Submitted by natekrinsky t3_11lwf9w in nyc
BronInThe2011Finals t1_jbfi7cg wrote
Reply to comment by jakeuznslao in With an absentee corporate landlord, Upper Manhattan tenants unite to demand repairs by natekrinsky
You wouldn’t PURCHASE a fuckin project apartment lmao
Why suggest that someone living in one should?
Wyd?
Convergecult15 t1_jbfne9j wrote
People think it’s so easy. Someone buys their NYCHA apartment as a co-op and immediately has to spend 15-20k getting it up to code. And then that “co-op” is immediately worth several hundred thousand if not a million and they refi it to the max and wind up in foreclosure the next economic hiccup. I remember the news doing a story on co-op residents in Harlem being foreclosed on while they were upside down on their mortgages, but at the end of the story they highlight that they purchased the apartment for a dollar through HUD in the 90’s and took our two 600k mortgages on it. People don’t become financially literate when they receive a windfall after years of abject poverty. Buying the projects won’t make them not projects anymore, it will just remove their code exemptions and further impoverish the owners causing those neighborhoods to be bought up by middle class millennials and forcing the prior residents out on the streets.
Chewwy987 t1_je0lj7u wrote
That’s the bigger issue a lot of these people in Los income housing rent stabilized or projects were never taught financial literacy and do have no ability to properly manage finances to get thendelfd out of poverty. I have friends that we’re in poverty but learned financial literacy and the importance of an education and’s not they’re a controller at s small hedge fund. Without proper education and financial literacy will determine if they’ll break the cycle of generational poverty living off the government programs
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