sllewgh

sllewgh t1_itvjla6 wrote

Reply to comment by DamionFord in Water Bill (RANT) by The_Waxies_Dargle

I don't mind paying for our infrastructure, but a quarter of the cost is just in bill pay fees because there's no way to consolidate these associated properties and pay the bills together.

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sllewgh t1_ituy4rk wrote

My home and my parking pad across the alley are two separate parcels of property purchased as a pair. That means I get a water bill for my home, plus a separate 12$ bill with a 3$ service charge for an 18x18 square of concrete with absolutely no water infrastructure.

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sllewgh t1_itcwiwt wrote

I've visited them plenty. I've gone door to door talking to poor folks in just about every area of the city. I help run a community garden in Harlem Park. I've personally observed the purchase, renovation, and occupation of a vacant as described in this article. I've helped establish community land trusts and I helped fight to secure a permanent source of funding from the city for projects like this. How about you take a look at your own ignorance before you assume mine?

Plenty of people are living decent lives in these neighborhoods you're writing off. There are plenty of problems to be solved, sure, but you've got the audacity to accuse me of ignorance when you don't know a damn thing about the people actually living in places like this.

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sllewgh t1_itcvasx wrote

>So you're saying the author didn't intend to refer to abandoned city blocks despite referring to them in both words and the picture?

Here is what you said:

>Because that picture IS a picture of the mentioned "abandoned city neighborhoods."

That's false. The article is not referring to the homes in the picture, it's referring to vacants in general. The article does not reference any specific locations this would happen whatsoever, so all your criticism is based on facts you invented yourself.

There are plenty of habitable, good vacants in this city to be filled.

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sllewgh t1_isvdmg8 wrote

The Affordable Housing Trust Fund supports what it says it does and is funded by a tax on housing speculation - any sale by someone who doesn't live there to someone who also won't live there. Currently this tax only applies to transactions over $1m, and there aren't that many. We wanted the threshold lower when we passed it, but it can be changed now.

This takes money from the absentee owners behind most blighted vacants and uses it to create affordable housing, help the elderly who can't afford home repairs stay in their homes, ect. The work of winning this, funding it, and setting the right conditions on using the money has been done. Now let's turn up the heat and make the law what it originally should have been.

I do not have an exact figure on what the dollar amount should be, I'll defer to more wonky experts on that.

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