Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for positing. This story will be invisible on housing twitter just like the original story about RealPage was. Anyone who claims to be an affordable housing advocate and doesn’t applaud the AG’s effort isn’t interested in affordable housing so much as they are in making sure landlords make giant profits.
Name one housing advocate who's denounced this lawsuit. If they're not commenting on it, it's because breaking up a price fixing scheme doesn't solve the underlying problems that they're focused on. Even if the DCAG proves that there was a conspiracy among landlords - it's plausible - there will still be a housing crisis, just as there will still be NIMBYs trying to prevent anyone from doing anything about it.
Have you even read the complaint? The companies were able to increase rents even as vacancies increased. That really calls into question your just build more housing slogan. Turns out building more housing won’t actually drive down pricing if landlords are colluding.
Then the solution is to stop the cartel, not to throw up our hands and say “it’s hopeless because landlords will always break the law.” We know from comparing housing production rates among different cities that whatever cartel activity is going on, it’s not enough to prevent rent prices from plateauing in places that are building enough. Besides, building more housing isn’t just about lowering prices. It’s also about making homes for people who need them, closer to urban cores and job centers. Housing advocates see NIMBY reliance on this lawsuit for what it is: an excuse to justify the status quo.
And yet YINBYs mobilize more effectively against next door messages than the cartel price fixing. How much have next door messages made rents go up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for positing. This story will be invisible on housing twitter just like the original story about RealPage was. Anyone who claims to be an affordable housing advocate and doesn’t applaud the AG’s effort isn’t interested in affordable housing so much as they are in making sure landlords make giant profits.
Fact check: false.
-person on housing Twitter
Serious question: where has housing twitter/urbanist twitter/local DC twitter gone? Is everyone on IG now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cool. Now go after the violent criminals that are terrorizing our city.
Yes, definitely can't address one problem unless we have already addressed every other problem first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be awesome if our AG stopped filing frivolous lawsuits and maybe did something about crime.
There’s nothing frivolous about this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for positing. This story will be invisible on housing twitter just like the original story about RealPage was. Anyone who claims to be an affordable housing advocate and doesn’t applaud the AG’s effort isn’t interested in affordable housing so much as they are in making sure landlords make giant profits.
Name one housing advocate who's denounced this lawsuit. If they're not commenting on it, it's because breaking up a price fixing scheme doesn't solve the underlying problems that they're focused on. Even if the DCAG proves that there was a conspiracy among landlords - it's plausible - there will still be a housing crisis, just as there will still be NIMBYs trying to prevent anyone from doing anything about it.
Have you even read the complaint? The companies were able to increase rents even as vacancies increased. That really calls into question your just build more housing slogan. Turns out building more housing won’t actually drive down pricing if landlords are colluding.
Then the solution is to stop the cartel, not to throw up our hands and say “it’s hopeless because landlords will always break the law.” We know from comparing housing production rates among different cities that whatever cartel activity is going on, it’s not enough to prevent rent prices from plateauing in places that are building enough. Besides, building more housing isn’t just about lowering prices. It’s also about making homes for people who need them, closer to urban cores and job centers. Housing advocates see NIMBY reliance on this lawsuit for what it is: an excuse to justify the status quo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for positing. This story will be invisible on housing twitter just like the original story about RealPage was. Anyone who claims to be an affordable housing advocate and doesn’t applaud the AG’s effort isn’t interested in affordable housing so much as they are in making sure landlords make giant profits.
Name one housing advocate who's denounced this lawsuit. If they're not commenting on it, it's because breaking up a price fixing scheme doesn't solve the underlying problems that they're focused on. Even if the DCAG proves that there was a conspiracy among landlords - it's plausible - there will still be a housing crisis, just as there will still be NIMBYs trying to prevent anyone from doing anything about it.
Have you even read the complaint? The companies were able to increase rents even as vacancies increased. That really calls into question your just build more housing slogan. Turns out building more housing won’t actually drive down pricing if landlords are colluding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for positing. This story will be invisible on housing twitter just like the original story about RealPage was. Anyone who claims to be an affordable housing advocate and doesn’t applaud the AG’s effort isn’t interested in affordable housing so much as they are in making sure landlords make giant profits.
Name one housing advocate who's denounced this lawsuit. If they're not commenting on it, it's because breaking up a price fixing scheme doesn't solve the underlying problems that they're focused on. Even if the DCAG proves that there was a conspiracy among landlords - it's plausible - there will still be a housing crisis, just as there will still be NIMBYs trying to prevent anyone from doing anything about it.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for positing. This story will be invisible on housing twitter just like the original story about RealPage was. Anyone who claims to be an affordable housing advocate and doesn’t applaud the AG’s effort isn’t interested in affordable housing so much as they are in making sure landlords make giant profits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for positing. This story will be invisible on housing twitter just like the original story about RealPage was. Anyone who claims to be an affordable housing advocate and doesn’t applaud the AG’s effort isn’t interested in affordable housing so much as they are in making sure landlords make giant profits.
Fact check: false.
-person on housing Twitter
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cool. Now go after the violent criminals that are terrorizing our city.
The AG is worried the criminals will be priced out of the area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be awesome if our AG stopped filing frivolous lawsuits and maybe did something about crime.
I find the timing of this curious, what with the little carjacker getting killed and the increasing media coverage about juvenile crime and all. It has a “look over here, look over here” distraction feel about it.
Please remove your tinfoil hat.
DC's OAG is a pretty large office with many divisions, all doing work at the same time. Some people are addressing crime, some are addressing public corruption, some are addressing housing, some are addressing consumer protection issues. It's not like Schlwab is sitting there saying "WE NEED A WIN! GET ME A BIG LAWSUIT TO FILE!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be awesome if our AG stopped filing frivolous lawsuits and maybe did something about crime.
I find the timing of this curious, what with the little carjacker getting killed and the increasing media coverage about juvenile crime and all. It has a “look over here, look over here” distraction feel about it.
You think the AG made the decision to file the lawsuit and put the whole thing together and actually did file it, all between Saturday night and Wednesday?![]()
No, they didn’t just throw this together this weekend, but I don’t think it was pure coincidence that they chose this week to file it and make a splashy press announcement.