Some people become temporarily homeless, but usually get by via couch surfing or whatever else until they can get into another apartment. But numerous studies and reports show that 70-80% of the chronically homeless - many of the ones living in tents etc are homeless due to serious mental health issues and/or substance abuse issues. That's a totally different issue, and putting a roof over their heads has to also come with treatment and supervision. |
Certainly true of Carter. |
It is illegal to choose a buyer for your home based on their race. There is no way you'd know their race unless you asked, when the offer letter came in, and if your realtor is smart, they wouldn't tell you. "Is the buyer of my home going to be Black?" you are not allowed to do that. |
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What's the solution? Let neighborhoods deteriorate into slums so people who want to move have no option but to abandon them?
What can be done is helping people get healthcare, education, motivation and skills to try to change their own lives. |
| I think mental health is the most important factor for people to get out of the destructive cycles of poverty, crime, alcohol, drugs and indifference. Once they start valuing themselves and respect others, their paths start clearing up. This is basic and universal for humans, race, religion, finances, culture etc doesn't matter. |
| Gentrifiers are better than slum lords, they are not there to take away, they are in a way investing in homes, lives and neighborhoods. There is no need to pitch locals and newcomers against each other, they should be encouraged to work together as both have same objectives, having safe and pleasant neighborhoods where people can focus on their individual struggles and triumphs. |
| People should be free to buy and sell their properties. Even Adam and Eve had to move. Its not like people stay in same homes for 500 years. Humans are mortals, home are transitionary shelters. |
| The OP is a monstah |
I look at places like the Wharf and the reality is that it created far more jobs of all types than were on those pieces of land before development, it also for example created 98 affordable ($533/month) apartments for people at 30% income level when there weren't that many prior on that land prior to development. https://www.wharfdc.com/building-our-community/providing-affordable-and-workforce-housing/ |
| Nothing. I’m one of the poors and bought a shitty place in LA and now it’s a hip neighbourhood. I’m so excited for less gang shootings and more Starbucks and hipster shops. F all of you who think everything needs to stay the same. |
I thought ‘Gentrification’ means the neighborhoods changing from majority Black to less black but more white. Increasing ethnic diversity in a historic black neighborhood means increasing white, Asian, and Hispanic. Fair Housing Act prohibits a seller rejects/picks a buyer based on their race, gender and etc. |
| Protesting against affordable housing in Bethesda so it can continue to be placed only in Wheaton, Silver Spring, Gaithersburg, and Germantown. |
You can sell your home to whomever you please. Especially if you’re selling below market rate, you just find a buyer before listing. |
| We need rehabilitation tax credits to encourage rehabbing not tearing down. We also need real estate tax increase caps, like the tax due (not tax rate or tax base) can only increase X amount per year. |
Doesn't DC have mandates on new development that some percentage of new units be affordable? |