California: Affordable
Housing Fraud, by Alice Greene,
9/30/15
The
lack of affordable housing is especially prevalent in coastal California, where
some pay more than $1,000 a month just for a bed.
According
to a recent survey, $3,500 is
the average monthly rent for a person living in a one-bedroom apartment in San
Francisco. Others are paying $1,800
just to rent a bunk bed. The rest of the Bay Area is similar, with particularly
high prices in Palo Alto and San Mateo.
San
Mateo held a public meeting recently to discuss the lack of affordable housing,
which is supposedly a complex issue. In reality, the "problem” is not
complex. It’s a simple effect of supply and demand: when an increase in
population results in the demand for more housing – but the government
prevents houses from being built – the price of existing housing will go
up.
Apartments
in the San Francisco have been three or four times more expensive than the
national average since the 1970s – but
why?
Local
laws and policies have prevented Californians from building in the name of
preserving land. But the environmental activists in California are usually so
well off they don’t have to worry about high rents.
Others
complain that there’s just no more room in coastal California, but anyone who
has driven on Highway 280 from Palo Alto to San Francisco knows this isn’t true
(image above).
Today,
more than half of the land that makes up San Mateo is off-limits for building.
Until this is changed, the price of housing will not go down.
http://punchingbagpost.com/california-affordable-housing-fraud
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