header pic

Perhaps the BEST B1G Forum anywhere, here at College Football Fan Site, CFB51!!!

The 'Old' CFN/Scout Crowd- Enjoy Civil discussion, game analytics, in depth player and coaching 'takes' and discussing topics surrounding the game. You can even have your own free board, all you have to do is ask!!!

Anyone is welcomed and encouraged to join our FREE site and to take part in our community- a community with you- the user, the fan, -and the person- will be protected from intrusive actions and with a clean place to interact.


Author

Topic: In other news ...

 (Read 1012614 times)

betarhoalphadelta

  • Global Moderator
  • Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 12222
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23254 on: May 04, 2023, 06:41:48 PM »
I think that last part might be overstating it a tad.

It is true that SF and other Bay Area cities placed certain limits on these things. But it’s also true that even with all that, SF is the second-densest big city in the country. And the impact of all that demand has high home prices for like 40 miles in several directions.

More apartments in SF would eat into that demand, but chances are low it’s moving the price point in most of the inner Bay Area all that much. (And I think they need a lot more high-density housing, despite what the dipshits in my hometown think)
Sorry, maybe I was a little too quick. I then went to run an errand and thought of additional things I should have said lol...

The issue to me isn't really about SF. It's everywhere. And when responding to OAM, it's important to highlight that this isn't a liberal or conservative problem. It's a human problem. 

The general aspect of humanity, and this transcends politics, is "I've already got mine, so f**k you if you want a bit of it."

It would be easy to blame that attitude in Scottsdale AZ on a bunch of conservatives. A little harder to blame that attitude in SF on them being liberal. Which is why I say it transcends it. 

This attitude happens throughout the rest of the Bay Area as well. It happens all over the country. It's a natural attitude of "I moved here because I liked it; and if you try to f**king change it I'll sue your a$$ off."

Without zoning, the entire Bay Area would be higher density. Because there would be economic incentive for developers to increase it. Buy a couple SFHs, demolish them and turn them into duplexes (or fourplexes), worry about the parking externalities problems later, sell it off knowing the new owner can live in one unit and have rental income from the other(s), and BOOM! you've made a profit. There's already an entire industry devoted to flipping houses (and multiple TV shows glorifying it); do you think the same wouldn't happen for turning SFHs into duplexes if zoning didn't prevent it? 

The dipshits in your hometown are the same as every dipshit everywhere. I used SF as an example, but the entire Bay Area is full of people that are fighting against density, and in the aggregate, that's FAR more effective than anything just done in SF. 

Gigem

  • Starter
  • *****
  • Posts: 2144
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23255 on: May 04, 2023, 06:45:08 PM »
Okay, but without that, in the SF peninsula (or whatever it's actually called), there's not enough supply, even if it's genuine (not artificial).

With genuine high demand/low supply, you'd have the same number of people paying more for the same spaces and those who cannot afford it having to commute in, which is a whole other problem.

I agree that the government probably oversteps and has bad ideas and can be draconian about it. Of course.  But for the Bay Area specifically, the artificial limitation of supply is irrelevant, because the demand will far outpace supply there.
Listen, nobody has to do nothing. If these people can’t find affordable housing, they can simply move to a place that does have access to affordable housing and better paying jobs ( COL adjusted ). Remember, SF as a whole didn’t even exist 200 years ago. So people that were unhappy with their current circumstances are the ones that populated it after 1849. 

The long article BART posted is exactly what I was referring to. Obviously the area is geography limited, but on the whole could be much denser. 

All of the other measures since then only make things worse. 

OrangeAfroMan

  • Stats Porn
  • Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 18899
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23256 on: May 04, 2023, 06:57:08 PM »
You can't just say people who can't afford to live there shouldn't live there.  Those places NEED the lower class to serve the upper class.  
You can't have a park-n-ride for the custodial staff of the Gucci store halfway to Sacramento.  
.
I find the conversation a waste of time because greed isn't ending anytime soon.  I'm just flabbergasted that in times when the poor can't afford affordable housing, the only new construction is "luxury" this and that.  It's fucking idiotic.
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

MaximumSam

  • Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 13106
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23257 on: May 04, 2023, 07:15:26 PM »
.
I find the conversation a waste of time because greed isn't ending anytime soon.  I'm just flabbergasted that in times when the poor can't afford affordable housing, the only new construction is "luxury" this and that.  It's fucking idiotic.
If there are ten thousand restrictions on new builds and you need a small army of lawyers to get a project off the ground, it's going to be a project that hopes to make a lot of money.

betarhoalphadelta

  • Global Moderator
  • Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 12222
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23258 on: May 04, 2023, 08:13:18 PM »
You can't just say people who can't afford to live there shouldn't live there.  Those places NEED the lower class to serve the upper class. 
You can't have a park-n-ride for the custodial staff of the Gucci store halfway to Sacramento. 
.
I find the conversation a waste of time because greed isn't ending anytime soon.  I'm just flabbergasted that in times when the poor can't afford affordable housing, the only new construction is "luxury" this and that.  It's fucking idiotic.
SF Bay Area: <spends a century enacting gov't policies that make affordable housing impossible to build>

SF Bay Area: "OMG we have an affordability problem! Why can't the gov't fix it?"

Brutus Buckeye

  • Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 11243
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23259 on: May 04, 2023, 09:15:01 PM »
the hordes of people crapping in the streets are probably not earning all that much. 
1919, 20, 21, 28, 29, 31, 34, 35, 36, 37, 42, 44
WWH: 1952, 54, 55, 57, 58, 60, 61, 62, 63, 65, 67, 68, 70, 72, 74, 75
1979, 81, 82, 84, 87, 94, 98
2001, 02, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19

OrangeAfroMan

  • Stats Porn
  • Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 18899
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23260 on: May 04, 2023, 09:31:17 PM »
If there are ten thousand restrictions on new builds and you need a small army of lawyers to get a project off the ground, it's going to be a project that hopes to make a lot of money.
Of course...and I hope they make all the money they want....but it's not something needed, which makes it less likely to succeed.
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

bayareabadger

  • Legend
  • ****
  • Default Avatar
  • Posts: 7868
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23261 on: May 04, 2023, 09:44:21 PM »
Sorry, maybe I was a little too quick. I then went to run an errand and thought of additional things I should have said lol...

The issue to me isn't really about SF. It's everywhere. And when responding to OAM, it's important to highlight that this isn't a liberal or conservative problem. It's a human problem.

The general aspect of humanity, and this transcends politics, is "I've already got mine, so f**k you if you want a bit of it."

It would be easy to blame that attitude in Scottsdale AZ on a bunch of conservatives. A little harder to blame that attitude in SF on them being liberal. Which is why I say it transcends it.

This attitude happens throughout the rest of the Bay Area as well. It happens all over the country. It's a natural attitude of "I moved here because I liked it; and if you try to f**king change it I'll sue your a$$ off."

Without zoning, the entire Bay Area would be higher density. Because there would be economic incentive for developers to increase it. Buy a couple SFHs, demolish them and turn them into duplexes (or fourplexes), worry about the parking externalities problems later, sell it off knowing the new owner can live in one unit and have rental income from the other(s), and BOOM! you've made a profit. There's already an entire industry devoted to flipping houses (and multiple TV shows glorifying it); do you think the same wouldn't happen for turning SFHs into duplexes if zoning didn't prevent it?

The dipshits in your hometown are the same as every dipshit everywhere. I used SF as an example, but the entire Bay Area is full of people that are fighting against density, and in the aggregate, that's FAR more effective than anything just done in SF.
So this is interesting and I agree with most of it, but I honestly still don't think it fixes the affordability problem. 

It might help. At the moment more than a few cities out that way are throwing up apartments like the world is ending. It's gonna be like putting paper towels on a bullet wound, but it's something. 

But the issue is still demand, demand, demand. 

SF might have spent all that time fighting against more density. And yet, SF is very, very, very dense. It is not lacking for density. It is not a city of big lawns, big lots, big houses. And yet, being super dense doesn't at all correlate with having affordable housing. 

Until you have people say "enough," stop paying and just leave, all the damn density in the world won't produce anything affordable. 

Gigem

  • Starter
  • *****
  • Posts: 2144
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23262 on: May 04, 2023, 09:51:12 PM »
You can't just say people who can't afford to live there shouldn't live there.  Those places NEED the lower class to serve the upper class. 
You can't have a park-n-ride for the custodial staff of the Gucci store halfway to Sacramento. 
.
I find the conversation a waste of time because greed isn't ending anytime soon.  I'm just flabbergasted that in times when the poor can't afford affordable housing, the only new construction is "luxury" this and that.  It's fucking idiotic.
You are making my point over and over. Of course they NEED people to serve them. Hence they have more power all along, they just can’t grasp it. The govt artificially increases the cost of living, then subsides that same cost of living through artificial rent control schemes, public housing, AH, etc. It lets the very people who need and can afford to pay them off the hook. The same people who dodge taxes with tax reinvestment zones, govt funded projects, the whole bureaucratic entanglement. And it only gets worse. 

Gigem

  • Starter
  • *****
  • Posts: 2144
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23263 on: May 04, 2023, 09:55:33 PM »
So this is interesting and I agree with most of it, but I honestly still don't think it fixes the affordability problem.

It might help. At the moment more than a few cities out that way are throwing up apartments like the world is ending. It's gonna be like putting paper towels on a bullet wound, but it's something.

But the issue is still demand, demand, demand.

SF might have spent all that time fighting against more density. And yet, SF is very, very, very dense. It is not lacking for density. It is not a city of big lawns, big lots, big houses. And yet, being super dense doesn't at all correlate with having affordable housing.

Until you have people say "enough," stop paying and just leave, all the damn density in the world won't produce anything affordable.
But they won’t leave because they’re housing is being subsidized by one program or another. Thus they live in a state of stasis. They neither gain anything, nor lose. Arguably the longer they stay the more they lose, because the best solution is always to find the best opportunity for their future in an area that has a low cost of living and better (col adjusted) wages. 

Gigem

  • Starter
  • *****
  • Posts: 2144
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23264 on: May 04, 2023, 09:57:02 PM »
Btw, I’m not so naive to think it’s simple as that. I know it’s complex, like all modern issues. But I would suggest that it’s at least a very major contributing factor. 

bayareabadger

  • Legend
  • ****
  • Default Avatar
  • Posts: 7868
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23265 on: May 04, 2023, 10:09:31 PM »
But they won’t leave because they’re housing is being subsidized by one program or another. Thus they live in a state of stasis. They neither gain anything, nor lose. Arguably the longer they stay the more they lose, because the best solution is always to find the best opportunity for their future in an area that has a low cost of living and better (col adjusted) wages.
This is simply not the case. At all. 

Gigem

  • Starter
  • *****
  • Posts: 2144
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23266 on: May 04, 2023, 10:42:42 PM »
I understand there are a lot of factors. Life is complicated. What I should have said is that the programs are a major reason why people won’t leave. 

I’m all for doing what is best for the overall population. I’m not totally against social programs and socialism. FFS, socialism is and will be a major cornerstone of the identity of the United States since at least the 1930’s. Hell, I think we practically invented most of the major ideas and functions of a lot of modern socialistic countries. 


bayareabadger

  • Legend
  • ****
  • Default Avatar
  • Posts: 7868
  • Liked:
Re: In other news ...
« Reply #23267 on: May 05, 2023, 12:02:01 AM »
I understand there are a lot of factors. Life is complicated. What I should have said is that the programs are a major reason why people won’t leave.


This “program” thing feels like stretching to attach something one believes to fully explain something very odd and specific. 

I promise you, rent control isn’t benefiting all that many people in a big way, and it’s probably not keeping many from brighter prospects elsewhere. 

 

Support the Site!
Purchase of every item listed here DIRECTLY supports the site.