Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington gives a lot of lip service to sharing and all being welcome, etc. Money where mouth is, zip codes.
This.
I actually find the people posting thing like go away we don’t want you here are much worse and definitely the problem. In real life they say the same thing over and over to affordable housing in their area. So I can’t take anything they say seriously. How about this? Instead of the next tear down monstrous rebuild in their neighborhood, we tear down and build a small multi family building. then we move in low income families. How many seconds would it take for the objections to roll in
Yes, that would help. I would reimagine the whole Madison rec center area, to take just one example, as a possible site for low income housing.
But there's not public transit infrastructure there. And it wouldn't fit enough housing to make building it there worthwhile.
Buses can be easily added.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington gives a lot of lip service to sharing and all being welcome, etc. Money where mouth is, zip codes.
This.
I actually find the people posting thing like go away we don’t want you here are much worse and definitely the problem. In real life they say the same thing over and over to affordable housing in their area. So I can’t take anything they say seriously. How about this? Instead of the next tear down monstrous rebuild in their neighborhood, we tear down and build a small multi family building. then we move in low income families. How many seconds would it take for the objections to roll in
Yes, that would help. I would reimagine the whole Madison rec center area, to take just one example, as a possible site for low income housing.
But there's not public transit infrastructure there. And it wouldn't fit enough housing to make building it there worthwhile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington gives a lot of lip service to sharing and all being welcome, etc. Money where mouth is, zip codes.
This.
I actually find the people posting thing like go away we don’t want you here are much worse and definitely the problem. In real life they say the same thing over and over to affordable housing in their area. So I can’t take anything they say seriously. How about this? Instead of the next tear down monstrous rebuild in their neighborhood, we tear down and build a small multi family building. then we move in low income families. How many seconds would it take for the objections to roll in
Yes, that would help. I would reimagine the whole Madison rec center area, to take just one example, as a possible site for low income housing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington gives a lot of lip service to sharing and all being welcome, etc. Money where mouth is, zip codes.
This.
I actually find the people posting thing like go away we don’t want you here are much worse and definitely the problem. In real life they say the same thing over and over to affordable housing in their area. So I can’t take anything they say seriously. How about this? Instead of the next tear down monstrous rebuild in their neighborhood, we tear down and build a small multi family building. then we move in low income families. How many seconds would it take for the objections to roll in
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington gives a lot of lip service to sharing and all being welcome, etc. Money where mouth is, zip codes.
This is true but not surprising. Human beings are evolutionarily hardwired to hoard resources. We can talk a good game but when push comes to shove, we don't want to give up any resource or privilege that gives us or our offspring an advantage. It's hard to overcome thousands of years of evolution.
Anonymous wrote:Oh it’s still a school board problem. APS could draw more equitable boundaries.