Just when you thought the discussion had ended some
pipsqueak sounds off!!!!!

I do not doubt Victoria's search of Strib ads saying
there are 394 apartments in the range of $500 to....

Let us talk definitions here. What is affordable?

At one time I recall that affordable rent was thought
to be 1/4 of a person's net income.

If that were true today a person would need $2000/mo
net plus.

We have changed definitions though, haven't we? 

Now people are expected to pay 1/3, 1/2 or even more
of their take home pay for housing leaving little else
for a car or buspass, auto insurance or renters
insurance, food, an occasional movie or a restaurant
meal, etc. Not to mention ridiculous deposits of two
and three times the monthly rental fee.

Two or three years ago the Strib ran a story saying
that a living wage was $10.50/hr at the same time the
City of Minneapolis pegged a livable wage at $9.02/hr.

Let's say a person makes $10.50/hr even now; that will
be a gross of $1480/mo or about, let's say, $1125/mo
net.

So now a person pays 1/2 their pay on rent.

Throw in that person is HIV-positive and likely faces
limitations in earning capacity especially if their
condition deteriorates.

Now please tell me a project like Clare Housing and
others like it are not necessary.

And not just for those unlucky enough to be HIV
positive but for those taking orders in fast food
joints, swamping bars at night, cooking on a kitchen
line, laying sod in the suburbs, cashiering at Target,
...I could go on but you get the point.

Another point might be the anticipated growth in our
community.

Admittedly with the economy in the tank and layoffs
rather than hirings the order of the day it is hard to
imagine that those 394 apartments could be rented
quickly but it is not beyond the realm of possibility
if things heat up.

I hate the word proactive. I hate all jargonese in
fact but it seems to me that this project may be
proactive. YECH!

A bit of disclosure here: I am a member of the Board
of Directors of CCHT which will have a considerable
hand in this development.

Part of the problem is there is little or no
affordable housing being built in this city by private
developers. They are qite happy to build market rate
but not housing for low income folks.

When the legislature acted this past session to offer
incentives to builders of multi-unit housing they did
not specify for whom to build it so guess what: we
have projects like Grant Park going up while building
housing of a more affordable nature is left to
non-profits.

Even with all I've said I have empathy for Ms Heller
and the people in PRAC. They get squeezed from both
ends.

That's my take on this issue.

Tim Connolly
DT Resident

P.S. Another disclosure: I live in supportive housing
and thank god I do.   



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