by topic administrator 12-30-2006 12:16 PM
shelly  13
03-20-2005 12:34 AM ET (US)
IT SUCKS THERE IS CRIME, BAD KIDS, DRUGS. I MOVED HERE FROM TUJUNGA CALIFORNIA AND I MISS THAT SHIT HOLE! I GO TO A HOME SCHOOL PROGRAM TO TRY TO GET MY HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION!
Xavier  12
11-10-2004 12:38 AM ET (US)
Hi everyone. I am a realtor in Sherman Oaks and recently I have been confronted to Palmdale. I was helping him get a house and we opened escrow yeaterday finally. I was impressed by Palmdale, clean, clear, Pretty cool. I like the high desert so!
since I have been asking questions to a lot of people cause I want to buy a house over there for me. I have been hearing things like:" there will be soon a bullet train from downtown LA and an International airport in 2007 etc.... I was wondering what is your prediction and your feelings about Palmdale development, say, in the next 3 years .
you can answer me direct if you want www.nathanx.com . I am really interested as I feel this is the future of LA county and may be it is a good idea to invest or build there. Let me know.
Sincerely,
Xavier Nathan
JM  11
06-15-2004 12:09 AM ET (US)
Looks like it has been awhile since anyone left a message. I have lived in the A.V. for 30 years. WOW what a change. When it came time for me to have children we relocated to California City to get away from the crime and high housing costs. We purchased house in Cal. City for $55,000. Today it sold for $120,000. Unbelievable!! This tells me that all of southern California is going to be like the San Fernando Valley. I stayed in Washingtion for 6 months and plan on returning. The only way to make it here is to live in debt or live off the system. NO THANK YOU!
L.D.  10
12-16-2003 10:12 PM ET (US)
I moved to the AV from Kentucky several months ago. From my own observations, I had a culture shock from the housing situation in the AV. Homes whose styles span every decade since the 50's are built on dead end streets. And now, more new neighborhoods with dead end streets and empty lots between houses. Instead of finishing something, they just build more dead-end streets. Not only are the neighborhoods not finished, the houses themselves are of poor quality. From the wood used for the frames to the carpet they slap down in tract homes to the shoddy drywall technique to the lousy windows, it is all CHEAP, CHEAP, CHEAP! It makes me appreciate the quality of my parents' house in Kentucky.
We did go house-hunting for a place to live, and mortgage lenders wanted to process us through and approve us that day (a Sunday, no less)(and more money than we could afford)and move us into a house that week. They told us grand stories about Rosamond being on the verge of the development that Palmdale started seeing in the 80's. They said we should hurry, hurry, hurry to get in on it before prices went up more. They seemed to be following some odd group mentality driven by greed. Greed was clouding reason, I thought. The dead-ends and empty lots testify that home prices will fall again.
We will not subject ourselves to that kind of market for a poor quality house. We will wait until we can build our own.
I will always appreciate the good things about Kentucky, but I love the AV landscape, and I love living so close to many things I would not see in Kentucky.
Jonah Kosatsky  9
11-13-2003 12:04 AM ET (US)
Edited by author 11-13-2003 12:06 AM
This was an excellent report and economic account of the true costs associated with urban sprawl.
North America needs a market solution to replace sprawl. The solution must not require government subsidies, and it must be low cost. We need car-free urban form. If anyone knows of such developments please post.

 jkosatsky@yahoo.com
Doug LOng  8
07-01-2003 10:32 PM ET (US)
Edited by author 07-01-2003 10:41 PM
I, too, stumbled onto your report, and found it interesting enough to give it a read. I'm also glad to see that you are entertaining comments on it. I disagree entirely with LMG /m3 and would like Mike K /m6 to give me a shout - I would love to buy his house so he can move to Oregon.

But mostly, I will say that while I commend you for the thoroughness of your report, I have to concur with Ravenna on the conclusion that you have indeed missed the mark:

The answer to "urban sprawl" lies not in the "sprawl", but in the "urban".

On a practical level, yes, the political entities responsible for the AV should have handled things better. From what I have read recently, that is now occurring to some degree. And, yes, captiatl and developers should try and grow frontal lobes before we become extinct from their lack of social conscience. But the survival of the race despite urban sprawl is a matter of adaptation and problem solving.

AV had California's first WalMart? Guess what? Now they have three. That should help with that constant auto use that sprawl generates. I mean, if I want to go to WalMart, I have to drive 30 miles east or west - that is unless I want to make a day of it and go to all three in AV!

Sorry, I'm only jesting - though I do like to shop at WalMart and wish it was closer. My real point is this:

Look at that collapsed freeway from the 1994 quake. How long did it take to rebuild it? Fairly well record time, I would say - undoubtedly faster than the first one. Why? Because real people took a concern and made it happen.

Your thesis is all well and good, in the 20-20 hindsight sections. But slightly myopic looking ahead. You underrate the ability of people to change their social landscape, and to create a better situation for themselves. And that is where Ravenna's message /m7 makes a good point:

I have lived in apartments a good part of my 47 years, too. I have never wanted to own a home, never personally had the drive to do so. But I do understand it, and it is as she has presented it. People need some space. They need the freedom to choose whether or not to form social bonds based on physical presence. Only the choice is needed.

High-density housing is not the answer - or did you never notice how utterly popular it is for prisons and the impoverished in "the projects"?

I would say that you have taken a good historical look at an area and attempted to make sense out of how it got to be hat way. Perhaps this is the liability of trying to present a homogenous overview, with acceptable generalizations of diverse elements. However rather than look far enough forward to see how it will be handled into the future, you saddle it with a label and a condition that are themselves antiquated.

"Urban sprawl" is an old concept that will pass away with the idea that "the city is the center", or that one has to live elsewhere than where he "makes his living" - just as it has in other times and other places. What will not pass, is that there are real people involved, and people will always manage, in the end.

Doug [ djlong3000 at yahoo dot com ]
Ravenna  7
06-08-2003 08:06 AM ET (US)
I found your report on the Antelope Valley interesting and very thorough regarding statistics,facts and local history, and although I agree with most of it, I definitely do not agree with the idea of ANY high density housing being added to the Antelope Valley, or anywhere else in this country. I am 37 years old and I grew up in the West San Fernando Valley and have continually had friends and relatives who have lived in the Antelope Valley and close surrounding areas going back to 1947. I have only lived here in A.V. a year ( beginning in June 2002 ) and I am not a permanent resident of A.V., or a current homeowner, but use this location currently as a convenience for my type of work. I stay with a friend who is a homeowner in Palmdale. Despite that I have spent much time out here over the many years prior. I am a historian, geographer, and am very well educated with degrees in criminal justice, history and psychology. This only matters as I am a writer as well and research many topics in my spare time and for a living, so I am knowledgeable about the area to a very high degree. I have traveled every hiking trail, fire road, access road and back country area within 100 miles of A.V. in all directions due to my love of the outdoors, remote locations and even camping. I believe that all you have to do is examine the effects of high density housing in any major city and on the residents living in it, and you will have your answer right there as to not only how " urban sprawl " developed, but why high density housing so obviously does not work. It is clearly ignoring the lessons of that history and the crowding of these many areas in cities ( especially L.A. ), that would cause anyone to even suggest high density housing in an area so absolutely and clearly unsuited for it as Palmdale is. People will never stop coming to California as long as they are allowed to do so. The only thing that will stop urban sprawl is a lack of population to bring it about in the first place. Do you see that happening? Yes it will finally happen, but only after the greater Los Angeles area has used up all of it's resources to the point where it cannot support any further development or residents. At that tine they would have to control the incoming population to this state as they did in 1933, but most likely in an even more stringent manner. Would they ever do that? No, of course not as each one of those new residents is more tax revenue for our greedy county and state. I see some large contradictions in your report such as you mentioning the problems with maintaining long term water sources for the Antelope Valley, but then turning around and suggesting that perhaps Palmdale and Lancaster should pack the people in even tighter against the 14 corridor. You specifically mention Palmdale's guidelines for lot sizes no smaller than 7,000 square feet as if that's a bad thing, but then proceed to point out that this same area will eventually be losing underground acquifers which provide much water. If the resources are dwindling, then how exactly do you see supporting four-six families on 7,000 square feet, if eventually it will be difficult to even support one? Not only that, but because Palmdale's crime rate is significantly high for the population size, cramming people together will only add to that and create more friction and violence. This is even more true when you consider that unless you are living in a Beverly Hills townhouse or condo by choice, the general consensus is that you are not successful and perhaps even somewhat downtrodden if you are forced to live so close to others. Familiarity breeds contempt. I used to live in a very expensive ( over priced ) apartment building in Woodland Hills. Before that I lived in another rather pricy building in the same neighborhood. I had always lived in nice West Valley single family home neighborhoods all my life prior to that, except for one stint in Studio City. My first idea about these apartments before moving to them was generally that they were safe, it was a good neighborhood, the people were respectful, little or no crime existed within them ,the tenants were screened to some effect, etc, etc. Well during just my residency ( four years ) at the most expensive location, there was constant domestic violence issues with many of the tenants, kids bringing their gang friends on to the property and causing violence or damage, numerous car thefts despite security gates, cameras and 24/7 security guards, physical fights over parking and the close proximity of some of the parking spaces, constant complaints about music and television noise, several break ins, three that were right near my apartment, someone being thrown off a balcony during a dispute, dogs living in the building despite severe regulations against it, homeless people sleeping in the very large bushes right under my window and proceeding to light them on fire, one murder from a midnight gang member intrusion, two seperate men hauled away for molesting their daughters, one person high on meth screaming as he was hauled away, one suicide of a tenant at the location, grafitti being done continually which turned out to be kids living on site, someone selling crack very blatantly and who was removed, a rat infestation at one corner of the building that was out of control, someone drowning in the pool in summer, the pool being closed all of another summer as several parents kept letting their toddlers defecate in it, two drunk drivers who at diffrent times lost control near the grounds and slammed into parked cars ( mine was one of those damaged ), an apartment that was being used 24/7 for prostitution ( very, very common in Woodland Hills by the way ), and many other smaller but negative and irritating problems that affected your comfort level and lifestyle. My desire for a quiet, private retreat as I thought being off in a far corner of the building would give me, was never realized. I would come home for lunch or after work and constantly see the police out front, about twice a week. If you think this building was unique and had an exceptional amount of bad things happening , you are mistaken. The other place I lived near it prior ( apartment ) had the same issues going on nonstop and as for my friends and associates who live in buildings now with over 50 units, some of these problems are commonplace. These events also hardly ever make any news cast, and only occasionally the newspaper. The point is that you have to either be inexperienced with what high density housing brings or just plain naive to even suggest that it is a " great " viable alternative to any area, especially A.V. where despite crime levels many still consider most of the outer lying areas here rural. There is no solution to urban sprawl except for the people to go away. They never will. You mention the lack of desire people have in A.V. for getting to know their neighbors, and you speak of it as if that would solve a lot. The issues go far beyond that. Knowing your neighbors will not stop them from dealing drugs, or any other vices they may have. It will only cause you to " maybe " know about them a little sooner. I have noticed that Los Angeles in general is not a place where people want to know their neighbors, and it has nothing to do with long commutes and how busy or tired they are as you suggest. It has to do with lack of commonalities between them. Some can bridge that gap and others do not want to take the time to. I have had more neighbors approach me friendly in A.V., then I ever did all the years I grew up in the valley. People do not like to share their personal business as too many get involved in it in a fashion that they do not have a place to. I respect that, because it has happened to me also with negative results. On top of this you hardly make better and faster neighbors in confined living zones. People in closer living proximity are likely and mostly in my experience to be even more stand offish as they are trying to keep a distance that isn't really there. I have seen this with everyone I ever knew who lived in anything but single detached homes. When I lived in apartments the people all around me were always moving because they wanted a house and a different life. There was no time to get close to anyone as they never stayed around long enough. Honestly though, if people want their single family homes and the privacy that may go with it, do you really feel the answer is to shove them together in close proximity and " make " them get along? This is your solution to urban sprawl? Well we have sure seen in history how well forcing people into unpopular things has worked haven't we? I do not like track homes at all really, and I never have. I realize though that the demand for them is there and always will be. If you have a family or even just a couple who have moved to A.V. because the cost of living is lower, do you really feel that they are going to be happy crammed in an apartment, or even worse investing in a condo or townhouse in a place that has millions of acres of open land? Who would want that and who in their right mind would do that unless they have no options? There are other ways to deal with transportation problems that have not been addressed by L.A. officials as everyone knows. If you are going to make a commute to A.V. and can afford to buy, aren't you going to want to have something to show for that effort besides some small hole in the wall place that you could live in anywhere? Why would you commute for that? People move out here so that they can have a yard, and a decent house. Not all succeed, but that's their dream and should not be denied because some of you want to create a huge urban area crammed with tenants and concrete that would take away the reasons that they came out here to begin with. Palmdale has it's problems, definitely, but why propose something to only make them worse in the future?
MIKE K.  6
04-21-2003 12:38 AM ET (US)
I'VE LIVE HERE FOR 27 YEARS, I MOVED UP HERE TO GET AWAY THE L.A. TRASH, NOW THEY MOVING UP. IT WAS NICE WHY IT LASTED, TIME TO MOVE OUT OF STATE.PLEASE THE LAST TRUE AMERICAN LEAVING CALIF. PLEASE CLOSE THE GATE SO THE TRASH DOESN'T FOLLOW YOU. AMERICA (AKA) MELTING POT, AV VALLEY, RUDE PEOPLE, DRIVERS RACING TO THEIR JOBS DAILY. DRUGS, HOOKERS,SOMEONE BUY MY HOUSE SO I CAN GET THE HELL OUTA HERE GOOD LUCK.
MiKE  5
03-15-2003 02:56 AM ET (US)
I am glad I took additional time to read all of your thesis instead of scan reading like I had planned. You did connect most of your points while your history and documentation were quite accurate. If you choose to update this I would highly recommend you consider facts and figures concerning the lack of parks and recreation in the Antelope Valley. While attending Fresno State in the 1980's I met a gentlemen who had written his thesis in the 1960's on the amount of parks the Antelope Valley would need to support its population. It was apparent in the 1980's that county and city planners had acquired or developed far less park space per acre foot versus the number of single-family unit homes then the thesis recommended. Adding to this problem, bond measures were passed by citizens who wanted more parks, only to see the county delay spending the money, then developing only fractions of the park space that was agreed to.

Second, I need to strike up issue with your problem points coming back to single-family home dwellings as the culprit. I would argue that most cities and communities in the US are only beginning to understand and plan their solutions to sprawl, especially those in California where westward expansion contributing to sprawl might have ended as late as 1990. The maturation point to sprawl however begins with the redevelopment of inner zones. Again, unfortunately California has had little time and experience with this. You were stymied by the implied statement of Lancaster with the police station downtown, however you didn't attempt to understand why.

To that point and finally; The Antelope Valley may never be a cultural center. With respect to your societal statement identifying the Antelope Valley as a commuter suburb to Los Angeles, in reality, most people here and now have no time or interest for engaging in a renaissance. Doing so means history takes presidence over today or the future. Many are fast working to the car, to work, to home, then to bed. But some are fast working to have the Antelope Valley become the premier aero research development test and information center. Concerned with past recessions, city leadership did attempt to wean the Antelope Valley from its military aerospace dependencies in the 1990's by building new manufacturing parks for businesses. Who came instead are innovative companies looking to be part of an early aero development age business center. This will not resemble Silicon Valley manufacturing or Aerospace manufacturing, rather more of a fusion of information and products. Aerospace engineers are combining with computer engineers under disciplined national defense plans to create these dynamic business abilities. The Antelope Valley has the natural setting with dry lakes and open space to ensure a safe and secure environment for large scale testing. And several hundred million dollars have already been spent for resources and solutions on environmental issues to ensure conservation and pollution prevention are repaired and being readied. Yes,... many leave the Valley and drive over the hill to jobs today. But in the near[ing] future, those who live here must find their place here, make a life here, and pay whatever the price will be to stay here. Otherwise, when the time comes, they will eagerly sell high, leave the Valley, and buy low somewhere else creating sprawl there -- say like, Los Angeles.

Sidenote: I always felt the movie "Paint Your Wagon" got radical urban theory right.
Lyn53  4
12-18-2002 04:31 PM ET (US)
I happen upon this thesis while looking for a decent restaurants in the Antelope Valley. I'm a recent transplant from Los Angeles to Palmdale. We grew tired of paying rent and wanted a place of our own and could only afford a house in Palmdale. We bought a house that was built at the end of 1989. We often wonder how Palmdale supports more housing and the availability of water. I wish I didn't have to commute to and fro to my work in W.Los Angeles. Fortunately, I ride in a vanpool and that helps. But I would love it if they would put in a high speed electric rail system and I hate to say this, also a real working airport.

Your thesis is interesting and informative. Thanks for sharing it on the internet.

Lyn
LMG  3
10-25-2002 12:28 PM ET (US)
This guys a racist!! He's ignoring that this State and
Country is a "melting pot". The Antelope Valley findly reflects the diversity of our wonderful nation...God Bless America!

LMG
Jon F.  2
04-26-2002 02:53 PM ET (US)
Mr. Jalbert, while "surfing" the web, I happened to land at the site that
contains your thesis report on the Antelope Valley. Let me say, you did an
outstanding job of reporting the situation that happened, and continues to
happen in the A.V. I was very impressed at both the depth of research and
the look into the problem of urban sprawl.
As an "ex-resident" of the A.V., I was very interested in the report because
I witnessed all that occured in the 80's and 90's, and have never discussed
the atrocities with anyone. I always sensed an urge by the residents to
ignore the subject, my family included.
I know the report was done a long time ago, but if you don't mind, I have
some comments on the subject.
My father moved to the A.V. in the late 60's seeking employment with the
aerospace industry. He will retire from Lockheed next year. He purchased
land in the early seventies in the Fairmont area, 27 miles west of
Lancaster. We have our own well, therefore we contribute to the depletion of
the underground water table. But we've never had a lawn!
When I was in the sixth grade, new faces started showing up at my school in
huge numbers. It wasn´t long before the "L.A. Transplants" represented a
majority of students at my rural junior high school. This brought a whole
host of various problems. When I graduated high school in 1994, the
recession was lifting, but I was focused on another aspect. I was one of a
few students who had attended that small country elementary/jr. high school.
Of the 800 plus graduates in my class, only a dozen or so went to grade
school with me . This was never brought to anyone's attention, by me or
anyone else involved that I know of. It was just accepted. A small "tragic"
side effect of urban sprawl, swept under the rug by social, economic, or
some other force(s).
I am currently a graduate student at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo in the
Agricultural Education Dept. and I am very interested in teaching future
students about the effects of urban sprawl on our state and our planet.
Could you recommend some good sources of information to accomplish this
task?
Another comment I wanted to make is how interesting it would be to read a
follow-up of your report. I visit the Antelope Valley occasionally, as my
parents still live there, and it is so transformed that I don't even
consider it my home anymore. I have only been away for 4 years!!!
You are the first person that I know of to report on the effects of urban
sprawl in the Antelope Valley, including the effects on long-time residents.
This was so interesting to me that I felt I had to say something. Again, I
hope you mind. It just really hit home, that's all.
Superb Job, Excellent Report!
Sincerely,
Jon F.
Matthew Jalbert  1
04-14-2002 11:28 PM ET (US)
Feel free to post messages regarding the Antelope Valley of California.
RSS link What's this?
QuickTopicSM message boards
Over 200,000 topics served
Learn more Frequently asked questions  Acknowledgements
What they're saying about QuickTopic
 Questions, comments, or suggestions? Contact Us
Read our use policy before beginning. We value your privacy; please read our privacy statement.
Copyright ©1999-2008 Internicity Inc. All rights reserved.