Housing SquareOffs

77%
Yes WINNER

10

23%
No

2

77%
Yes

10 Comments
Tina Bouthillier
1
Tina Bouthillier

Of course nothing is 100% but overall, yes!

Reply
Darlene Thompson
0
Darlene Thompson

We have everything we need and we can live on just one level of the house which is important for us as retired.

Reply
Milton Trachtenburg
0
Milton Trachtenburg

We downsized from a three-story home to a small condo. At this stage of our lives, we don't need the space we needed when we were raising children. Cooking for two doesn't require a kitchen that looks like it was meant for a restaurant. A living/dining room is sufficient for two.

Reply
Vicki & Chuck Heidorn
0
Vicki & Chuck Heidorn

I am warm and have loving people around me.

Reply
Terri Compton
0
Terri Compton

Yes. We moved closer to family and into a community with a lot of ammenities.

Reply
seaweed349
0
seaweed349

Big home in the country, retired. Big garden. Lots of room for company. But wish it wasn't in Canada.

Reply
Lisa Gray
0
Lisa Gray

I live in my daughter's home with her boyfriend. He is a great roommate. We get along very well and I am really comfortable here!

Reply
Hilary
0
Hilary

Last year, we had a 3bdrm we grew out of. My son and my brother had their own rooms. I shared a room with my mother. Her new fiancé lived separately. And our belongings were overflowing. We finally found a 4bdrm. Her fiancé shares her room, I have my own. And we have more space for our stuff.

Reply
Linda Tansey
0
Linda Tansey

moved into a retirement

Reply

23%
No

2 Comments
Anna Chaya Hoffman
0
Anna Chaya Hoffman

We moved from a house to a condo thinking it's just 2 of us and we don't need so much room. Wrong. I miss having my own space where I can go to and hear only me and what I'm doing. My husband is amazing but he's loud 🙉

Reply
Valerie Lantz
0
Valerie Lantz

I hate the kitchen!

Reply

Yes

4

No

7

Yes

2 Comments
Jon Krutsch
1
Jon Krutsch

As long as it brings with it some accountablity. If the point in time numbers come down over 2 years, great. If not, she should be fired.

Reply
Gabe West
0
Gabe West

Yes, and not looking like Portland or California is a good start also

Reply

No

6 Comments
Steven Huillet
3
Steven Huillet

Just another waste of our money!

Reply
Gabe West
Gabe West

You might be right

Nik Myles
2
Nik Myles

Just more pandering

Reply
Jake M
2
Jake M

Anyone who uses the word houseless is full of it to start with. One of the many people who make a living by saying all the right things and doing almost nothing.

Reply
Gabe West
Gabe West

You might be right

annie Oakley
0
annie Oakley

It's a clever way to spend tax money. That's about all.

Reply
Kimmy Wasatch
0
Kimmy Wasatch

No, you can't help people if they don't want it. Houseless are pretty much doing what they want, legally or not.

Reply
snowzone
0
snowzone

Check her history

Reply

Yes

1

No

2

Yes

1 Comment
Jama Rahn
0
Jama Rahn

Like crime? Like illnesses more prevalent in our schools, workplaces , and where we buy groceries? How many months worth of expenses do you have in savings or easily accessible? Now, what about your parents/kids? Affordable housing is necessary for all of us!

Reply

No

1 Comments
Paul Prevo
1
Paul Prevo

The cost of affordable housing tends to be higher then the cost of typical construction due to over burdensome regulation required by the federal and sometimes local governments.

Reply
Max DeYoung
Max DeYoung

The cost of affordable housing is paid for by people who work for a living, not by the people living in affordable housing.

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