Sentences with phrase «afford nice housing»

Bringing this back to the issue of druggies and other less financially fortunate people not being able to afford nice housing: the very codes that are supposed to promote providing everyone with «habitable» housing are driving home prices up.
Your income is stagnant, your job is going nowhere, you can't afford a nice house or a good school and you 19 too young online dating My own dating site.

Not exact matches

AND, I still can go out for nice dinners, go to sporting events, go on a week or two of vacation each year, go to shows, have nice clothes for work and casual events, drive a decent car, and afford home improvement projects on my house.
But then again, I doubt you could afford a home in a neighborhood like that, since in general, such houses are in nicer neighborhoods than yours, and the houses retain higher values as a result of the covenants.
When times are tight and we can't afford all the groceries we are used to, it's nice to have staple pantry items in the house that keep well like rice, dried beans, pasta, flour, and other dry pantry goods that can be used to make wholesome, filling, and inexpensive meals.
At least this answered a long standing question I had on how he afforded such a nice house on a 100K salary... Nice gnice house on a 100K salary... Nice gNice guy!!
Your house and clothing are gorgeous, I'm sure you do well financially as a photographer and get discounts and freebies via the blog but I'm still left scratching my head as to how one can afford such a nice lifestyle?
Perhaps the nicest thing about the dock is that it houses an extra battery which affords users 10 extra hours of battery life, making for 20 hours of battery life altogether.
Early in life you can focus on buying as nice a house as you can afford, and you'll pay off the mortgage as quickly as possible as your salary grows.
If you can't afford a house in the very near future, you might want to consider being patient, keep saving and investing, and pick yourself a nice bargain when the next recession rolls around.
Wouldn't it be nice to know what you can afford before shopping for a house?
We all want a nice house, but only buy what you can afford.
If you can't afford a nice ribeye to put on that Weber grill in your spectacular gated backyard, if you can't have friends over for dinner because you don't have a dining room table in that grand paneled dining room, you're house poor.
Besides debt consolidation, you can also refinance to get some equity out of your house in order to make home improvements, go on a really nice vacation, or make a big purchase you could not otherwise afford to make.
While some debt is necessary and beneficial («good debt» such as mortgages that help us afford a nice quality of life in a house that grows in value, or college loans that help improve our lifelong income prospects), many Americans are trying hard to get out of debt and live more simply with greater financial freedom.
I have land in two different states, one with a house I can not afford to upkeep on my own but it has 10 acres and would make a nice tiny house community however I am not sure if the zoning would allow it though it appears this county in Arkansas is pretty open in zoning requirements as I had gone in to ask about permit to put a cabin on the land and they didn't even have one.
Later, as Andriamahavita is driving us from Loowatt's pilot neighborhood to the main office, I can't help but ask: «Gloria works for the Ministry of Health, and her house looks rather nice, so why can't she afford a home with a better toilet?»
If you buy the nicest house you can afford in the best neighborhood of your city, your family and friends will be very impressed.
If I had your construction and heavy equipment background I would be buying the ugliest houses in the nicest area I could afford and fix them up.
Some people with very low incomes, whether druggies, or low level poverty, can only afford minimum amounts of rent, and pick a cheap / crappy house with low rent over a nicer, more expensive one.
Yet, we've been happy here, very very happy and hopefully we'll be happy here for quite a few more years... We could move now, we could probably afford something a little bigger and something a little nicer... But, our house is like an engagement ring — today, you could afford to buy more carats than you could as a newly wed, but it's your ring, and it means something deeply to you, more than just bling.»
I guess when you reach a certain age (I'm 32, don't know if you're in your thirties) you want to live in a nice house, and if you can't afford to buy one, at least you want your rented flat to look proper.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z