Yes, don't you? I think most people would. |
What would the point of that be? Do you think it would lower prices? |
The point of it would be a couple hundred additional housing units for people to live in, in areas that were previously zoned exclusively-SFH. I would have thought that went without saying. |
No, not in the units themselves. That’s a push for nearly all people. |
First of all, the units in a four-unit building would be different from the units in a five-over-one. And second of all, people don't live in units floating in space. The units are in buildings, and the buildings are in places. |
A couple hundred new units? Sounds like a growth plan written by NIMBYs. |
Why? 200 additional housing units is 200 additional housing units. I wouldn't object to more. I also understand that there isn't some magical policy that will all by itself immediately solve all problems. |
Because that’s pathetic in a county of a million people. There are three problems with YIMBYs. The first is they focus on legislation and approvals but pay little attention to the results. If you did, you would be showing up at JBG and Avalon shareholders meeting instead of Planning Board and County Council meetings. The second is you think small, as you did above. The third is your myopic focus on housing. Housing is merely responding to the broader economy. Housing growth here is sluggish because the economy stinks. If you focused less on what gets approved and more on what actually gets built you’d have a lot more impact. |
And no doubt the relatively high interest rates does not help either, with either builders or buyers. Sometimes a problem can't be solved by govt. Progressives no doubt fail to understand that the world does not revolve around their policy wishes. |
Perhaps focusing more on the underutilized commercial areas where thousands and thousands of units of all types could be built would be a better expenditure of your energy. |
Of course what is ignored is that SFHs have shown to be a means for middle class families to grow their wealth. Apartments do not do that, and condos have not been shown to do that. But here we are reducing the number of SFHs, whether by a few hundred or more, reducing the opportunities for middle class to become wealthier. |
This is a housing proposal, not a proposal for middle-class investment. |
Why not both? |
This is about zoning. Zoning is done by the government. Are you suggesting that Montgomery County should just abolish the zoning code? |
Yes, you're right, I think incremental improvement (which is a result, by the way) is better than no improvement. Yes, you're right, I think housing proposals should be about housing. I don't know why I should show up at JBG and Avalon shareholders meetings. As far as I know, I don't own any stock in JBG or Avalon, and I certainly would never own any meaningful amount of stock. I show up at Planning Board and County Council meetings because I'm a resident of Montgomery County and a voter in Montgomery County. And I actually don't think of myself as a YIMBY. |