Affordable housing: Difference between revisions

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affordable housing in Portland....
{{cquote2|quotetext=Unfortunately, the State of Oregon forbids rent control, and values land ownership rights over tenants’ rights.|personquoted=[[Commissioners#Amanda_Fritz|Amanda Fritz]], City Commissioner<ref>[http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2014/03/affordable_housing_no_recourse.html Affordable housing in Portland: No recourse for renters losing cheap apartments to infill development] From article: "The urban core is increasingly becoming a 'playground' for the well educated and well off, while the fringes of Portland are almost indistinguishable from neglected areas of other cities."</ref>|quotewidth=##px|quoteheight=##px}}
 
Finding affordable housing in Portland, Oregon is becoming harder and harder.
 
==External Resources==
* http://www.noah-housing.org/
* http://www.housingconnections.org/
* http://www.hapdx.org/
* http://www.cpahinc.org/
* http://www.oregon.gov/OHCS/COM_INeedHelp.shtml
* http://habitatportlandmetro.org/
 
== In The News ==
* [http://inthesetimes.com/article/16424/game_of_homes Game of Homes]: The private-equity firm Blackstone could be your next landlord.
: Seeing a profitable opening in the wake of the foreclosure crisis, investment groups have worked diligently to bring a “rentership society” into being. During the past two years, investors have bought approximately 200,000 single-family homes, mostly foreclosures, in urban areas nationwide, with plans to convert them into rental properties.
 
==See also==
* [[Food]]
* [[Free food]]
* [[Clothing]]
* [[Free clothing]]
* [[Housing]]
 
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
 
[[Category:Housing]]

Latest revision as of 16:47, 5 May 2014

Unfortunately, the State of Oregon forbids rent control, and values land ownership rights over tenants’ rights.
 
Amanda Fritz, City Commissioner[1]

Finding affordable housing in Portland, Oregon is becoming harder and harder.

External Resources

In The News

  • Game of Homes: The private-equity firm Blackstone could be your next landlord.
Seeing a profitable opening in the wake of the foreclosure crisis, investment groups have worked diligently to bring a “rentership society” into being. During the past two years, investors have bought approximately 200,000 single-family homes, mostly foreclosures, in urban areas nationwide, with plans to convert them into rental properties.

See also

References

  1. Affordable housing in Portland: No recourse for renters losing cheap apartments to infill development From article: "The urban core is increasingly becoming a 'playground' for the well educated and well off, while the fringes of Portland are almost indistinguishable from neglected areas of other cities."