Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
But people don't need housing in expensive cities and subsidized by the government. And there is enough housing for people in the United States, you just don't like the price and the location.
Yeah, people can live in dying rural areas for cheap. Who cares if there aren't any "jobs," or "transportation to where there are jobs," or "reasons to be there at all." They can figure all those things out themselves once they're safely out of sight and out of mind, that way I can enjoy my artificially scarce housing in peace without any fear of having to look at the filthy poors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
But people don't need housing in expensive cities and subsidized by the government. And there is enough housing for people in the United States, you just don't like the price and the location.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
But people don't need housing in expensive cities and subsidized by the government. And there is enough housing for people in the United States, you just don't like the price and the location.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
The point that you are refusing to acknowledge is that more quantity is not always better. I suppose that you don’t eat all of your meals at a buffet, correct?
First let's agree that there needs to be more housing, and it has to go somewhere, and it has to be built by someone.
I do not agree with that. Claims of shortages or crises are unfounded. Housing utilization can be improved through appropriate tax policy and economic policy.
DC has a smaller population than it did in 1950. And I do not believe the homeless population was larger in 1950 than today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
The point that you are refusing to acknowledge is that more quantity is not always better. I suppose that you don’t eat all of your meals at a buffet, correct?
First let's agree that there needs to be more housing, and it has to go somewhere, and it has to be built by someone.
I do not agree with that. Claims of shortages or crises are unfounded. Housing utilization can be improved through appropriate tax policy and economic policy.
DC has a smaller population than it did in 1950. And I do not believe the homeless population was larger in 1950 than today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
But people don't live live they did in the 1950s. The market has moved on. Younger residents want their own places and buyers/renters want more amenities.
The point that you are refusing to acknowledge is that more quantity is not always better. I suppose that you don’t eat all of your meals at a buffet, correct?
First let's agree that there needs to be more housing, and it has to go somewhere, and it has to be built by someone.
I do not agree with that. Claims of shortages or crises are unfounded. Housing utilization can be improved through appropriate tax policy and economic policy.
DC has a smaller population than it did in 1950. And I do not believe the homeless population was larger in 1950 than today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
The point that you are refusing to acknowledge is that more quantity is not always better. I suppose that you don’t eat all of your meals at a buffet, correct?
First let's agree that there needs to be more housing, and it has to go somewhere, and it has to be built by someone.
I do not agree with that. Claims of shortages or crises are unfounded. Housing utilization can be improved through appropriate tax policy and economic policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
The point that you are refusing to acknowledge is that more quantity is not always better. I suppose that you don’t eat all of your meals at a buffet, correct?
First let's agree that there needs to be more housing, and it has to go somewhere, and it has to be built by someone.
I do not agree with that. Claims of shortages or crises are unfounded. Housing utilization can be improved through appropriate tax policy and economic policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
The point that you are refusing to acknowledge is that more quantity is not always better. I suppose that you don’t eat all of your meals at a buffet, correct?
First let's agree that there needs to be more housing, and it has to go somewhere, and it has to be built by someone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
The point that you are refusing to acknowledge is that more quantity is not always better. I suppose that you don’t eat all of your meals at a buffet, correct?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.
I'm trying to increase the supply of housing. The value I'm trying to promote is that people need housing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are great homes across america. I am cool with grandfathering in existing residents and also essential workers (teachers, firefighters etc/ with rent to buy, loans, homestead act.. NOT with feeling compelled to build mini apartments to compete with Ballston rentals.
Are you a developer? If not, then nobody is asking you to build apartments, let alone compelling you to build apartments.
My point is DC is running a $$ surplus, yes, really. There are MANY policies that don't involve building more housing (unless we are talking homeless shelters, which are fine!) that would protect existing DC residents from being priced out (like the homestead act, or more loans to buy houses) and allow the kinds of middle class residents who provide essential services to find footholds in the city. All this can be done without building little 1-2 bedroom.units all over ward 3. Those are just to lure young professionals from Ballston.
There are many policies that would increase the supply of housing without increasing the supply of housing?
NP. These talking points are tiresome. Any supply of housing units of any type is not a net positive good for the immediate or long-term in and of itself. It’s a question of the values you want to promote through your economic and development policy.