[identity profile] davisdenizen.livejournal.com 2016-02-18 02:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I appreciate your comment, but I don't agree entirely with it. There are many long-time renters in Somerville who are valuable members of our community. The profit motive does not recognize that renters can be more important assets to a city than property values and that forces the people who make our neighborhoods desirable in the first place to desperately search for new places to live.

This affects not only residents, but also small businesses -- e.g. the Consignment Gallery on Highland whose wonderful owners did not want to move, but whose building was bought by a developer. The loss of that business is a blow to our community. Yes, change is inevitable, but we should also look at what is happening to the town that many of us love.

I am surprised, given the progressive politics espoused by many in this town, that there is no group speaking up for renters' rights. And I don't wish to see owners and renters at odds, either. Most owners are not profiteers or developers. Owning and maintaining a property and collecting fair rents is a business, jacking up rents and flipping buildings is greed.

[identity profile] davisdenizen.livejournal.com 2016-02-18 03:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Interesting article -- thanks for the link! I think another scary aspect is that often towns are talking about "affordable housing" for those in the lowest income tier; this article is addressing the crisis for those who make what used to be good salaries, but now lag far behind rental rates, especially because of the concomitant stagnation of salary raises.

I had noted the Cambridge organization and that was one of the reasons I was so puzzled that there was nothing equivalent in Somerville.

I appreciate the discussion -- let's hope there will be more of it, here and elsewhere. It's needed!

[identity profile] achinhibitor.livejournal.com 2016-02-24 03:32 am (UTC)(link)
The conflict between liberal politics and unaffordable housing is one that's gotten a lot of coverage recently:

That doesn't surprise me -- well-educated professional workers are a Democratic-leaning class and can afford to live in an expensive city. And an expensive city drives out more working-class people, who tend to vote Republican these days.