Posted on 07/23/2015 10:26:16 AM PDT by Ray76
While some cities in Texas and other Southern states have been adopting ordinances that protect their citizenry from creeping Shariah-compliant practices, cities such as Seattle are taking the opposite approach.
Seattles Democrat Mayor Ed Murray was so concerned that Muslims and other residents werent buying enough homes in his city that he had a committee investigate how that could be rectified.
One of the committees recommendations: Banks need to offer Shariah-compliant mortgage loans for Seattles growing Muslim community.
(Excerpt) Read more at wnd.com ...
http://www.citylab.com/housing/2015/07/how-a-seattle-plan-to-end-single-family-zoning-could-change-affordable-housing/398420/?utm_source=SFFB
How a Seattle Plan to End Single-Family Zoning Could Change Affordable Housing
Some of the proposed tools are untested, some are best practices. Together, they would set the city on the progressive edge.
Kriston Capps
Jul 13, 2015
The 28-member committeeplanners, business owners, architects, advocates, and other people in housing, right down to the tenantseven fingers how race and class discrimination have guided the history of single-family zoning. This is the purpose of single-family housing: to keep poor people and people of color out of white, wealthy neighborhoods by erecting high barriers to entry. The Seattle committee recommends that the city take those barriers down by replacing single-family zones with low-density residential zones and upzoning practically everywhere else.
That is a solution that is so clear and sensible that its dangerous.
The formal proposal released by Mayor Murray today is lighter on theory and details, but it gives a broader account of the mayors plans for affordable housing. Seattle can build or preserve 50,000 new units of housing over the next decade, with almost half (20,000 units) designated affordable.
Thats a reasonable goal. But its clear from the mayors proposal that he isnt merely looking to expand affordable housing. Mayor Murray and his City Council allies want to build fairly. Seattle could get housing that is fundamentally just, and thats something we havent seen in any city anywhere.
Use property taxes to promote affordable housing
Mayor Murray proposes to double Seattles housing levyto $290 millionin order to build affordable housing. He also proposes a 0.25 percent tax on real-estate transfers in the hopes of capturing some of the value from rising land prices and redirecting it toward affordable housing. The mayor also calls for an expansion of the multifamily property tax exemption.
Reform parking and preservation requirements
Historic review and design review are important tools for protecting the culture and texture of a city, but yeesh, these tools can be a NIMBYs deadliest weapon. Seattles already done the hard work of eliminating parking minimums from its urban centers and urban villages, so the mayors goal is to remove parking requirements beyond these areas.
Three mantras for building: taller, denser, more inclusive
Mayor Murray cannot eliminate single-family housing in one fell swoop. He would be chased out of town with pitchforks and torches.
But enabling low-density housing throughout most of Seattle (rowhouses, duplexes, triplexes, courtyard housing, and so on) is a start. The proposal also calls for taller height limits and relaxed building and fire codes to encourage denser wood-frame multifamily construction. Mandatory inclusionary housing plus upzoning to make room for these requirements is part of the mayors package.
Build in extra safeguards to ensure fair housing
The proposal recommends a ban-the-box approach to housing to ensure that people with criminal histories still have access to fair, stable, affordable housing. How this works will depend on the nature of the legislation (if and when it is proposed), but this could make a huge difference for present and future Seattle residents. Several other items on Mayor Murrays wishlist would serve to identify low-income communities that are at risk of losing their homes before they lose them.
Yep...written write out there!
I call them Fingerhut loans, because that mail order company was the first place I encountered that rolled the interest into the principle. Really the borrower comes out behind in this, since one of the big benefits of early payoff (reducing your interest) evaporates when you do that roll. I’d guess most banks are already more than willing to give people loans that don’t reward early payoff.
> This is the purpose of single-family housing: to keep poor people and people of color out of white, wealthy neighborhoods by erecting high barriers to entry.
These people are psychotic.
Man, I love Seattle, but doing this will ensure I will never set foot near it ever again.
Conversions come in handy for this. They used to make loans like this. Tell people that if they converted there would be no interest...
Yeah, this is huge I think.
They really are. Try West Seattle for instance.
http://www.acton.org/pub/commentary/2014/11/05/envy-time-inequality
http://www.libinst.ch/?i=socialism-envy-and-redistribution—en
http://blog.acton.org/archives/75272-vox-connects-dots-inequality-envy.html
WTF????!!!!!!!!
Can you imagine if a city did something like this for Christians? The Leftist mind just doesn’t make any sense to me.
I’m thinking of changing my FR name to Tired of Political Correctness, unless you beat me to it.
; )
LOL. Good one.
On the other hand, if they’re going to give interest-free loans to Muslims, maybe we all should convert. ;-) (Just kidding!)
It sounds as if this plan would turn banks into real estate investors - buying homes and then selling them for profit... but not earning interest (?). I noticed one comment here mentioned that banks wouldn’t have to worry about a borrower paying off early. ;-)
Perhaps the stupid infidel should consult his tax adviser.
He would learn that interest on residential mortgages is tax deductible, but rent-to-own rental payments are not.
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