Posted on 07/02/2002 9:14:32 PM PDT by FreedomFriend
Edited on 04/13/2004 1:39:42 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
TRENTON, N.J.
(Excerpt) Read more at usatoday.com ...
That's true - but only because their parents didn't teach them propeer manners - apparently yours did.
I remember the differences in the house keeping habits of some of m friends that lived in fraternity houses when we were in college. It was so obvious which of the guys' mothers had taught them how to do laundry, etc. and who's fathers had taught them how to make minor repairs.
I'm no Martha Stewart as a house keeper but my house is clean, albeit cluttered, but my husband has clean shirts for work everyday and my daughter always has clean clothes.
And after spending 25 years in the construction industry, hubby is quite capable of keeping repairs up.
I guess the point I'm trying to make is, it doesn't take much effort and upbringing has much to do with it all.
Ya got that right, man!!
Celebrate Americas birthday tomorrow and enjoy it. We don't have many left!!
A disgustingly pessimistic observation. Probably true, but I don't feel up to facing reality right this very moment. Instead, I'll drive to the mega-mall in my SUV happily chanting, "Diversity is our Strength...Diversity is our Strength."
many a totally law-abiding fellow landlord (and i mean people who never even had a speeding ticket) would ask me if i knew anyone who could throw a molatov cocktail or stage a furnace blow up (ever wonder about all those "suspicious" inner city fires in vacant buildings where the landlord just didn't have enough money to keep up with the tenant destruction?)
this was how far people felt they were pushed. it was either arson or foreclosure/bankruptcy, or the extremely lucky ones just rented to a single mother with a firebug kid and nature took it's course. (all the time worrying if the family was ok and if they would be sued it the family wasn't ok).
for those of you who wonder why i would buy in such a neighborhood, it was a "starter" home AND i was dumb enough to buy it during the winter months. NEVER buy a home during the winter months where you can't get a TRUE picture of the neighborhood.
How? According to the article, the examples given are as follows:
Mount Vernon, Wash., pop. 26,232, is rewriting its building code after complaints that 12, sometimes 20 people are living in one house. The code limits occupancy to eight unrelated people. But it does little to prevent large, extended families from cramming into one house or apartment.
Another example:
Santa Ana then argued that too many people under one roof create a fire hazard. State fire officials refused to change the code. It asked legislators to set occupancy limits, but a bill failed.
Further,
Sam Surtees, West Windsor's community development director, says that dozens of homeowners are renovating their basements usually to create guest apartments. The township can't legally stop them.
The township sure can stop them - by passing a law forbidding the building of guest apartments, mother-in-law quarters, whatever. If occupancy codes are written properly and strictly enforced, this will not happen.
The school situation is a matter of local enforcement too. Districts do NOT have to accept students living with grandparents etc. unless there is a court order granting custody. It *can* be done - the question is, is there the political will to do it?
You know, I probably shouldn't have made that comment to you, only because it opens a can of worms for which I don't have time right now. Zoning is a subtle issue with which a number of complex games are played. I wrote a couple of chapters on the political and economic mechanics of zoning and environmental regulations in my book. It includes an inflation-adjusted opportunity-cost-based analysis (net of the cost of funds) of land transactions in the County of Santa Cruz, CA, under a couple of different tax scenarios extending over 30 years. During that time, a select group of developers sponsored zoning laws that literally controlled an inventory of developable rural/suburban parcels to make aquisition for conversion cheap while excluding outside competitors. They also put a squeeze on urban parcels to drive up the value around undevelopable parcels. When the market was ripe (and they had finished screwing the bag-holders) they simply had the planning department rezone previously "substandard" parcels for "in-fill." These are the classic gambits common to sustainable development (we were the first).
It's really dirty. For me to make my case I would have to familiarize you with a whole new vocabulary in order to do a comparative analysis and show how the mechanics repeat elsewhere. Then I would have to familiarize you with what some communities have done to preclude such problems. I do suggest that you consult Randal O'Toole's book: The Vanishing Automobile and Other Urban Myths where he goes into more detail on the unintended consequences of sustainable development (smart growth).
I want to thank you for your thoughtful response. I've captured your post/links and will look at some of this info. when I have more time.
I'm not hedgetrimmer, but nevertheless I never heard of what happened in SC. Where in SC? Could you give us details? I think something like this happened in CO, too.
foreverfree
What HUD is trying to do is create one poorly maintained house on the every tenth block as opposed to putting everything together. They know that if they do that they'll create a slum. When you concentrate all of the public housing in one area you create Cabrini-Green or one of the other public housing disasters. The idea is that if you spread people out, the problems won't be as concentrated or noticable.
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