Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally get why he is doing it. To preserve the character of the neighborhood. Laudible. That said it is covertly racist. I doubt that he even realizes.
I missed the part of the listing that says that a black person cannot buy the house. Can you point it out?
That would be overtly racist. Covertly racist is when the effect disproportionately effects people of color even if the intent was otherwise. For example, public schools pursuant to federal standards require milk as the drink. Why? It’s not health, although milk has healthy components. It’s because the dairy industry lobbied harder than the orange industry. Did you know that less than 10% of white people are lactose intolerant, approximately 50% of black people are lactose intolerant and over 90% of Asians are lactose intolerant.
I am presuming that the covenant is not intended as racist but it is rather indisputable that single family houses in will attract a higher percentage of white buyers than multi family in the same location.
Anonymous wrote:Love to see it. “Missing middle” serves to enrich developers and nothing more. Hopefully people have begun to recognize that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally get why he is doing it. To preserve the character of the neighborhood. Laudible. That said it is covertly racist. I doubt that he even realizes.
I missed the part of the listing that says that a black person cannot buy the house. Can you point it out?
Anonymous wrote:I totally get why he is doing it. To preserve the character of the neighborhood. Laudible. That said it is covertly racist. I doubt that he even realizes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will it stand up to legal scrutiny?
No, all the new owners have to do is submit for a variance wit the county to subdivide. talk to a local real estate lawyer before purchasong
The covenant is absolutely enforceable if he gets another property owner in the neighborhood to sign onto the agreement.
If I was the neighbor, I would only sign on if the seller agrees to pay all legal costs to enforce it.
Even then…I am skeptical the seller would be available when it comes time to hire a lawyer.
Again….this is why some people really like HOA communities.
Anonymous wrote:1.2M isn't missing middle. 1.2M is a very expensive house.
House is a dump. It's a tiny post-war rambler. Nothing special about it. Most middle class people live in better housing than this one.
Seller is delusional. House should be torn down. If you want affordable housing, you need density. Replace it with townhouses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will it stand up to legal scrutiny?
No, all the new owners have to do is submit for a variance wit the county to subdivide. talk to a local real estate lawyer before purchasong
The covenant is absolutely enforceable if he gets another property owner in the neighborhood to sign onto the agreement.
Anonymous wrote:I cannot believe that little dump is 1.2…i dont care what you can walk to