Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear this constantly asserted, as if it were self-evidently true, but cannot figure out how it could possibly be correct.
There's 700,000 people in the District. There's 5 million in the suburbs. If you add 30,000 housing units in DC, they will instantly be soaked up by people in the suburbs looking for shorter commutes.
As people move into DC from Falls Church and Rockville and Fairfax, their old places will open up for other people. Other people will move into those places from suburbs even further out, which will open up slots in places like Chantilly or Columbia or wherever else those people are coming from and that would put downward pressure on housing prices in the suburbs they've left.
But how does any of that lead to affordable housing in DC?
OP here. Still waiting for someone to answer this question.
I'm still waiting for you to explain why you apparently oppose adding housing to DC.
No one is answering because the arguments that adding to the housing supply will result in affordable housing are completely bogus.
Why do you oppose adding to the housing supply in DC?
Changing the topic, huh? Because someone calls you on your bogus arguments? Why don't you explain to us how, if we only raised the building height restrictions, we'd have all this affordable housing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Give rich people what they want, and there will be dregs for average people! In the far suburbs! Awesome.
The rich people in Ward 3, and similar places, want to stop development. Send the lesser folks somewhere else, as far away as possible.
It's the density people who want to push out poor people to make way for their million-dollar condos.
No, I am a density person in Ward 3, and what I want is (a) new buildings with affordable housing in them to replace empty lots, (b) zoning that allows for apartment buildings and other multi-family housing throughout the ward instead of just big single-family homes, and (c) taller buildings in general to allow for more housing in the area. I want more poor people to be able to move TO the neighborhood.
None of this stuff will actually result in lower housing prices. That's the whole point of this thread.
Anonymous wrote:
It’s interesting that the District’s CFO estimates far less population growth in DC than the wild-eyed assumptions of the Office of Planning. I would trust the CFO office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Give rich people what they want, and there will be dregs for average people! In the far suburbs! Awesome.
The rich people in Ward 3, and similar places, want to stop development. Send the lesser folks somewhere else, as far away as possible.
It's the density people who want to push out poor people to make way for their million-dollar condos.
No, I am a density person in Ward 3, and what I want is (a) new buildings with affordable housing in them to replace empty lots, (b) zoning that allows for apartment buildings and other multi-family housing throughout the ward instead of just big single-family homes, and (c) taller buildings in general to allow for more housing in the area. I want more poor people to be able to move TO the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Give rich people what they want, and there will be dregs for average people! In the far suburbs! Awesome.
The rich people in Ward 3, and similar places, want to stop development. Send the lesser folks somewhere else, as far away as possible.
It's the density people who want to push out poor people to make way for their million-dollar condos.
No, I am a density person in Ward 3, and what I want is (a) new buildings with affordable housing in them to replace empty lots, (b) zoning that allows for apartment buildings and other multi-family housing throughout the ward instead of just big single-family homes, and (c) taller buildings in general to allow for more housing in the area. I want more poor people to be able to move TO the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Give rich people what they want, and there will be dregs for average people! In the far suburbs! Awesome.
The rich people in Ward 3, and similar places, want to stop development. Send the lesser folks somewhere else, as far away as possible.
It's the density people who want to push out poor people to make way for their million-dollar condos.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
That's not quite what they say. They say it will lead to *affordable* housing in the District. They say it endlessly, but no one can seem to explain how that will work.
Please cite some examples.
Google it. It's fundamental to the mayor's housing plans, and it makes no sense. Here's her from October:
“I’m discouraging any developer that has the opportunity to build more units so that we can have more affordable housing, to be scared away from the process,” Bowser said. “These units have been held up for too long, and we can’t continue to hear residents across our entire city be concerned about affordability without doing everything that we can to get more units.”
Ah. In that context, presumably it means that the development project will include some affordable units. That's how it will work.
Generally the way it works is the mayor gives the developers a blank check to do whatever they want, the developers give her lots of campaign contributions and everyone agrees to throw in a couple affordable housing units as a fig leaf so everyone can pretend this is really all about making housing affordable.
Actually that's not how it works at all.
Affordable housing units aren't "thrown-in" they are required.
A mayor in the pocket of developers would be eliminating the IZ requirements not strengthening them which is what the Mayor has done though of course just to highlight your ignorance of how things work it is actually the DC Council that passes the laws but this proposal to strengthen the IZ law came from the Office of Planning which is an executive branch agency that reports to the Mayor!
Mayor Bozo-Bowser hasn’t touched IZ requirements and if you talk with OP staff they will tell you that there is no political will to increase requirements because of developer push back. That’s why large developments, even PUDs, are averaging about 8 percent IZ.
Google is your friend:
https://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/news/housing-complex/blog/20828951/zoning-change-could-give-district-2600-more-affordable-housing-units
The mayor in fact did engineer a change in the IZ rules back in 2016 that made the units available to people making 25% less than the previous standard, a change that will in fact cost developers money.
But hey don't let the facts get in the way of any of your uninformed screeds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear this constantly asserted, as if it were self-evidently true, but cannot figure out how it could possibly be correct.
There's 700,000 people in the District. There's 5 million in the suburbs. If you add 30,000 housing units in DC, they will instantly be soaked up by people in the suburbs looking for shorter commutes.
As people move into DC from Falls Church and Rockville and Fairfax, their old places will open up for other people. Other people will move into those places from suburbs even further out, which will open up slots in places like Chantilly or Columbia or wherever else those people are coming from and that would put downward pressure on housing prices in the suburbs they've left.
But how does any of that lead to affordable housing in DC?
OP here. Still waiting for someone to answer this question.
I'm still waiting for you to explain why you apparently oppose adding housing to DC.
No one is answering because the arguments that adding to the housing supply will result in affordable housing are completely bogus.
Why do you oppose adding to the housing supply in DC?
Changing the topic, huh? Because someone calls you on your bogus arguments? Why don't you explain to us how, if we only raised the building height restrictions, we'd have all this affordable housing?
The point of adding to the housing supply is adding to the housing supply. Why do you oppose this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
That's not quite what they say. They say it will lead to *affordable* housing in the District. They say it endlessly, but no one can seem to explain how that will work.
Please cite some examples.
Google it. It's fundamental to the mayor's housing plans, and it makes no sense. Here's her from October:
“I’m discouraging any developer that has the opportunity to build more units so that we can have more affordable housing, to be scared away from the process,” Bowser said. “These units have been held up for too long, and we can’t continue to hear residents across our entire city be concerned about affordability without doing everything that we can to get more units.”
Ah. In that context, presumably it means that the development project will include some affordable units. That's how it will work.
Generally the way it works is the mayor gives the developers a blank check to do whatever they want, the developers give her lots of campaign contributions and everyone agrees to throw in a couple affordable housing units as a fig leaf so everyone can pretend this is really all about making housing affordable.
Actually that's not how it works at all.
Affordable housing units aren't "thrown-in" they are required.
A mayor in the pocket of developers would be eliminating the IZ requirements not strengthening them which is what the Mayor has done though of course just to highlight your ignorance of how things work it is actually the DC Council that passes the laws but this proposal to strengthen the IZ law came from the Office of Planning which is an executive branch agency that reports to the Mayor!
Mayor Bozo-Bowser hasn’t touched IZ requirements and if you talk with OP staff they will tell you that there is no political will to increase requirements because of developer push back. That’s why large developments, even PUDs, are averaging about 8 percent IZ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear this constantly asserted, as if it were self-evidently true, but cannot figure out how it could possibly be correct.
There's 700,000 people in the District. There's 5 million in the suburbs. If you add 30,000 housing units in DC, they will instantly be soaked up by people in the suburbs looking for shorter commutes.
As people move into DC from Falls Church and Rockville and Fairfax, their old places will open up for other people. Other people will move into those places from suburbs even further out, which will open up slots in places like Chantilly or Columbia or wherever else those people are coming from and that would put downward pressure on housing prices in the suburbs they've left.
But how does any of that lead to affordable housing in DC?
OP here. Still waiting for someone to answer this question.
I'm still waiting for you to explain why you apparently oppose adding housing to DC.
No one is answering because the arguments that adding to the housing supply will result in affordable housing are completely bogus.
Why do you oppose adding to the housing supply in DC?
Changing the topic, huh? Because someone calls you on your bogus arguments? Why don't you explain to us how, if we only raised the building height restrictions, we'd have all this affordable housing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear this constantly asserted, as if it were self-evidently true, but cannot figure out how it could possibly be correct.
There's 700,000 people in the District. There's 5 million in the suburbs. If you add 30,000 housing units in DC, they will instantly be soaked up by people in the suburbs looking for shorter commutes.
As people move into DC from Falls Church and Rockville and Fairfax, their old places will open up for other people. Other people will move into those places from suburbs even further out, which will open up slots in places like Chantilly or Columbia or wherever else those people are coming from and that would put downward pressure on housing prices in the suburbs they've left.
But how does any of that lead to affordable housing in DC?
OP here. Still waiting for someone to answer this question.
I'm still waiting for you to explain why you apparently oppose adding housing to DC.
No one is answering because the arguments that adding to the housing supply will result in affordable housing are completely bogus.
Why do you oppose adding to the housing supply in DC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear this constantly asserted, as if it were self-evidently true, but cannot figure out how it could possibly be correct.
There's 700,000 people in the District. There's 5 million in the suburbs. If you add 30,000 housing units in DC, they will instantly be soaked up by people in the suburbs looking for shorter commutes.
As people move into DC from Falls Church and Rockville and Fairfax, their old places will open up for other people. Other people will move into those places from suburbs even further out, which will open up slots in places like Chantilly or Columbia or wherever else those people are coming from and that would put downward pressure on housing prices in the suburbs they've left.
But how does any of that lead to affordable housing in DC?
OP here. Still waiting for someone to answer this question.
I'm still waiting for you to explain why you apparently oppose adding housing to DC.
No one is answering because the arguments that adding to the housing supply will result in affordable housing are completely bogus.