Anonymous
Post 09/06/2023 06:58     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

“Massive”

I’m just here to see whether the Justin’s traffic jam folks are going to freak out even when the plan is this mild…
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 21:38     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

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Anonymous wrote:The schools have been overcapacity for years the roads are impossible to travel on now in the city. City officials have seriously lost their minds. When city council was asked about class sizes and overcapacity issues years ago and asked what their plans are with all the 10 newish affordable housing buildings the literally sat there and blinked. You can't make this incompetence up.


Impossible, you say? So everyone is just sitting at home? Or, if you mean impossible to travel on by car, how come there are so many cars on the roads?


Hey go back to posting hour bike lobby crap on AlxNow. You know the roads are crowded.

My daughter ended up with a daily drop off occupational therapy appointment every day Mon-Fri this summer at a location where I needed to go up duke st, then over and up seminary road. I did the round trip drive twice daily all summer and not once did I see a single bike in the bike lanes. Honest to god, not a single bike even though the times I was driving varied and often included am or pm rush hour. What an absolute waste and cause of more vehicle congestion.


I bike on Seminary all the time. I fly right past the cars sitting in traffic. Probably why you didn't see me is because you weren't paying attention, which drivers never do.


I call BS on this one. I live off Seminary, there are rarely cars sitting in traffic and if they are, they're trying to turn left on to St. Stephen's. There are also small backups going north/west on Seminary right before the Howard intersection.


Double BS. Sounds like the geezer who got the bike lanes built on Seminary Rd. because he worried about his grandkids riding their bikes a few blocks to his house. The kids moved so he is looking for reasons to keep the bike lanes. His original argument was based on blind people not being able to safely cross Seminary Rd. in the "heavy traffic."


Durham's daughter and grandkids moved closer to him. They are no further away from Seminary than they used to be.


NP here. They live closer, and are still off of Seminary. Durham is the ultimate mansplainer who thinks his legacy and his calling from God are to get bike lanes everywhere possible. He’s here to save us. He cannot understand how his visions or options are not the best choice, ever. He had his blind friends from the charity he works with (biking with the blind) call and write in support of that seminary bike lane and to get the crosswalk in front of his house claiming they’re too scared and it’s too dangerous for them to cross the street there; despite the fact they’re never crossing the street there because they don’t live at the seminary or EHS or even in Alexandria. It’s special interest to the core. It’s such BS. His daughters told me he had them do that. They can’t keep their mouths shut.


More than two years later, city officials say they made the right decision. A report shows that:

Speeds decreased slightly but did not display a noticeable difference.
Traffic did not appear to divert to neighborhood streets, with one exception: Vehicle volumes on Ft. Williams Parkway saw an increase in both directions of 12 to 33 percent.
Peak period travel times on Seminary Road decreased by 35 to 60 seconds. Reductions eastbound were marginally greater than trips traveling west.
Bicycle ridership on the road increased. Pedestrian usage decreased.
The percentage of drivers traveling more than 35 mph on the roadway has decreased significantly.

A few high-profile, high-speed crashes on the roadway have damaged pedestrian infrastructure, and the city is working to get new equipment, again, to replace that damaged by cars.

The one thing the city wanted — a sidewalk on the north side of the road outside the Virginia Theological Seminary — has proved cost-prohibitive. The Virginia Dept. of Transportation denied funding for the sidewalk, and the city has not come up with the $1 million it would cost to install it.


They were fixing those little curbs on the edge of the bike lanes this morning. Dave at the Exxon Station on Duke St. said that people routinely come to him because they have hit one of those bumpers and damaged a tire. The white pylons are frequently hit. I saw a runner trip on one about a week ago and he stopped himself before falling into the car lane. of course the speed limit has been reduced. You have to maneuver around all the bike infrastructure not to damage your car.


Sounds like it was effective, then. That's good.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 21:36     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

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Anonymous wrote:The schools have been overcapacity for years the roads are impossible to travel on now in the city. City officials have seriously lost their minds. When city council was asked about class sizes and overcapacity issues years ago and asked what their plans are with all the 10 newish affordable housing buildings the literally sat there and blinked. You can't make this incompetence up.


Impossible, you say? So everyone is just sitting at home? Or, if you mean impossible to travel on by car, how come there are so many cars on the roads?


Hey go back to posting hour bike lobby crap on AlxNow. You know the roads are crowded.

My daughter ended up with a daily drop off occupational therapy appointment every day Mon-Fri this summer at a location where I needed to go up duke st, then over and up seminary road. I did the round trip drive twice daily all summer and not once did I see a single bike in the bike lanes. Honest to god, not a single bike even though the times I was driving varied and often included am or pm rush hour. What an absolute waste and cause of more vehicle congestion.


I bike on Seminary all the time. I fly right past the cars sitting in traffic. Probably why you didn't see me is because you weren't paying attention, which drivers never do.


I call BS on this one. I live off Seminary, there are rarely cars sitting in traffic and if they are, they're trying to turn left on to St. Stephen's. There are also small backups going north/west on Seminary right before the Howard intersection.


Double BS. Sounds like the geezer who got the bike lanes built on Seminary Rd. because he worried about his grandkids riding their bikes a few blocks to his house. The kids moved so he is looking for reasons to keep the bike lanes. His original argument was based on blind people not being able to safely cross Seminary Rd. in the "heavy traffic."


Durham's daughter and grandkids moved closer to him. They are no further away from Seminary than they used to be.


NP here. They live closer, and are still off of Seminary. Durham is the ultimate mansplainer who thinks his legacy and his calling from God are to get bike lanes everywhere possible. He’s here to save us. He cannot understand how his visions or options are not the best choice, ever. He had his blind friends from the charity he works with (biking with the blind) call and write in support of that seminary bike lane and to get the crosswalk in front of his house claiming they’re too scared and it’s too dangerous for them to cross the street there; despite the fact they’re never crossing the street there because they don’t live at the seminary or EHS or even in Alexandria. It’s special interest to the core. It’s such BS. His daughters told me he had them do that. They can’t keep their mouths shut.


More than two years later, city officials say they made the right decision. A report shows that:

Speeds decreased slightly but did not display a noticeable difference.
Traffic did not appear to divert to neighborhood streets, with one exception: Vehicle volumes on Ft. Williams Parkway saw an increase in both directions of 12 to 33 percent.
Peak period travel times on Seminary Road decreased by 35 to 60 seconds. Reductions eastbound were marginally greater than trips traveling west.
Bicycle ridership on the road increased. Pedestrian usage decreased.
The percentage of drivers traveling more than 35 mph on the roadway has decreased significantly.

A few high-profile, high-speed crashes on the roadway have damaged pedestrian infrastructure, and the city is working to get new equipment, again, to replace that damaged by cars.

The one thing the city wanted — a sidewalk on the north side of the road outside the Virginia Theological Seminary — has proved cost-prohibitive. The Virginia Dept. of Transportation denied funding for the sidewalk, and the city has not come up with the $1 million it would cost to install it.


They were fixing those little curbs on the edge of the bike lanes this morning. Dave at the Exxon Station on Duke St. said that people routinely come to him because they have hit one of those bumpers and damaged a tire. The white pylons are frequently hit. I saw a runner trip on one about a week ago and he stopped himself before falling into the car lane. of course the speed limit has been reduced. You have to maneuver around all the bike infrastructure not to damage your car.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 21:27     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

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But in the City of Alexandria, right now, where is the crisis? Where are the droves of Residents (the Council's constituency) that are in "a time of intense difficulty, trouble, or danger" over housing? Unfortunately financial inequities exist, and they always will even in countries purporting to be socialist / communist (look at the immigrant populations in Sweden and France). Alexandria need not destroy itself so DINKs can buy Del Ray townhouses or the Hill staffer can rent an apartment in Potomac Yard. Weirdly, there are plenty of apartments available in the West End - there are 46 units available right now at The Sherwood at Southern Towers, so they are at 89% occupancy. Right --- that developer who will make a cool million knocking down that perfectly good SFH to build three townhouses doesn't get a dime if we just encourage occupancy of the existing housing stock. So it is a crisis of not getting the house one wants or thinks they deserve - what if one wants a SFH, do they not deserve that?


The idea here seems to be that there is no housing crisis if vacant units are available. But there are always going to be vacant rental units available, just like there are always going to be units available for sale. People move in, people move out, people die, people combine households, people separate households...

Also, let's look at those units at The Sherwood at Southern Towers.

391 sf studio, 7 available, starting from $1498/month
514 sf studio, 10 available, starting from $1499/month
653 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 1 available, starting from $1690/month
721 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 8 available, starting from $1678/month
725 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 10 available, starting from $1755/month
884 sf 2 BR/1 BA, 2 available, starting from $2238/month
928 sf 2 BR/1 BA, 4 available, starting from $2290/month
1450 sf 2 BR/2 BA, 2 available, starting from $3013/month
1250 sf 3 BR/2 BA, 1 available, starting from $3002/month


So I guess you are trying to say these rents are outrageous and unaffordable ?

In reality, these rents aren’t too far off from the affordable housing rents offered by the City. Btw the City updates the list monthly.

https://www.alexandriava.gov/sites/default/files/2023-08/AUGUST%202023%20CAU%20Monthly%20Report%2008-03-2023.FINALTOUSE.pdf

And from your other example income of $57k is achievable if there are 2 working full time adults in the household. What then happens is they will often take in other relatives to help with the rent and no they don’t add them to the lease.


How many working full time adults should live in a 595 sf 1 BR/1 BA apartment?


2 adults is the usual max. You might be shocked to know but many people in the US live in 1 Br apts. There is nothing wrong with it and it’s not bad and it doesn’t mean the people living in them are “less than” though apparently it dies in your eyes




Fine, 2 adults in the 595 sf 1 BR/1 BA apartment that's affordable with a $57,000 gross income. Now, where should their children live? And where should the other relatives live whom they have taken in to help with the rent?


This proposal will not correct that issue unless you are talking about bonus height density. Most of the housing that will come out of this proposal will not be affordable. Rather, proponents argue, its existence will one day relieve pressure on the median and above median income markets, bringing down rent across the board.

The problem with this argument is that this area will continue to remain popular based on its proximity to DC and employers.

They also argue their current infrastructure/school projects will prepare the area for future needs. But they also continuously use old assumptions to determine future need. For example, they say new apartments are not a primary source for school kids historically. But if their argument is that SFHs are going to become unaffordable, then at some point those new apartments will become a source for school kids.


Yeah, I'm tired of hearing that adding housing supply won't change the supply-demand curve. The basic facts are:

1. there's a housing shortage
2. more housing will help alleviate the housing shortage
3. some people are highly motivated to assert that fact 1 and fact 2 are not facts


My post wasn’t meant to imply 1 and 2 aren’t facts. Simply that there are factors that may mitigate the intended impact, potentially significantly. I don’t think construction of new hosing via 3-6 plexes or bonus height density will outweigh population pressures for decades. The lending environment is pretty unfavorable right now. Some people are also highly motivated to simplify complex scenarios and bury unintended impacts by attacking those who raise them as opposed to addressing their arguments.


I was just noticing there is a ton of land along the George Washington Parkway that could be sold to developers for housing. The National Mall has lots of flat, open space. Fort Ward also has lots of space, don’t mind the historical significance and past. This. Is. A. Crisis.


Or we could allow developers to build 2-6 unit buildings where they are currently only allowed to build 1-unit buildings.


Serious question: Who is the target market for those 2 to 6 unit buildings? Are they not available elsewhere in Alexandria?


People who want to live in multi-unit buildings that aren't big multi-unit buildings. Where in Alexandria do you believe such buildings exist?



Well there are already tons of duplexes. Once you get to a triplex you are effectively talking about a town house to already tons of those. So it’s really 4-6 plexes wedged in between SFH on narrow streets with one side of street parking only near metros (Del Ray/Rosemount/GW Park). I mean, sure, they could pop up elsewhere but that’s the most likely location.


If there are already tons of duplexes, then they're not exotic, and nobody will get in a panic about allowing more property owners to build duplexes in places where property owners are currently not allowed to build duplexes. That's great news!


Actually I don’t think you would get nearly as much protest if you stuck to duplexes. Or even triplexes if room and parking allowed. But (and I guess we will know for sure tomorrow) we are probably talking about allowing 4-6 plexes. And all those nice, afforded garden apartments will get demolished for bonus height density with significantly reduced parking.


Duplexes: ok.
Triplexes: ok-ish.
Fourplexes: HELL ON EARTH!!!!!!!!!!!!11111111111111


Look, I don’t live in Del Ray so it’s not going to impact me. But most lots aren’t wide enough for a triplex so realistically we are probably talking about a duplex v. a 4-plex. That a lot more people and cars on narrow streets with parking on one side. And I know we all want people to ditch cars but realistically most people in those areas have two even when they metro to work.

But this is what I meant about about not being able to discuss meaningful nuances. And this is why every conversation will break down on this topic, because people like you are so stringent you cannot even get reasonable people on board.

And it’s why you and council don’t want to make this an election issue. It’s easier to fast track it and treat anyone with any concerns like a NIMBY jerk.


Housing for cars is apparently more important than housing for people.


Again, you are proving my point. We are probably on the same side. I don’t even know how to argue with this. We’ve probably met at Dem meetings assuming you aren’t lying about your background.

Intellectually it’s easy, but politically it’s really hard.

It may not be as hard politically as people seem to believe it is, after five billion public meetings where the same older, more affluent homeowners attend and say the same thing, over and over and over. That's not just a City of Alexandra thing, it's everywhere.

Also, what is your point? My point is that a lot of the objections to housing boil down to: but I don't want more people parking cars on my street.


Correct because land - thus parking - is actually a finite resource. When I bring my small child home from therapy that is inaccessible by public transport I don’t want them to walk a mile to get home. That is a legitimate concern that merits something other than dismissal and derision. Maybe it is not “winning” in your book, but it is legitimate.


Why can't we have housing? Because parking.
Why can't we have sidewalks? Because parking.
Why can't we have bike lanes? Because parking.
Why can't we have bus lanes for better bus service? Because parking.
Why can't we have walkable neighborhoods? Because parking.
Why can't we have walkable schools? Because parking.
Why can't we have safer intersections? Because parking.



Parking isn’t the only issue and you know that. Parking was never an argument against most of the issues you list. You post like a petulant child.


Have you been to meetings about such issues? Parking is always an argument. In fact, it often turns out be the main argument.


Yes, I am involved in meetings about intersections, school rebuilds, the Duke Street BRT and bike lane proposals and rarely hear anyone bring up parking.


Then Alexandria must be an amazing and exceptional wonderland.


So you don’t even live here?


As you probably know, DC and many of the surrounding jurisdictions are all dealing with the same issues, the same sets of policy proposals, and the same groups of people who support and/or oppose those policy proposals. The City of Alexandria is not unique. Also, people who don't live in the City of Alexandria get to have opinions about things that happen in the City of Alexandria.


You sound like the Alexandria snob from Old Town who is a substitute teacher in Arlington public schools. She posts on ArlNow all the time and sneers that she "would never step foot in an Alexandria school." She does't even have kids, but from her station as an substitute she pontificates on every Arliington school policy with faux authority. This is what happens when people don't stay in their lane.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 20:54     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

Welp, Justin seems to have overplayed his cards on his social media campaign. That plan is quite the nothing burger.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 20:32     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

Nobody uses the bike lanes and claiming otherise makes you look like an insane person with an agenda, to those of us that drive that stretch 2 or 3 times a day.

There are no bikes. Maybe once every two weeks, I'll see a lone, retired, 102 year old, struggling up the side of The Seminary.

You already won. Just shut up and take comfort in knowing that you accomplished something 85% of the city really, really didn't want.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 19:19     Subject: Re:City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

Anonymous wrote:^^^^ "Right decision" is subjective. The City literally took an area (Seminary from Howard to Quaker) without a high KSI rate and put in the road diet. Meanwhile, the part of Seminary that was actually dangerous three years ago (see the KSI rate) is still dangerous today. Some folks think it's interesting that the area near Jim Durham and his wealthy bike bros got the improvements while the majority POC area between Howard and Dawes on Seminary got zilch.


What they did was right, AND they should do more of it in more places.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 18:41     Subject: Re:City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

Anonymous wrote:^^^^ "Right decision" is subjective. The City literally took an area (Seminary from Howard to Quaker) without a high KSI rate and put in the road diet. Meanwhile, the part of Seminary that was actually dangerous three years ago (see the KSI rate) is still dangerous today. Some folks think it's interesting that the area near Jim Durham and his wealthy bike bros got the improvements while the majority POC area between Howard and Dawes on Seminary got zilch.


Durham's daughter used to live off of Howard, and it was his motivation to get bike lanes to connect Howard to his house off of Seminary. That is why he didn't care about west of Howard, only from Howard to Ft. Williams.

Then she moved, so it was all for nothing.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 17:35     Subject: Re:City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

^^^^ "Right decision" is subjective. The City literally took an area (Seminary from Howard to Quaker) without a high KSI rate and put in the road diet. Meanwhile, the part of Seminary that was actually dangerous three years ago (see the KSI rate) is still dangerous today. Some folks think it's interesting that the area near Jim Durham and his wealthy bike bros got the improvements while the majority POC area between Howard and Dawes on Seminary got zilch.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 15:06     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:The schools have been overcapacity for years the roads are impossible to travel on now in the city. City officials have seriously lost their minds. When city council was asked about class sizes and overcapacity issues years ago and asked what their plans are with all the 10 newish affordable housing buildings the literally sat there and blinked. You can't make this incompetence up.


Impossible, you say? So everyone is just sitting at home? Or, if you mean impossible to travel on by car, how come there are so many cars on the roads?


Hey go back to posting hour bike lobby crap on AlxNow. You know the roads are crowded.

My daughter ended up with a daily drop off occupational therapy appointment every day Mon-Fri this summer at a location where I needed to go up duke st, then over and up seminary road. I did the round trip drive twice daily all summer and not once did I see a single bike in the bike lanes. Honest to god, not a single bike even though the times I was driving varied and often included am or pm rush hour. What an absolute waste and cause of more vehicle congestion.


I bike on Seminary all the time. I fly right past the cars sitting in traffic. Probably why you didn't see me is because you weren't paying attention, which drivers never do.


I call BS on this one. I live off Seminary, there are rarely cars sitting in traffic and if they are, they're trying to turn left on to St. Stephen's. There are also small backups going north/west on Seminary right before the Howard intersection.


Double BS. Sounds like the geezer who got the bike lanes built on Seminary Rd. because he worried about his grandkids riding their bikes a few blocks to his house. The kids moved so he is looking for reasons to keep the bike lanes. His original argument was based on blind people not being able to safely cross Seminary Rd. in the "heavy traffic."


Durham's daughter and grandkids moved closer to him. They are no further away from Seminary than they used to be.


NP here. They live closer, and are still off of Seminary. Durham is the ultimate mansplainer who thinks his legacy and his calling from God are to get bike lanes everywhere possible. He’s here to save us. He cannot understand how his visions or options are not the best choice, ever. He had his blind friends from the charity he works with (biking with the blind) call and write in support of that seminary bike lane and to get the crosswalk in front of his house claiming they’re too scared and it’s too dangerous for them to cross the street there; despite the fact they’re never crossing the street there because they don’t live at the seminary or EHS or even in Alexandria. It’s special interest to the core. It’s such BS. His daughters told me he had them do that. They can’t keep their mouths shut.


More than two years later, city officials say they made the right decision. A report shows that:

Speeds decreased slightly but did not display a noticeable difference.
Traffic did not appear to divert to neighborhood streets, with one exception: Vehicle volumes on Ft. Williams Parkway saw an increase in both directions of 12 to 33 percent.
Peak period travel times on Seminary Road decreased by 35 to 60 seconds. Reductions eastbound were marginally greater than trips traveling west.
Bicycle ridership on the road increased. Pedestrian usage decreased.
The percentage of drivers traveling more than 35 mph on the roadway has decreased significantly.

A few high-profile, high-speed crashes on the roadway have damaged pedestrian infrastructure, and the city is working to get new equipment, again, to replace that damaged by cars.

The one thing the city wanted — a sidewalk on the north side of the road outside the Virginia Theological Seminary — has proved cost-prohibitive. The Virginia Dept. of Transportation denied funding for the sidewalk, and the city has not come up with the $1 million it would cost to install it.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 15:01     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The schools have been overcapacity for years the roads are impossible to travel on now in the city. City officials have seriously lost their minds. When city council was asked about class sizes and overcapacity issues years ago and asked what their plans are with all the 10 newish affordable housing buildings the literally sat there and blinked. You can't make this incompetence up.


Impossible, you say? So everyone is just sitting at home? Or, if you mean impossible to travel on by car, how come there are so many cars on the roads?


Hey go back to posting hour bike lobby crap on AlxNow. You know the roads are crowded.

My daughter ended up with a daily drop off occupational therapy appointment every day Mon-Fri this summer at a location where I needed to go up duke st, then over and up seminary road. I did the round trip drive twice daily all summer and not once did I see a single bike in the bike lanes. Honest to god, not a single bike even though the times I was driving varied and often included am or pm rush hour. What an absolute waste and cause of more vehicle congestion.


I bike on Seminary all the time. I fly right past the cars sitting in traffic. Probably why you didn't see me is because you weren't paying attention, which drivers never do.


I call BS on this one. I live off Seminary, there are rarely cars sitting in traffic and if they are, they're trying to turn left on to St. Stephen's. There are also small backups going north/west on Seminary right before the Howard intersection.


Double BS. Sounds like the geezer who got the bike lanes built on Seminary Rd. because he worried about his grandkids riding their bikes a few blocks to his house. The kids moved so he is looking for reasons to keep the bike lanes. His original argument was based on blind people not being able to safely cross Seminary Rd. in the "heavy traffic."


Durham's daughter and grandkids moved closer to him. They are no further away from Seminary than they used to be.


NP here. They live closer, and are still off of Seminary. Durham is the ultimate mansplainer who thinks his legacy and his calling from God are to get bike lanes everywhere possible. He’s here to save us. He cannot understand how his visions or options are not the best choice, ever. He had his blind friends from the charity he works with (biking with the blind) call and write in support of that seminary bike lane and to get the crosswalk in front of his house claiming they’re too scared and it’s too dangerous for them to cross the street there; despite the fact they’re never crossing the street there because they don’t live at the seminary or EHS or even in Alexandria. It’s special interest to the core. It’s such BS. His daughters told me he had them do that. They can’t keep their mouths shut.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 14:05     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

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But in the City of Alexandria, right now, where is the crisis? Where are the droves of Residents (the Council's constituency) that are in "a time of intense difficulty, trouble, or danger" over housing? Unfortunately financial inequities exist, and they always will even in countries purporting to be socialist / communist (look at the immigrant populations in Sweden and France). Alexandria need not destroy itself so DINKs can buy Del Ray townhouses or the Hill staffer can rent an apartment in Potomac Yard. Weirdly, there are plenty of apartments available in the West End - there are 46 units available right now at The Sherwood at Southern Towers, so they are at 89% occupancy. Right --- that developer who will make a cool million knocking down that perfectly good SFH to build three townhouses doesn't get a dime if we just encourage occupancy of the existing housing stock. So it is a crisis of not getting the house one wants or thinks they deserve - what if one wants a SFH, do they not deserve that?


The idea here seems to be that there is no housing crisis if vacant units are available. But there are always going to be vacant rental units available, just like there are always going to be units available for sale. People move in, people move out, people die, people combine households, people separate households...

Also, let's look at those units at The Sherwood at Southern Towers.

391 sf studio, 7 available, starting from $1498/month
514 sf studio, 10 available, starting from $1499/month
653 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 1 available, starting from $1690/month
721 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 8 available, starting from $1678/month
725 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 10 available, starting from $1755/month
884 sf 2 BR/1 BA, 2 available, starting from $2238/month
928 sf 2 BR/1 BA, 4 available, starting from $2290/month
1450 sf 2 BR/2 BA, 2 available, starting from $3013/month
1250 sf 3 BR/2 BA, 1 available, starting from $3002/month


So I guess you are trying to say these rents are outrageous and unaffordable ?

In reality, these rents aren’t too far off from the affordable housing rents offered by the City. Btw the City updates the list monthly.

https://www.alexandriava.gov/sites/default/files/2023-08/AUGUST%202023%20CAU%20Monthly%20Report%2008-03-2023.FINALTOUSE.pdf

And from your other example income of $57k is achievable if there are 2 working full time adults in the household. What then happens is they will often take in other relatives to help with the rent and no they don’t add them to the lease.


How many working full time adults should live in a 595 sf 1 BR/1 BA apartment?


2 adults is the usual max. You might be shocked to know but many people in the US live in 1 Br apts. There is nothing wrong with it and it’s not bad and it doesn’t mean the people living in them are “less than” though apparently it dies in your eyes


Fine, 2 adults in the 595 sf 1 BR/1 BA apartment that's affordable with a $57,000 gross income. Now, where should their children live? And where should the other relatives live whom they have taken in to help with the rent?


This proposal will not correct that issue unless you are talking about bonus height density. Most of the housing that will come out of this proposal will not be affordable. Rather, proponents argue, its existence will one day relieve pressure on the median and above median income markets, bringing down rent across the board.

The problem with this argument is that this area will continue to remain popular based on its proximity to DC and employers.

They also argue their current infrastructure/school projects will prepare the area for future needs. But they also continuously use old assumptions to determine future need. For example, they say new apartments are not a primary source for school kids historically. But if their argument is that SFHs are going to become unaffordable, then at some point those new apartments will become a source for school kids.


Yeah, I'm tired of hearing that adding housing supply won't change the supply-demand curve. The basic facts are:

1. there's a housing shortage
2. more housing will help alleviate the housing shortage
3. some people are highly motivated to assert that fact 1 and fact 2 are not facts


My post wasn’t meant to imply 1 and 2 aren’t facts. Simply that there are factors that may mitigate the intended impact, potentially significantly. I don’t think construction of new hosing via 3-6 plexes or bonus height density will outweigh population pressures for decades. The lending environment is pretty unfavorable right now. Some people are also highly motivated to simplify complex scenarios and bury unintended impacts by attacking those who raise them as opposed to addressing their arguments.


I was just noticing there is a ton of land along the George Washington Parkway that could be sold to developers for housing. The National Mall has lots of flat, open space. Fort Ward also has lots of space, don’t mind the historical significance and past. This. Is. A. Crisis.


Or we could allow developers to build 2-6 unit buildings where they are currently only allowed to build 1-unit buildings.


Serious question: Who is the target market for those 2 to 6 unit buildings? Are they not available elsewhere in Alexandria?


People who want to live in multi-unit buildings that aren't big multi-unit buildings. Where in Alexandria do you believe such buildings exist?



Well there are already tons of duplexes. Once you get to a triplex you are effectively talking about a town house to already tons of those. So it’s really 4-6 plexes wedged in between SFH on narrow streets with one side of street parking only near metros (Del Ray/Rosemount/GW Park). I mean, sure, they could pop up elsewhere but that’s the most likely location.


If there are already tons of duplexes, then they're not exotic, and nobody will get in a panic about allowing more property owners to build duplexes in places where property owners are currently not allowed to build duplexes. That's great news!


Actually I don’t think you would get nearly as much protest if you stuck to duplexes. Or even triplexes if room and parking allowed. But (and I guess we will know for sure tomorrow) we are probably talking about allowing 4-6 plexes. And all those nice, afforded garden apartments will get demolished for bonus height density with significantly reduced parking.


Duplexes: ok.
Triplexes: ok-ish.
Fourplexes: HELL ON EARTH!!!!!!!!!!!!11111111111111


Look, I don’t live in Del Ray so it’s not going to impact me. But most lots aren’t wide enough for a triplex so realistically we are probably talking about a duplex v. a 4-plex. That a lot more people and cars on narrow streets with parking on one side. And I know we all want people to ditch cars but realistically most people in those areas have two even when they metro to work.

But this is what I meant about about not being able to discuss meaningful nuances. And this is why every conversation will break down on this topic, because people like you are so stringent you cannot even get reasonable people on board.

And it’s why you and council don’t want to make this an election issue. It’s easier to fast track it and treat anyone with any concerns like a NIMBY jerk.


Housing for cars is apparently more important than housing for people.


Again, you are proving my point. We are probably on the same side. I don’t even know how to argue with this. We’ve probably met at Dem meetings assuming you aren’t lying about your background.

Intellectually it’s easy, but politically it’s really hard.

It may not be as hard politically as people seem to believe it is, after five billion public meetings where the same older, more affluent homeowners attend and say the same thing, over and over and over. That's not just a City of Alexandra thing, it's everywhere.

Also, what is your point? My point is that a lot of the objections to housing boil down to: but I don't want more people parking cars on my street.


Correct because land - thus parking - is actually a finite resource. When I bring my small child home from therapy that is inaccessible by public transport I don’t want them to walk a mile to get home. That is a legitimate concern that merits something other than dismissal and derision. Maybe it is not “winning” in your book, but it is legitimate.


Why can't we have housing? Because parking.
Why can't we have sidewalks? Because parking.
Why can't we have bike lanes? Because parking.
Why can't we have bus lanes for better bus service? Because parking.
Why can't we have walkable neighborhoods? Because parking.
Why can't we have walkable schools? Because parking.
Why can't we have safer intersections? Because parking.



Parking isn’t the only issue and you know that. Parking was never an argument against most of the issues you list. You post like a petulant child.


Have you been to meetings about such issues? Parking is always an argument. In fact, it often turns out be the main argument.


Yes, I am involved in meetings about intersections, school rebuilds, the Duke Street BRT and bike lane proposals and rarely hear anyone bring up parking.


Then Alexandria must be an amazing and exceptional wonderland.


So you don’t even live here?


As you probably know, DC and many of the surrounding jurisdictions are all dealing with the same issues, the same sets of policy proposals, and the same groups of people who support and/or oppose those policy proposals. The City of Alexandria is not unique. Also, people who don't live in the City of Alexandria get to have opinions about things that happen in the City of Alexandria.


Did I say you don’t? Your prior post implied I am not directly involved in these issues in Alexandria. It’s pretty disingenuous to imply that if you yourself don’t live here.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 12:43     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The schools have been overcapacity for years the roads are impossible to travel on now in the city. City officials have seriously lost their minds. When city council was asked about class sizes and overcapacity issues years ago and asked what their plans are with all the 10 newish affordable housing buildings the literally sat there and blinked. You can't make this incompetence up.


Impossible, you say? So everyone is just sitting at home? Or, if you mean impossible to travel on by car, how come there are so many cars on the roads?


Hey go back to posting hour bike lobby crap on AlxNow. You know the roads are crowded.

My daughter ended up with a daily drop off occupational therapy appointment every day Mon-Fri this summer at a location where I needed to go up duke st, then over and up seminary road. I did the round trip drive twice daily all summer and not once did I see a single bike in the bike lanes. Honest to god, not a single bike even though the times I was driving varied and often included am or pm rush hour. What an absolute waste and cause of more vehicle congestion.


I bike on Seminary all the time. I fly right past the cars sitting in traffic. Probably why you didn't see me is because you weren't paying attention, which drivers never do.


I call BS on this one. I live off Seminary, there are rarely cars sitting in traffic and if they are, they're trying to turn left on to St. Stephen's. There are also small backups going north/west on Seminary right before the Howard intersection.


Double BS. Sounds like the geezer who got the bike lanes built on Seminary Rd. because he worried about his grandkids riding their bikes a few blocks to his house. The kids moved so he is looking for reasons to keep the bike lanes. His original argument was based on blind people not being able to safely cross Seminary Rd. in the "heavy traffic."


Durham's daughter and grandkids moved closer to him. They are no further away from Seminary than they used to be.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 12:26     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

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Anonymous wrote:
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But in the City of Alexandria, right now, where is the crisis? Where are the droves of Residents (the Council's constituency) that are in "a time of intense difficulty, trouble, or danger" over housing? Unfortunately financial inequities exist, and they always will even in countries purporting to be socialist / communist (look at the immigrant populations in Sweden and France). Alexandria need not destroy itself so DINKs can buy Del Ray townhouses or the Hill staffer can rent an apartment in Potomac Yard. Weirdly, there are plenty of apartments available in the West End - there are 46 units available right now at The Sherwood at Southern Towers, so they are at 89% occupancy. Right --- that developer who will make a cool million knocking down that perfectly good SFH to build three townhouses doesn't get a dime if we just encourage occupancy of the existing housing stock. So it is a crisis of not getting the house one wants or thinks they deserve - what if one wants a SFH, do they not deserve that?


The idea here seems to be that there is no housing crisis if vacant units are available. But there are always going to be vacant rental units available, just like there are always going to be units available for sale. People move in, people move out, people die, people combine households, people separate households...

Also, let's look at those units at The Sherwood at Southern Towers.

391 sf studio, 7 available, starting from $1498/month
514 sf studio, 10 available, starting from $1499/month
653 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 1 available, starting from $1690/month
721 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 8 available, starting from $1678/month
725 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 10 available, starting from $1755/month
884 sf 2 BR/1 BA, 2 available, starting from $2238/month
928 sf 2 BR/1 BA, 4 available, starting from $2290/month
1450 sf 2 BR/2 BA, 2 available, starting from $3013/month
1250 sf 3 BR/2 BA, 1 available, starting from $3002/month


So I guess you are trying to say these rents are outrageous and unaffordable ?

In reality, these rents aren’t too far off from the affordable housing rents offered by the City. Btw the City updates the list monthly.

https://www.alexandriava.gov/sites/default/files/2023-08/AUGUST%202023%20CAU%20Monthly%20Report%2008-03-2023.FINALTOUSE.pdf

And from your other example income of $57k is achievable if there are 2 working full time adults in the household. What then happens is they will often take in other relatives to help with the rent and no they don’t add them to the lease.


How many working full time adults should live in a 595 sf 1 BR/1 BA apartment?


2 adults is the usual max. You might be shocked to know but many people in the US live in 1 Br apts. There is nothing wrong with it and it’s not bad and it doesn’t mean the people living in them are “less than” though apparently it dies in your eyes


Fine, 2 adults in the 595 sf 1 BR/1 BA apartment that's affordable with a $57,000 gross income. Now, where should their children live? And where should the other relatives live whom they have taken in to help with the rent?


This proposal will not correct that issue unless you are talking about bonus height density. Most of the housing that will come out of this proposal will not be affordable. Rather, proponents argue, its existence will one day relieve pressure on the median and above median income markets, bringing down rent across the board.

The problem with this argument is that this area will continue to remain popular based on its proximity to DC and employers.

They also argue their current infrastructure/school projects will prepare the area for future needs. But they also continuously use old assumptions to determine future need. For example, they say new apartments are not a primary source for school kids historically. But if their argument is that SFHs are going to become unaffordable, then at some point those new apartments will become a source for school kids.


Yeah, I'm tired of hearing that adding housing supply won't change the supply-demand curve. The basic facts are:

1. there's a housing shortage
2. more housing will help alleviate the housing shortage
3. some people are highly motivated to assert that fact 1 and fact 2 are not facts


My post wasn’t meant to imply 1 and 2 aren’t facts. Simply that there are factors that may mitigate the intended impact, potentially significantly. I don’t think construction of new hosing via 3-6 plexes or bonus height density will outweigh population pressures for decades. The lending environment is pretty unfavorable right now. Some people are also highly motivated to simplify complex scenarios and bury unintended impacts by attacking those who raise them as opposed to addressing their arguments.


I was just noticing there is a ton of land along the George Washington Parkway that could be sold to developers for housing. The National Mall has lots of flat, open space. Fort Ward also has lots of space, don’t mind the historical significance and past. This. Is. A. Crisis.


Or we could allow developers to build 2-6 unit buildings where they are currently only allowed to build 1-unit buildings.


Serious question: Who is the target market for those 2 to 6 unit buildings? Are they not available elsewhere in Alexandria?


People who want to live in multi-unit buildings that aren't big multi-unit buildings. Where in Alexandria do you believe such buildings exist?



Well there are already tons of duplexes. Once you get to a triplex you are effectively talking about a town house to already tons of those. So it’s really 4-6 plexes wedged in between SFH on narrow streets with one side of street parking only near metros (Del Ray/Rosemount/GW Park). I mean, sure, they could pop up elsewhere but that’s the most likely location.


If there are already tons of duplexes, then they're not exotic, and nobody will get in a panic about allowing more property owners to build duplexes in places where property owners are currently not allowed to build duplexes. That's great news!


Actually I don’t think you would get nearly as much protest if you stuck to duplexes. Or even triplexes if room and parking allowed. But (and I guess we will know for sure tomorrow) we are probably talking about allowing 4-6 plexes. And all those nice, afforded garden apartments will get demolished for bonus height density with significantly reduced parking.


Duplexes: ok.
Triplexes: ok-ish.
Fourplexes: HELL ON EARTH!!!!!!!!!!!!11111111111111


Look, I don’t live in Del Ray so it’s not going to impact me. But most lots aren’t wide enough for a triplex so realistically we are probably talking about a duplex v. a 4-plex. That a lot more people and cars on narrow streets with parking on one side. And I know we all want people to ditch cars but realistically most people in those areas have two even when they metro to work.

But this is what I meant about about not being able to discuss meaningful nuances. And this is why every conversation will break down on this topic, because people like you are so stringent you cannot even get reasonable people on board.

And it’s why you and council don’t want to make this an election issue. It’s easier to fast track it and treat anyone with any concerns like a NIMBY jerk.


Housing for cars is apparently more important than housing for people.


Again, you are proving my point. We are probably on the same side. I don’t even know how to argue with this. We’ve probably met at Dem meetings assuming you aren’t lying about your background.

Intellectually it’s easy, but politically it’s really hard.

It may not be as hard politically as people seem to believe it is, after five billion public meetings where the same older, more affluent homeowners attend and say the same thing, over and over and over. That's not just a City of Alexandra thing, it's everywhere.

Also, what is your point? My point is that a lot of the objections to housing boil down to: but I don't want more people parking cars on my street.


Correct because land - thus parking - is actually a finite resource. When I bring my small child home from therapy that is inaccessible by public transport I don’t want them to walk a mile to get home. That is a legitimate concern that merits something other than dismissal and derision. Maybe it is not “winning” in your book, but it is legitimate.


Why can't we have housing? Because parking.
Why can't we have sidewalks? Because parking.
Why can't we have bike lanes? Because parking.
Why can't we have bus lanes for better bus service? Because parking.
Why can't we have walkable neighborhoods? Because parking.
Why can't we have walkable schools? Because parking.
Why can't we have safer intersections? Because parking.



Parking isn’t the only issue and you know that. Parking was never an argument against most of the issues you list. You post like a petulant child.


Have you been to meetings about such issues? Parking is always an argument. In fact, it often turns out be the main argument.


Yes, I am involved in meetings about intersections, school rebuilds, the Duke Street BRT and bike lane proposals and rarely hear anyone bring up parking.


Then Alexandria must be an amazing and exceptional wonderland.


So you don’t even live here?


As you probably know, DC and many of the surrounding jurisdictions are all dealing with the same issues, the same sets of policy proposals, and the same groups of people who support and/or oppose those policy proposals. The City of Alexandria is not unique. Also, people who don't live in the City of Alexandria get to have opinions about things that happen in the City of Alexandria.
Anonymous
Post 09/05/2023 12:10     Subject: City of Alexandria rolls out timeline for massive housing reform project

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

But in the City of Alexandria, right now, where is the crisis? Where are the droves of Residents (the Council's constituency) that are in "a time of intense difficulty, trouble, or danger" over housing? Unfortunately financial inequities exist, and they always will even in countries purporting to be socialist / communist (look at the immigrant populations in Sweden and France). Alexandria need not destroy itself so DINKs can buy Del Ray townhouses or the Hill staffer can rent an apartment in Potomac Yard. Weirdly, there are plenty of apartments available in the West End - there are 46 units available right now at The Sherwood at Southern Towers, so they are at 89% occupancy. Right --- that developer who will make a cool million knocking down that perfectly good SFH to build three townhouses doesn't get a dime if we just encourage occupancy of the existing housing stock. So it is a crisis of not getting the house one wants or thinks they deserve - what if one wants a SFH, do they not deserve that?


The idea here seems to be that there is no housing crisis if vacant units are available. But there are always going to be vacant rental units available, just like there are always going to be units available for sale. People move in, people move out, people die, people combine households, people separate households...

Also, let's look at those units at The Sherwood at Southern Towers.

391 sf studio, 7 available, starting from $1498/month
514 sf studio, 10 available, starting from $1499/month
653 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 1 available, starting from $1690/month
721 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 8 available, starting from $1678/month
725 sf 1 BR/1 BA, 10 available, starting from $1755/month
884 sf 2 BR/1 BA, 2 available, starting from $2238/month
928 sf 2 BR/1 BA, 4 available, starting from $2290/month
1450 sf 2 BR/2 BA, 2 available, starting from $3013/month
1250 sf 3 BR/2 BA, 1 available, starting from $3002/month


So I guess you are trying to say these rents are outrageous and unaffordable ?

In reality, these rents aren’t too far off from the affordable housing rents offered by the City. Btw the City updates the list monthly.

https://www.alexandriava.gov/sites/default/files/2023-08/AUGUST%202023%20CAU%20Monthly%20Report%2008-03-2023.FINALTOUSE.pdf

And from your other example income of $57k is achievable if there are 2 working full time adults in the household. What then happens is they will often take in other relatives to help with the rent and no they don’t add them to the lease.


How many working full time adults should live in a 595 sf 1 BR/1 BA apartment?


2 adults is the usual max. You might be shocked to know but many people in the US live in 1 Br apts. There is nothing wrong with it and it’s not bad and it doesn’t mean the people living in them are “less than” though apparently it dies in your eyes


Fine, 2 adults in the 595 sf 1 BR/1 BA apartment that's affordable with a $57,000 gross income. Now, where should their children live? And where should the other relatives live whom they have taken in to help with the rent?


This proposal will not correct that issue unless you are talking about bonus height density. Most of the housing that will come out of this proposal will not be affordable. Rather, proponents argue, its existence will one day relieve pressure on the median and above median income markets, bringing down rent across the board.

The problem with this argument is that this area will continue to remain popular based on its proximity to DC and employers.

They also argue their current infrastructure/school projects will prepare the area for future needs. But they also continuously use old assumptions to determine future need. For example, they say new apartments are not a primary source for school kids historically. But if their argument is that SFHs are going to become unaffordable, then at some point those new apartments will become a source for school kids.


Yeah, I'm tired of hearing that adding housing supply won't change the supply-demand curve. The basic facts are:

1. there's a housing shortage
2. more housing will help alleviate the housing shortage
3. some people are highly motivated to assert that fact 1 and fact 2 are not facts


My post wasn’t meant to imply 1 and 2 aren’t facts. Simply that there are factors that may mitigate the intended impact, potentially significantly. I don’t think construction of new hosing via 3-6 plexes or bonus height density will outweigh population pressures for decades. The lending environment is pretty unfavorable right now. Some people are also highly motivated to simplify complex scenarios and bury unintended impacts by attacking those who raise them as opposed to addressing their arguments.


I was just noticing there is a ton of land along the George Washington Parkway that could be sold to developers for housing. The National Mall has lots of flat, open space. Fort Ward also has lots of space, don’t mind the historical significance and past. This. Is. A. Crisis.


Or we could allow developers to build 2-6 unit buildings where they are currently only allowed to build 1-unit buildings.


Serious question: Who is the target market for those 2 to 6 unit buildings? Are they not available elsewhere in Alexandria?


People who want to live in multi-unit buildings that aren't big multi-unit buildings. Where in Alexandria do you believe such buildings exist?



Well there are already tons of duplexes. Once you get to a triplex you are effectively talking about a town house to already tons of those. So it’s really 4-6 plexes wedged in between SFH on narrow streets with one side of street parking only near metros (Del Ray/Rosemount/GW Park). I mean, sure, they could pop up elsewhere but that’s the most likely location.


If there are already tons of duplexes, then they're not exotic, and nobody will get in a panic about allowing more property owners to build duplexes in places where property owners are currently not allowed to build duplexes. That's great news!


Actually I don’t think you would get nearly as much protest if you stuck to duplexes. Or even triplexes if room and parking allowed. But (and I guess we will know for sure tomorrow) we are probably talking about allowing 4-6 plexes. And all those nice, afforded garden apartments will get demolished for bonus height density with significantly reduced parking.


Duplexes: ok.
Triplexes: ok-ish.
Fourplexes: HELL ON EARTH!!!!!!!!!!!!11111111111111


Look, I don’t live in Del Ray so it’s not going to impact me. But most lots aren’t wide enough for a triplex so realistically we are probably talking about a duplex v. a 4-plex. That a lot more people and cars on narrow streets with parking on one side. And I know we all want people to ditch cars but realistically most people in those areas have two even when they metro to work.

But this is what I meant about about not being able to discuss meaningful nuances. And this is why every conversation will break down on this topic, because people like you are so stringent you cannot even get reasonable people on board.

And it’s why you and council don’t want to make this an election issue. It’s easier to fast track it and treat anyone with any concerns like a NIMBY jerk.


Housing for cars is apparently more important than housing for people.


Again, you are proving my point. We are probably on the same side. I don’t even know how to argue with this. We’ve probably met at Dem meetings assuming you aren’t lying about your background.

Intellectually it’s easy, but politically it’s really hard.

It may not be as hard politically as people seem to believe it is, after five billion public meetings where the same older, more affluent homeowners attend and say the same thing, over and over and over. That's not just a City of Alexandra thing, it's everywhere.

Also, what is your point? My point is that a lot of the objections to housing boil down to: but I don't want more people parking cars on my street.


Correct because land - thus parking - is actually a finite resource. When I bring my small child home from therapy that is inaccessible by public transport I don’t want them to walk a mile to get home. That is a legitimate concern that merits something other than dismissal and derision. Maybe it is not “winning” in your book, but it is legitimate.


Why can't we have housing? Because parking.
Why can't we have sidewalks? Because parking.
Why can't we have bike lanes? Because parking.
Why can't we have bus lanes for better bus service? Because parking.
Why can't we have walkable neighborhoods? Because parking.
Why can't we have walkable schools? Because parking.
Why can't we have safer intersections? Because parking.



Parking isn’t the only issue and you know that. Parking was never an argument against most of the issues you list. You post like a petulant child.


Have you been to meetings about such issues? Parking is always an argument. In fact, it often turns out be the main argument.


Yes, I am involved in meetings about intersections, school rebuilds, the Duke Street BRT and bike lane proposals and rarely hear anyone bring up parking.


Then Alexandria must be an amazing and exceptional wonderland.[/quote

So you don’t even live here?