• BartsBigBugBag@lemmy.tf
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    11 months ago

    There are 25 empty houses for every homeless person in the US. There are people like Bezos who own multiple $25 million dollar mansions, that sit empty 300+ days a year. There are places with housing shortages, but that is not the case nationwide. The problem is that our government cares little to ensure adequate housing for its population. It sees absolutely no issue in allowing property to be hoarded by the rich and used to strangle the poor.

    • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      That’s one of those things that’s technically true, but quite misleading.

      The number of houses you could reasonably move homeless people into tomorrow is much smaller than the number of vacant houses. Unless you suggest putting homeless people in buildings undergoing renovation, in new houses that are almost done being constructed, in houses that were sold but have the new owners moving in next week, in rental units that have been on the market for a month, or in your grandmother’s house after she dies while the estate is being settled. Or into chalets on a ski hill, into seasonally occupied employee housing, etc.

      The vacancy rate includes basically everything that isn’t currently someone’s primary residence on whichever day the census uses for their snapshot. Low vacancy rates are actually a bad thing and are bad for affordability.

    • SCB@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Fun fact: homeless people can’t afford mansions.

      Build them places to rent.

      • BartsBigBugBag@lemmy.tf
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        11 months ago

        Fun fact: Every mansion or luxury condo built is 100+ affordable units not being built.

        We’re building at record rates in many places, but just building housing does nothing but line the pockets of developers, because they will always choose to prioritize more profitable ventures, and current methods of requiring a small single digit percentage of their units to be “affordable” aren’t cutting it.

        We need to be specific in what we’re building, and who we’re building it for. People moving in from out of state with high paying jobs are often prioritized by city and county governments because they increase the tax base, but this simultaneously raises rents for all of the current residents in crises as the market is dragged up. If we’re not specifically building affordable housing for local residents within each effected community to the best of our ability, then we’re only going to exacerbate the issue further. I’ve lived through “just build more” in my state for 20 years, I know how it goes.

        • SCB@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          If you build any housing at all, you are opening up “affordable housing” at the bottom of the totem pole. That’s how buying houses works.

          No one is going to build a dumpster apartment to rent on the cheap. There’s no incentive there.

          Let people build and the less-desirable homes will be scooped up as prices fall. It’s basic supply and demand.

          Your state, like mine, has probably been kneecapping development in favor of NIMBY policies for those 20 years

          • BartsBigBugBag@lemmy.tf
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            11 months ago

            No, they haven’t. They’ve been working hand in hand with developers to entice new money for them to tax, and ignoring the poor who only get poorer.

            • SCB@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              Knocking down single-family or small unit homes to build more multi-family housing is a good thing actually.