Large numbers of people entering or living in America illegally are exacerbating the housing crisis, including in areas like Ohio far from the border.
City Manager Bryan Heck of Springfield sent an urgent letter requesting federal aid to U.S. Sens. Tim Scott, R-S.C., and Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio. Despite the cityās ongoing advancements in housing projects, the sheer number of migrants arriving and residing in the area has strained resources to their limits.
Harrisās tax credit has existed in one form or another for decades. I once use it to buy my first home. Then it was called āmortgage credit certificateā.
And all her other plans will result in a maximum of 800,000 extra homes available for sale.
Itās going to be a great big expensive nothing in terms of home prices.
A company out of Ohio, Sustainable Concrete Solutions, is touting a concrete 3d printing process that they say will potentially slash the price of homes due to less time to build, and also less people needed to build them.
In the article, the owner of the company actually claims it may be possible to own a home for the price of a car payment. I find that claim dubious, but I do think there are real savings in this we can all benefit from.
Technology may be able to do what Harris canāt: Make homes affordable again.
No, Iām not suggesting you invest in Boxable, itās the only link I can find for the company itself and wanted to put this in here to show that technology may do what that SPIA act cannot, and that is actually make housing affordable again.
Just build mega blocks like in Mega City One. Citizens can spend their entire lives without ever leaving. Each block even has its own version of the National Guard though many times the blocks just end up at war with each other
No, what I am trying to say is there is a myriad of technology on the horizon that has the potential to make homes much more affordable than they are now.
Boxable is just one answer, another I posted was the 3d printing company earlier.