American attorney and politician
Katharine Elizabeth Young Yaroslavsky
(born May 30, 1980) is an American attorney and politician who is currently a member of the
Los Angeles City Council
representing the
5th district
.
[1]
A member of the
Democratic Party
, Yaroslavsky placed first in the
2022 election
to replace
Paul Koretz
,
[2]
before winning in the general election against attorney Sam Yebri.
[3]
[4]
The daughter-in-law of influential Los Angeles politician
Zev Yaroslavsky
, she worked in the office of
Sheila Kuehl
, whom her mother previously worked for.
[5]
During her tenure on the L.A. City Council, Young Yaroslavsky spearheaded a legislative effort to block the fast-tracking of
affordable housing
in historic districts.
[6]
Early life and career
[
edit
]
Young Yaroslavsky was born Katharine Elizabeth Young on May 30, 1980. She graduated
Phi Beta Kappa
with a
Bachelor's degree
from
University of California, Berkeley
and received her
Juris Doctor
degree from
University of California, Los Angeles
.
[7]
Young Yaroslavsky got into politics as a deputy for
Sheila Kuehl
when Kuehl was elected to the
Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
; Yaroslavsky's mother Laura Plotkin served on Kuehl's staff when she was in the California State Legislature.
[8]
[9]
[10]
While a deputy, she helped with the creation of the Office of Sustainability and the creation and passing of Measure W in 2018.
[11]
[12]
Before being named in Kuehl's staff, she was the general counsel and director of government affairs at the nonprofit Climate Action Reserve.
[13]
Political career
[
edit
]
Los Angeles City Council
[
edit
]
In September 2021, Young Yaroslavsky announced that she would be running to replace
Paul Koretz
on the
Los Angeles City Council
for the
5th district
.
[14]
In the primary election, Young Yaroslavsky and Sam Yebri advanced to the general runoff election, with Young Yaroslavsky taking a majority of the votes.
[15]
In the general election, Young Yaroslavsky won against Yebri in a landslide.
[16]
In 2023, she was named to be on the Transportation Committee, the first all-female committee, alongside
Traci Park
,
Eunisses Hernandez
,
Nithya Raman
, and
Heather Hutt
.
[17]
In 2024, Young Yaroslavsky introduced a motion to stop the fast-tracking of affordable housing in any areas of Los Angeles designated as part of the 8.5 square-mile Historic Preservation Overlay Zone. Prior to 2000, there were only historic zones in L.A., but by 2024, they were 36. Housing advocates have criticized the historic designation process as being hijacked by
NIMBY
homeowners to block housing in their neighborhoods. Young Yaroslavsky's chief of staff justified the need to block affordable housing by pointing to the construction of a 70-unit affordable apartment building on a vacant lot in the affluent neighborhood
Windsor Village.
The chief of staff described the building as "egregious" and a "refrigerator box".
[6]
Personal life
[
edit
]
Young Yaroslavsky is married to David Yaroslavsky, a
Los Angeles County Superior Court
judge, with the two having three children.
[18]
She is the daughter-in-law to
Zev Yaroslavsky
, a former member of the
Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
who held the same seat in the City Council from 1975 to 1994.
[19]
Electoral history
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Regardie, Jon (March 3, 2022).
"A Fight for the 5th District"
. Los Angeles Magazine
. Retrieved
June 8,
2022
.
- ^
"Katy Young Yaroslavsky"
.
Voter's Edge California
. Retrieved
June 8,
2022
.
- ^
Zahniser, David (November 15, 2022).
"McOsker, Yaroslavsky, Soto-Martinez claim victory in their L.A. City Council races"
.
Los Angeles Times
. Retrieved
November 15,
2022
.
- ^
"Katy Young Yaroslavsky Set to Win LA Council's 5th District Seat, Yebri Concedes"
.
Westside Current
. November 15, 2022.
- ^
"Endorsement: Katy Young Yaroslavsky for Los Angeles Council District 5"
.
The Los Angeles Times
. May 3, 2022
. Retrieved
June 8,
2022
.
- ^
a
b
"Why Homeowners In LA's Historic Districts Say They Should Be Exempt From Fast-Tracked Affordable Housing"
.
LAist
. 2024-05-03.
- ^
"Katy Young Yaroslavsky"
.
VerdeXchange
.
- ^
"L.A. County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl announces staff appointments"
.
Century City/Westwood News
. December 2, 2014.
- ^
Fishbach, Brian (June 15, 2022).
"Four LA Elections to Watch"
.
The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles
.
- ^
Miller, Jacob (June 7, 2022).
"Meet the four candidates vying to represent one of L.A.'s Jewish hubs"
.
Jewish Insider
.
- ^
"Endorsement: Katy Young Yaroslavsky for Los Angeles City Council"
.
Los Angeles Times
. September 22, 2022.
- ^
"Katy Young Yaroslavsky Unpacks Measure W: Implementation of LA's 'Safe, Clean Water Program'
"
.
The Planning Report
. September 3, 2019.
- ^
Svendsen, Tim (September 22, 2022).
"Confirmation: Katy Young Yaroslavsky for Los Angeles City Council"
.
Local Today
.
- ^
Folven, Edwin (September 23, 2021).
"Candidate Katy Young Yaroslavsky aims to bring meaningful change to 5th District"
.
Park Labrea News & Beverly Press
.
- ^
Love, Marianne (October 13, 2022).
"In LA City Council 5th District race, it's Katy Young Yaroslavsky versus Sam Yebri on Nov. 8"
.
Daily Breeze
.
- ^
Love, Marianne (November 15, 2022).
"Election 2022: Sam Yebri concedes LA City Council seat to Katy Young Yaroslavsky"
.
Los Angeles Daily News
.
- ^
"LA council committee makes history as 1st all-female panel"
.
Hey SoCal
. January 25, 2023.
- ^
Lombard, Patricia (December 12, 2022).
"CD5 Councilmember Katy Young Yaroslavsky Sworn in at Pan Pacific Park Auditorium"
.
Larchmont Buzz
.
- ^
Chiotakis, Steve (October 27, 2022).
"LA City Council races: Key takeaways about each candidate"
.
KCRW
.