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Darrenanity t1_j0rncea wrote

I never understood this point of view…I worked in Boston for 10 years and not once did I have a Boston zip code. I would have loved to live closer to work, but I couldn’t afford it. It wasn’t the fault of the people that lived there that I couldn’t live where I wanted to.

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Adventurenauts t1_j0yy7k5 wrote

There are literally laws necessary to maintain that paradigm. It's not some free choice by all individuals. It's the result of laws that encourage sprawl and pushes workers further and further away from their place of employment.

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Darrenanity t1_j0zh90i wrote

The only law needed is that of supply and demand. If the demand is greater than the supply, the price increases. Portsmouth is a small city with likely less than 13k dwellings available. The number of people that want to move here, either for work or just because it’s an amazing area, far exceeds its ability to house everyone. There has been a fair number of units added over the past couple of years, but land and building costs are very high. If it costs a developer $50m to create 50 units, you can trust those units are not selling for less than $1m each and if they decide to rent them, you can’t expect a $1m property to rent for $1500 a month - which doesn’t help get those people that want to move here but can’t afford to. There has been a few developments for workplace housing and smaller units, but it doesn’t begin to cover the number of people that want to live in Portsmouth. I’d love an ocean front property (or even a Little Harbor one), but I don’t have one because I can’t afford it. I don’t hate the system because someone else is doing better or their family has more money. Nor do I make threats about burning things to the ground because I think the system is broken. I do what I can to make my situation better and live within my means. I had a long commute for years, because that’s what I had to do. I wasn’t entitled to a downtown Boston property just because I worked there as much as I wanted one at the time.

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Adventurenauts t1_j0zs837 wrote

Zoning has restricted supply to the point where MOST people cannot afford to be a part of our community. It's not freedom when people can't access resources in an area. Unless you want to put a specific income on participating in society fine, I don't. Everybody deserves to be housed in their community : )

Just because your life, commute and housing were far and terrible doesn't mean that has to be the legal mandate for everybody.

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