CookieSheaButter
CookieSheaButter t1_iu51od5 wrote
Reply to comment by KaiDaiz in NYC chief housing officer: The era of YIMBY is here by ToffeeFever
That’s not how any of this works. You can’t just build another floor. There’s zoning laws that are designed to cause a housing crisis.
CookieSheaButter t1_iu4cr2b wrote
Reply to comment by KaiDaiz in NYC chief housing officer: The era of YIMBY is here by ToffeeFever
Not all basement apartments are the same. For every dangerous or suboptimal one there are plenty perfectly good ones.
You’re going to add another floor to your single or multiple family home?
CookieSheaButter t1_iu4bndf wrote
Reply to comment by MalcolmXmas in NYC chief housing officer: The era of YIMBY is here by ToffeeFever
The whole point of legalizing ADUs is to regulate it so that doesn’t happen. Instead of how it is now in the shadows.
CookieSheaButter t1_iu4bhv1 wrote
Reply to comment by colourcodedcandy in NYC chief housing officer: The era of YIMBY is here by ToffeeFever
Rent control is only harmful because the city and state passed zoning laws that had no purpose but to increase congestion (parking) and make larger apartments (density). So we ended up with developers who could only build a limited number of very large units that were expensive af to construct.
If we reversed all of the zoning changes from the 60s we could actually make the rent affordable for everyone.
CookieSheaButter t1_iu0hxd3 wrote
Reply to comment by Hrekires in New York’s Migrant Tent City Is Mostly Empty a Week After Opening by nexert233
I think it was more that it was reactionary rather than based on sound logic.
The shelter population was going to explode this summer even without a manufactured migrant crisis. The eviction moratorium expired while inflation and rent soared. Besides that, the shelter population is always highest in summer.
The mayor, who was warned about this when he took office decided to take zero preventive or reactionary steps. He proposed a laundry list of ideas to help people move out of shelters and into permanent housing. Yet as of today, he has implemented zero with no plans to ever do so. So what do we have? A growing shelter population while average time in shelter is at over two years for families.
The city would rather spend $5300 a month per person (the cost of the awful homeless shelter on Randall’s island right next to the HERC) than take any steps toward meaningful reform.
CookieSheaButter t1_j0znbax wrote
Reply to comment by Melodic-Mix-4449 in New York City removed its last public pay telephone by Rollyman1
Yeah I was going to say there’s quite a few in queens still. But this exact headline comes up on this sub monthly.