Brad Sallows
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
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"I want to live where everyone else lives."
"Housing is too expensive."
"Housing is too expensive."
Even the young urbanites are sick of the status quo when home affordability seems forever beyond their reach. Besides, all are welcome in Alberta. This province has the youngest demographic for a reason.The ads seem to be targeting young urbanites from the GTA and Vancouver.
I wonder if they will have an impact on Alberta voting ( municipal, provincial and federal ).
"I want to live where everyone else lives."
"Housing is too expensive."
The problem is that those fringes become population centres.Somewhere between population centres and shitty rural communities lie the fringes of population centres. It's not an either/or.
Changing jobs is always an option. It's also more exciting during periods of economic unrest and distress.
I see a pattern forming, be a shame if no one took advantage…The problem is that those fringes become population centres.
When I was growing up, Borden (and
Barrie) was so fringe that it might as well be Manitoba. Now it’s a “short” commute to Toronto.
I see a pattern forming, be a shame if no one took advantage…
If more people were encouraged to invest in housing, we'd have more of it.
Driving up the cost of housing doesn't lower QoL any more than driving up the cost of equities does; it's still a store of value. What affects QoL is if the bottom drops out of the market. What's f*cking prospective homeowners over is inflation, interest rate increases, and government cash dumps into the middle class (lower taxes, various transfers to individuals).
People are discovering that places with less than 1,000,000 population are not homogeneous, backwards, cesspits.Young urban leftists want locally owned, locally roasted fair trade coffee with ethically sourced vegan scones, none of the Starbucks corporate BS.
I’m gonna go out on a limb and guess you’ve owned a home for some time, and haven’t recently been in the position of being a young professional in an urban area hoping to enter the ownership market for the first time.Driving up the cost of housing doesn't lower QoL any more than driving up the cost of equities does; it's still a store of value. What affects QoL is if the bottom drops out of the market. What's f*cking prospective homeowners over is inflation, interest rate increases, and government cash dumps into the middle class (lower taxes, various transfers to individuals).
It's the zoning.
Notice all the yellow? Those are designated as neighbourhoods. Only single detached houses are permitted.
I can't see our local ratepayers association getting on board with any changes to the neighborhood.
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I'm firmly convinced that Japan has zoning right; it's jurisdiction of the federal government, not the municipalities. having everything local hands way too much power to the NIMBYs.
I was at a meeting last night in Guelph with a group we call OURNA , (Old University Residental Neighborhood Association), and the Ontario Govt will soon be taking that out of cities/towns/areas hands. Pretty much approving all "Mother in law" apartments in single dwelling homes will be first up.It's the zoning.
Notice all the yellow? Those are designated as neighbourhoods. Only single detached houses are permitted.
I can't see our local ratepayers association getting on board with any changes to the neighborhood.
toronto residential zones - Bing
Intelligent search from Bing makes it easier to quickly find what you’re looking for and rewards you.www.bing.com
On the wet coast the housing market is sustained by offshore money, and not much is going to change that.Nonsense. You don't need equities to survive. You need housing to survive. Driving up the cost of it only benefits those who already own it. It hurts literally everyone else.