• Rhynoplaz
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    9 months ago

    I don’t like it. By allowing more subdivisions, you are opening the door for the privileged to buy a house, split it in half, and collect double the mortgage payment.

    We should be making it easier for those families to move into their own homes, not half of someone else’s.

    • @psychothumbsOP
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      -19 months ago

      Why would you be against that? If a rich person wants to split off half their house and rent it out that’s a valuable contribution to resolving the housing shortage. Of course in practice I don’t think rich people will do that since they aren’t desperate for a little extra income in exchange for losing half their house. Who it’s really great for is middle class empty nester types who have much bigger homes than they need and would love to be able to downsize and make a little extra money from the rental, while not having to move.

      • Rhynoplaz
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        29 months ago

        Because it won’t be somebody splitting their own house. They’ll be buying available houses, splitting them into apartments and charging each family their mortgage payment or more.

        It’s an invitation for slum lords to take advantage of anyone who can’t get a mortgage.

        I’d rather see programs that help families secure a mortgage so they can pay for their own homes instead of paying a middle man an arbitrary amount every month with nothing to show for it.

        • @psychothumbsOP
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          -19 months ago

          What in the world are you talking about? Yes the whole point is that people will be able to buy homes and turn them into apartments, that’s the outcome we’re looking for. Where you’re going wrong is not realizing that the apartments will be less expensive and more numerous than the houses they’re replacing. Thus it’ll be easier for people looking to buy to afford one of them than a full house, and easier to find a place to rent if you can’t afford or don’t want to purchase.

          • Rhynoplaz
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            29 months ago

            Where you’re going wrong is not realizing that the apartments will be less expensive and more numerous than the houses they’re replacing.

            If someone could trick me into believing that, I would probably support it.

            • @psychothumbsOP
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              09 months ago

              It’s sort of a tautological statement. Obviously an apartment building on the site of what used to be a single house will produce more than one apartment. And obviously an apartment in that building will not be as expensive to buy or rent as a full house next door sitting on as much land as the whole apartment building. It’s not a trick, just real life.

              • Rhynoplaz
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                29 months ago

                Ok, I’ll give you that two living spaces are more than one space. That’s no denying that.

                But, these house owners are going to want to turn a profit, right?

                I don’t know about where you live, but my monthly mortgage on a 5 bedroom house is less than the average rent for a two bedroom rental apartment in the same area.

                According to your “reality” that can’t be possible, but sure as shit, that’s how it is. Landlords spend as little as possible to get the place up to code, cut corners on maintenance and repairs, and charge enough that they can quit their day jobs, and let the tenants pay their bills.

                Like I said, I’d love to believe that nobody would do what I’m describing, but greedy people still exist, and they do so by exploiting those around them.

                • @psychothumbsOP
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                  -19 months ago

                  You’re comparing apples to oranges with your monthly mortgage and rent rates, you’ve got to compare purchase prices to purchase prices and rents to rents.

          • @[email protected]
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            9 months ago

            the whole point is that people will be able to buy homes and turn them into apartments, that’s the outcome we’re looking for

            I don’t support that and it would do nothing to improve conditions. Creating a middleman is useless

            Rampant landlordism is a driving factor for why things are as bad as they are. Such landlords contribute nothing to housing supply. More dense government owned affordable housing for purchase is the solution, not private landlordism

            • @psychothumbsOP
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              19 months ago

              A landlord who just buys a property and rents it out is doing nothing for the housing supply but obviously a developer that buys a house and turns it into an apartment building is increasing the housing supply regardless of whether they rent the apartments or sell them or whatever.

              Not sure what you mean by government owned housing available for purchase - surely it’s either government owned or being purchased? A big government house building program would be fantastic, but that’s no reason to support keeping restrictions on also helpful private house building.