Why affordable housing isn't affordable
Bloomberg is notorious for pretending government is the solution rather than the problem and housing is no exception. The problem of not enough cheap housing stems from several regulations and regulatory climates - not from income levels. It used to be that on the US Census records, many were listed as "Boarders" - ie people who stayed in someone else's home and paid a small fee to have their meals provided and laundry done. Government did away with this source of cheap housing by mandating hospitality permits for such activities at the behest of the hotel industry - who they then began to hit with large fees for water and energy consumption!
Next you have zoning boards, who decide whether or not a particular property can house a residential, industrial, or commercial entity. And they pay property taxes based on their zoning, incentivizing government to push people into the higher-tax commercial and industrial areas.
What other ways can you think of that contribute to the lack of affordable housing?
Next you have zoning boards, who decide whether or not a particular property can house a residential, industrial, or commercial entity. And they pay property taxes based on their zoning, incentivizing government to push people into the higher-tax commercial and industrial areas.
What other ways can you think of that contribute to the lack of affordable housing?
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I would add few more problems ...union wages and regulation on licenses plumbers, electricians and everyone else in the construction industry.
And that was way back when that silly Tea Party got born..
Now we have Crooked Cackles promising to extend the screaming like bloody hell wonderment successes of the Commander Of Grief's hope and change eight years.
What's wrong with you? Don't you know we have to spend our way out of debt?
Subsidizing moochers is a plan. And a jimmied dandy way to get votes also.
http://www.usdebtclock.org/
(Psst! +1)
Two examples from building a house in Las Vegas:
I was forced to put in three in-floor electrical outlets at $150 each including labor right in front of a picture window that I would never put furniture or electrical items in front of.
I was forced to redo all the can light wiring that I installed because there was a loop of extra wire that I specifically put between the can itself and the last wire staple. The regulation said there could be no slack. I put the slack in there so that if there was a problem with the can light, I could more easily repair it.
Useless regulation, resulting in rework and re-inspection.
After living in the house for 4 years, an inspector decided that the septic tank system that THEY had approved earlier before it was installed- was TOO SMALL. It was 2000 gal capacity, and they wanted 2200 gal capacity. It cost me $20,000 to tear it up, have it sanitized and removed, and a new larger septic tank installed.
You can bet i want to recoup my $20,000 when I sell the house.
Most government programs to increase home ownership focus on helping people afford their expensive house, never on increasing supply so that prices come down. Drop in prices would cost too many votes.
It was difficult when she wrote the book and is even more difficult now with realestate prices being what they are, even after the bubble burst.
No, that would never happen.