Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When everyone around you is doing the same thing, you think it's normal.
You seem to assume that in the absence of committed affordable housing in Arlington or Alexandria, they would be living with good role models. Have you ever spent any time around private market rate AH - places like Culmore, the cheap apt complexes in Annandale or or Sterling or PG County?
They may not have good role models in the absence of CAH, but Arlington and Alexandria would not be squandering millions of dollars, either. That money could do a lot of good for other, more beneficial programs (both for low-income, and the increasingly squeezed middle class).
- Not PP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When everyone around you is doing the same thing, you think it's normal.
You seem to assume that in the absence of committed affordable housing in Arlington or Alexandria, they would be living with good role models. Have you ever spent any time around private market rate AH - places like Culmore, the cheap apt complexes in Annandale or or Sterling or PG County?
Anonymous wrote:When everyone around you is doing the same thing, you think it's normal.
Anonymous wrote:Look at page 3 of this report. It's a study Arlington County did about the jobs the Affordable Housing people have:
http://arlingtonva.s3.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/15/2014/02/Occupations-of-Tenants-of-CAFs-Feb-2015.pdf
They are mostly food service workers, construction, office and admin, and taxi drivers.
So 3 out of 4 top tenant occupations are KNOWN for under-the-table cash payments. So are they fully disclosing and paying taxes on all their earnings? Or are they committing fraud?
Anonymous wrote:One major problem with affordable housing that rarely if ever gets discussed is that it dooms the people living there to generations of poverty.
In the rush to make their white liberal guilt feel better, there is a belief that somehow propping people up in housing in an area where their very limited income is going to be spent on goods that are already just slightly priced higher for a lifetime, coupled with no understanding of how to get of their situation, leads to long term, generational poverty. If you doubt this, drive over to Old Town, grab a donut at Sugar Shack and admire the public housing where a majority of residents having been living for 20+ years.
I actually now oppose any form of "affordable housing" because it just hurts families way more than it will ever help.
These families aren't saving - they are spending what limited income they have to just tread water in an already too costly area. Sometimes, these families don't even understand the value of savings.
These families are likely not going to get into the middle class. They do not understand how to get there (need to have less kids, need to save money vs. buying iphones, cable, etc, need to worry about school work, need to learn conversational English, etc) and they have no way of knowing this. All their neighbors live like they do. When everyone around you is doing the same thing, you think it's normal.
I think both Alexandria and Arlington governments should get out of the housing game all together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The affordable housing study shows that the number of "market rate affordable" units -- the apartments that a family of four making 60% of the average median income of $107,000 can afford -- dropped from over 10,000 apartments in 2004 to just over 3,000 units in 2014. That is the displacement of 7,000 moderate income families who lived in Arlington--for example, the huge Arna Valley complex that was knocked down and replaced with "The Avalon" and "The Harlowe," or the blocks and blocks of Buckingham Village apartments that are now $800,000 townhouses.
While yes, this is market forces at work and developers have the right to build on their property to its highest use within the zoning laws, its also not unreasonable that the county should try and do something to help out lower income county residents by trying to staunch the losses. If you immigrated from here in the 90's, had your kids at VHC, send them to APS schools, work in Arlington or DC or Fairfax, whatever---it sucks that your landlord can kick you out and you have to move to Manassas that is an hour from your job and pull your kids out of school and where you don't know anyone. No one is entitled to live anywhere, but it's not crazy to say that as an extremely wealthy county--that is wealthy in part because the value of real estate has increased so much--we should spend some of that wealth to help out those displaced by its acquisition.
I wholeheartedly agree with this.
Also to the PPs talking about "poor" people and their limited choices--I moved to Arlington to work as an RN. I previously worked as a teacher before changing careers. I would be hard pressed to afford an apartment as either a teacher or a nurse. When you talk about affordable housing remember that you're not just keeping out people's maids or nannies but also nurses, teachers, EMTs, police, firefighters....
Anonymous wrote:The affordable housing study shows that the number of "market rate affordable" units -- the apartments that a family of four making 60% of the average median income of $107,000 can afford -- dropped from over 10,000 apartments in 2004 to just over 3,000 units in 2014. That is the displacement of 7,000 moderate income families who lived in Arlington--for example, the huge Arna Valley complex that was knocked down and replaced with "The Avalon" and "The Harlowe," or the blocks and blocks of Buckingham Village apartments that are now $800,000 townhouses.
While yes, this is market forces at work and developers have the right to build on their property to its highest use within the zoning laws, its also not unreasonable that the county should try and do something to help out lower income county residents by trying to staunch the losses. If you immigrated from here in the 90's, had your kids at VHC, send them to APS schools, work in Arlington or DC or Fairfax, whatever---it sucks that your landlord can kick you out and you have to move to Manassas that is an hour from your job and pull your kids out of school and where you don't know anyone. No one is entitled to live anywhere, but it's not crazy to say that as an extremely wealthy county--that is wealthy in part because the value of real estate has increased so much--we should spend some of that wealth to help out those displaced by its acquisition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
First off, those new all AH buildings are hardly tenements.
I am not sure they are all in one or two neighborhoods. Many are on Col Pike and Buckingham Gardens, but there is also that apt complex on Glebe near Crystal City, and I think some proposals elsewhere. Also there are prospects to move up - the neighborhoods they are in are still mixed income, and the kids attend some pretty decent schools - I don't think they are condemned to multigenerational poverty.
https://www.arlnow.com/2016/05/13/nauck-apartment-residents-demand-better-living-conditions/
Er, poor customer service? C'mon now. A tenement is a place that is physically barely liveable. Not a poorly managed building. Or even one with crime. And, BTW, that is one building - out of several CAH buildings in Arlington.
Maybe it's not Cabrini-Green, but we can and should do better.
Even Cabrini Green was not a tenement. Tenements are the horrible places people lived in that projects like Cabrini Green replaced. Places without hot water, often without indoor plumbing, with limited light and air, subject to frequent fires, disease, etc.
The economic profile of the west end of the Pike (west of Four Mile Run) has decreased significantly in recent years,
I am not sure about that. Yes, there have been a few low income buildings built, but there has been at least one new market rate building (5500) and I think the market rate older hi rises have at least held their own - and as far as I can gather, the nearby SFHs have been appreciating.
and there are more proposals for this area that will push it even further into concentrated poverty territory.
I believe there are also some market rate development proposals.