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RamboLiberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-27-06 12:26 AM
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WP: The Housing Crisis Goes Suburban
Edited on Sun Aug-27-06 12:42 AM by RamboLiberal
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/25/AR2006082501197_pf.html

In the past five years, housing prices in Fairfax County have grown 12 times as fast as household incomes. Today, the county's median family would have to spend 54 percent of its income to afford the county's median home; in 2000, the figure was 26 percent. The situation is so dire that Fairfax recently began offering housing subsidies to families earning $90,000 a year; soon, that figure may go as high as $110,000 a year.

Seventy years after President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared that the Depression had left one-third of the American people "ill-housed, ill-clothed and ill-nourished," Americans are well-clothed and increasingly overnourished. But the scarcity of affordable housing is a deepening national crisis, and not just for inner-city families on welfare. The problem has climbed the income ladder and moved to the suburbs, where service workers cram their families into overcrowded apartments, college graduates have to crash with their parents, and firefighters, police officers and teachers can't afford to live in the communities they serve.

Homeownership is near an all-time high, but the gap is growing between the Owns and the Own-Nots -- as well as the Owns and the Own-80-Miles-From-Works. One-third of Americans now spend at least
30 percent of their income on housing, the federal definition of an "unaffordable" burden, and half the working poor spend at least 50 percent of their income on rent, a "critical" burden. The real estate boom of the past decade has produced windfalls for Americans who owned before it began, but affordable housing is now a serious problem for more low- and moderate-income Americans than taxes, Social Security or gas prices.

Yet nobody in national politics is doing anything about it -- or even talking about it.

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Erika Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-27-06 12:36 AM
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1. W is doing away with the middle class
He's redistributed the wealth to the elites.
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MADem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-27-06 12:52 AM
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2. It's another thing to run on, that is for sure NT
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Porcupine Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-27-06 01:24 AM
Response to Original message
3. Taboo Subject, third rail, dead political zone, call it what you will....
but if you mention it while on the campaign trail you will suddenly discover that you have no funding and your gardener is accusing you of having sex with your daughter(even if you dont' have a daughter.)

The rich in AmeriKa largely stay rich by owning all the land worth owning. I work for them and they are A-holes. There will be no change in laws that might make it less profitable to own rental property. To be sure it is purchasers of investment property that have pushed the housing boom to ridiculous heights.

I have rentals on my portfolio that are $425K properties renting for $1300/mo; less than any reasonable mortgage would be for that amount. They are purchased brand new from developers. Until we change the tax laws to screw housing speculators this will be a problem.
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