The problem is clear, there are not
enough council houses to meet the demand.
Not exact matches
Mike Rowley, city
council board member for
housing, told the Oxford Times: «Rough sleeping is a growing challenge nationally, and the Government simply doesn't provide
enough funding.
The City
Council had one response to Mayor Bill de Blasio's sweeping proposals to rezone the city for more affordable
housing: this is not
enough.
Mayor Bill de Blasio's administration plans to dedicate 750 apartments a year in public
housing to homeless families, officials said Tuesday, a number that
council members and advocates say isn't
enough to address record levels of homelessness.
De Blasio's administration plans to dedicate 750 apartments a year in public
housing to homeless families — a number that
Council members and advocates say isn't
enough to address record levels of homelessness.
A proposal by de Blasio to rezone parts of the city to build more
housing cleared its most important hurdle, emerging from a NYC
Council meeting with
enough revisions to satisfy major critics and city lawmakers who had opposed the plan for not doing
enough to provide
housing for the poorest New Yorkers.
The boards, which are appointed by the mayor, City
Council and borough presidents, have criticized the rezoning plans as not providing
enough housing that is affordable to the actual income levels of people in the neighborhoods and for fear that it would spark more gentrification and overcrowding.
William Rapfogel, CEO and executive director of the Met
Council, said the residency will help seniors who don't have
enough money to afford private care, but who don't qualify for other senior
housing.
Ava Farkas, executive director of the Metropolitan
Council on
Housing, called the plans approved by the City
Council «not good
enough» and said they planned to push the city to do better.
Though Brewer can't stop the project, the City
Council is likely to share her concerns about new
housing not being affordable
enough and the city not doing
enough to protect tenants from harassment.
A proposal by Mayor Bill de Blasio to rezone parts of the city to build more
housing cleared its most important hurdle on Monday, emerging from a City
Council meeting with
enough revisions to satisfy major critics and city lawmakers who had opposed the plan for not doing
enough to provide
housing for the poorest New Yorkers.
The
Council altered de Blasio's Mandatory Inclusionary
Housing and Zoning for Quality and Affordability proposals to make them include more affordable housing and more parking in areas with poor access to public transportation, but these changes was not enough to satisfy some Bronx l
Housing and Zoning for Quality and Affordability proposals to make them include more affordable
housing and more parking in areas with poor access to public transportation, but these changes was not enough to satisfy some Bronx l
housing and more parking in areas with poor access to public transportation, but these changes was not
enough to satisfy some Bronx leaders.
It is our failures in social policy, to provide
council housing, to protect workers» (and trade union) rights, and to do
enough to combat low pay and job insecurity that are the root cause of public concern about immigration.
The development, known as Astoria Cove, is viewed as a coup by the de Blasio administration and left - leaning City
Council members — a about - face on the part of City Councilmembers occasioned by a 7 percent increase in the amount of affordable
housing housing to built — and an agreement to use organized labor during the construction phase, even as speculation builds that the developer, Alma Realty, could flip the property and some activists question whether
enough affordable
housing will be built.
(«
House,» a public - art commission made in a condemned East London terrace house and exhibited in situ, was controversial enough that a local council destroyed it after just a few mon
House,» a public - art commission made in a condemned East London terrace
house and exhibited in situ, was controversial enough that a local council destroyed it after just a few mon
house and exhibited in situ, was controversial
enough that a local
council destroyed it after just a few months.)
It is because
councils had
enough housing stock to offer vulnerable individuals / families on low income, social
housing.
High - Tech Fitness Centers According to the 2017 National Multifamily
Housing Council and Kingsley Apartment Renter Preferences Report, of the more than 272,000 apartment residents that were surveyed, 55 percent say they would not rent an apartment without a fitness center; however, a couple of old ellipticals aren't
enough anymore.
Many of the markets where developers have been doubling down on building new apartment units are likely to have
enough renters to fill those apartments over the next decade or so, according to the latest research commissioned by the National Multifamily
Housing Council (NMHC) and the National Apartment Association (NAA).