Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So move to loudon county if you don’t want density. The fact is, housing is unaffordable because there isn’t enough of it.
This is just wrong.
Increasing density drives housing prices up, not down.
If you have a bunch of people living in a small area, then businesses will want to be there too because they want foot traffic. As bars and grocery stores and restaurants and boutiques move in, then more people want to live there too. So more condos and apartments are built. That brings even more bars and grocery stores and restaurants to the area, which makes even more people want to live there, and housing prices go to the moon.
This has happened over and over and over in neighborhoods across DC. Look at Navy Yard (before that 14th Street, and before that U Street, and before that...)
A well-known phenomenon in economics - the price increases when the supply increases.
Wait, what?
Uh, well, I didnt make this up. Economists have talked about this for years. There's academic papers written about it.
There are academic papers written about economic models, which are based on assumptions (because that's how models work), which the academics themselves explicitly say do not reflect the actual real world we live in.
But if you want to test it out in real life, then you can go to McPherson, Kansas (for example) and start building housing. Let us know in a few years whether the housing has generated people to live in it.
You could also just walk over to Navy Yard.
There's way, way, way more housing there than there was ten years ago.
And it is way, way, way more expensive than it was ten years ago.
And this is how increasing density drives low-income minorities out of the city.
The recipe is to buy houses from black people who've been here forever, knock them down and replace them with million-dollar condos that will mostly be bought up by high-income white people.
Anonymous wrote:DC has been historically an African American city going back to the times of the Civil War and post Civil War times.
The Federal Government brought a lot of jobs and African Americans came and stayed for the jobs.
It is only in about the last decade that DC is becoming white.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So move to loudon county if you don’t want density. The fact is, housing is unaffordable because there isn’t enough of it.
This is just wrong.
Increasing density drives housing prices up, not down.
If you have a bunch of people living in a small area, then businesses will want to be there too because they want foot traffic. As bars and grocery stores and restaurants and boutiques move in, then more people want to live there too. So more condos and apartments are built. That brings even more bars and grocery stores and restaurants to the area, which makes even more people want to live there, and housing prices go to the moon.
This has happened over and over and over in neighborhoods across DC. Look at Navy Yard (before that 14th Street, and before that U Street, and before that...)
A well-known phenomenon in economics - the price increases when the supply increases.
Wait, what?
Uh, well, I didnt make this up. Economists have talked about this for years. There's academic papers written about it.
There are academic papers written about economic models, which are based on assumptions (because that's how models work), which the academics themselves explicitly say do not reflect the actual real world we live in.
But if you want to test it out in real life, then you can go to McPherson, Kansas (for example) and start building housing. Let us know in a few years whether the housing has generated people to live in it.
You could also just walk over to Navy Yard.
There's way, way, way more housing there than there was ten years ago.
And it is way, way, way more expensive than it was ten years ago.
And this is how increasing density drives low-income minorities out of the city.
The recipe is to buy houses from black people who've been here forever, knock them down and replace them with million-dollar condos that will mostly be bought up by high-income white people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So move to loudon county if you don’t want density. The fact is, housing is unaffordable because there isn’t enough of it.
And that's OK.
People who can't afford close-in DC homes can live in affordable Loudon and Laurel and Laytonsville. There's nothing wrong with this.
All these discussions are premised on the fallacy that moderate and low-income people deserve to live in certain zip codes and that it's inherently 'wrong' when they can't.
I don't think it's ok.
The idea that only wealthy people get to have a secure home in a convenient location - that's not something I can get behind. Like saying that only wealthy people get to have secure access to nutritious food, or only wealthy people get to have assured access to good schools for their kids, or only wealthy people get to have health care when they need it. Nope.
Wrong. Housing may be a right, maaaybe, but housing at a given address is emphatically not a right or entitlement. To the victor go the spoils, and all. Well-resourced people have more options — such as options of where to call home — than lower-resourced people.
No one on this thread or in the WaPo article advocates that lower-resourced people get no home, or an unsafe shelter. They just don't get the best home and the best address.
And that's OK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So move to loudon county if you don’t want density. The fact is, housing is unaffordable because there isn’t enough of it.
And that's OK.
People who can't afford close-in DC homes can live in affordable Loudon and Laurel and Laytonsville. There's nothing wrong with this.
All these discussions are premised on the fallacy that moderate and low-income people deserve to live in certain zip codes and that it's inherently 'wrong' when they can't.
I don't think it's ok.
The idea that only wealthy people get to have a secure home in a convenient location - that's not something I can get behind. Like saying that only wealthy people get to have secure access to nutritious food, or only wealthy people get to have assured access to good schools for their kids, or only wealthy people get to have health care when they need it. Nope.
Anonymous wrote:
If the question is taxes, DC has the homestead act and could expand programs like that. Building new high density housing in low density, thriving neighborhoods is not the answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So move to loudon county if you don’t want density. The fact is, housing is unaffordable because there isn’t enough of it.
This is just wrong.
Increasing density drives housing prices up, not down.
If you have a bunch of people living in a small area, then businesses will want to be there too because they want foot traffic. As bars and grocery stores and restaurants and boutiques move in, then more people want to live there too. So more condos and apartments are built. That brings even more bars and grocery stores and restaurants to the area, which makes even more people want to live there, and housing prices go to the moon.
This has happened over and over and over in neighborhoods across DC. Look at Navy Yard (before that 14th Street, and before that U Street, and before that...)
A well-known phenomenon in economics - the price increases when the supply increases.
Wait, what?
Uh, well, I didnt make this up. Economists have talked about this for years. There's academic papers written about it.
There are academic papers written about economic models, which are based on assumptions (because that's how models work), which the academics themselves explicitly say do not reflect the actual real world we live in.
But if you want to test it out in real life, then you can go to McPherson, Kansas (for example) and start building housing. Let us know in a few years whether the housing has generated people to live in it.
You could also just walk over to Navy Yard.
There's way, way, way more housing there than there was ten years ago.
And it is way, way, way more expensive than it was ten years ago.
And this is how increasing density drives low-income minorities out of the city.
The recipe is to buy houses from black people who've been here forever, knock them down and replace them with million-dollar condos that will mostly be bought up by high-income white people.
This is what happened to black people on Hilton Head Island. They could not pay the real estate taxes for land and houses they had owned for forever and now they can't afford to live there.
Anonymous wrote:
"In the Navy Yard neighborhood, about 77 percent of residents were identified as low income in 2000. Sixteen years later, that population dropped to 21 percent.
Most of the people pushed out of these economic hot spots are black and low income, according to the data."
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/in-the-district-gentrification-means-widespread-displacement-report-says/2019/04/26/950a0c00-6775-11e9-8985-4cf30147bdca_story.html?outputType=amp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So move to loudon county if you don’t want density. The fact is, housing is unaffordable because there isn’t enough of it.
And that's OK.
People who can't afford close-in DC homes can live in affordable Loudon and Laurel and Laytonsville. There's nothing wrong with this.
All these discussions are premised on the fallacy that moderate and low-income people deserve to live in certain zip codes and that it's inherently 'wrong' when they can't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So move to loudon county if you don’t want density. The fact is, housing is unaffordable because there isn’t enough of it.
This is just wrong.
Increasing density drives housing prices up, not down.
If you have a bunch of people living in a small area, then businesses will want to be there too because they want foot traffic. As bars and grocery stores and restaurants and boutiques move in, then more people want to live there too. So more condos and apartments are built. That brings even more bars and grocery stores and restaurants to the area, which makes even more people want to live there, and housing prices go to the moon.
This has happened over and over and over in neighborhoods across DC. Look at Navy Yard (before that 14th Street, and before that U Street, and before that...)
A well-known phenomenon in economics - the price increases when the supply increases.
Wait, what?
Uh, well, I didnt make this up. Economists have talked about this for years. There's academic papers written about it.
There are academic papers written about economic models, which are based on assumptions (because that's how models work), which the academics themselves explicitly say do not reflect the actual real world we live in.
But if you want to test it out in real life, then you can go to McPherson, Kansas (for example) and start building housing. Let us know in a few years whether the housing has generated people to live in it.
You could also just walk over to Navy Yard.
There's way, way, way more housing there than there was ten years ago.
And it is way, way, way more expensive than it was ten years ago.
And this is how increasing density drives low-income minorities out of the city.
The recipe is to buy houses from black people who've been here forever, knock them down and replace them with million-dollar condos that will mostly be bought up by high-income white people.
Anonymous wrote:So move to loudon county if you don’t want density. The fact is, housing is unaffordable because there isn’t enough of it.