The Homelessness Crisis
- Bi_3
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
Not Floyd himself. The arson. The looting. The violent riots. The mainstreaming of BLM and Defund/Abolish the Police. Remember? Those things happened and the epicenter was Minneapolis in 2020.
What I'm suggesting is that housing costs are not univariate and that over the period depicted in those graphs it's unlikely that Minneapolis figured out some optimal housing supply policy that stabilized costs relative to inflation but it was instead a combination of many factors that made them so unique amoungst the cities depicted and maybe one of those factors was the violent, dangerous, whole-of-society changing events that occurred in that location in the same time period being analyzed.
What I'm suggesting is that housing costs are not univariate and that over the period depicted in those graphs it's unlikely that Minneapolis figured out some optimal housing supply policy that stabilized costs relative to inflation but it was instead a combination of many factors that made them so unique amoungst the cities depicted and maybe one of those factors was the violent, dangerous, whole-of-society changing events that occurred in that location in the same time period being analyzed.
"The fatal flaw of all revolutionaries is that they know how to tear things down but don't have a f**king clue about how to build anything."
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
The housing market did NOT experience any signifcant shift due to Floyd. It just didnt happen. It pretty much stayed the course commennsurate with markets across the country with low interest rates and lack of housing.Bi_3 wrote:Not Floyd himself. The arson. The looting. The violent riots. The mainstreaming of BLM and Defund/Abolish the Police. Remember? Those things happened and the epicenter was Minneapolis in 2020.
What I'm suggesting is that housing costs are not univariate and that over the period depicted in those graphs it's unlikely that Minneapolis figured out some optimal housing supply policy that stabilized costs relative to inflation but it was instead a combination of many factors that made them so unique amoungst the cities depicted and maybe one of those factors was the violent, dangerous, whole-of-society changing events that occurred in that location in the same time period being analyzed.
Floyd unrest "looting and violence" etc lasted how long? It just didnt impact housing.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
and when i say "floyd", i know you didnt fucking mean George Floyd himself (he died remember) i mean the entire unrest due to Floyd.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
The area that Floyd unrest happened was already an area of lower income housing, some poverty, and vacancies, and a more....i cant say dilapated area anymore but....
Downtown MPLS was already struggling with commercial vacancies and lack of general interest in downtown core
Downtown MPLS was already struggling with commercial vacancies and lack of general interest in downtown core
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
I heard a rumor that St. Paul passed rent control and immediately housing developers pulled the plug on projects there. Tell us more about this.Strat wrote:The area that Floyd unrest happened was already an area of lower income housing, some poverty, and vacancies, and a more....i cant say dilapated area anymore but....
Downtown MPLS was already struggling with commercial vacancies and lack of general interest in downtown core
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- tragabigzanda
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
FUCK ICE
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 15, 2026 5:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- Strat
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
It seems that landlords can apply for exemptions and easily obtain them citing various reasons as inflation, increased construction costs, and a right to return on investment.Bammer wrote:I heard a rumor that St. Paul passed rent control and immediately housing developers pulled the plug on projects there. Tell us more about this.Strat wrote:The area that Floyd unrest happened was already an area of lower income housing, some poverty, and vacancies, and a more....i cant say dilapated area anymore but....
Downtown MPLS was already struggling with commercial vacancies and lack of general interest in downtown core
https://www.twincities.com/2023/05/28/o ... s-pile-up/
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
City backtracked big time after permits fell. Now landlords can apply for extensions and some of the biggest developers are getting sweetheart tax deals.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
tragabigzanda wrote:I don't know anything about that specifically, but they've got the Democratic trifecta: Dem governor, Dem-controlled legislature, and Dem mayors in the Twin Cities. I'm already sorry for Strat because it's going to become Boston.Bammer wrote:I heard a rumor that St. Paul passed rent control and immediately housing developers pulled the plug on projects there. Tell us more about this.Strat wrote:The area that Floyd unrest happened was already an area of lower income housing, some poverty, and vacancies, and a more....i cant say dilapated area anymore but....
Downtown MPLS was already struggling with commercial vacancies and lack of general interest in downtown core
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
FUCK ICE
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 15, 2026 5:55 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- McParadigm
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
Begs the question: have any states spent the last 4 years getting it right? Has any state used policy to produce a demonstrable change in the percent of income spent on rent? Or does it just come down to, how many people are there per square mile in the area you want to move into?
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
So did Minneapolis build a bunch of new housing because St. Paul passed rent control?Strat wrote:City backtracked big time after permits fell. Now landlords can apply for extensions and some of the biggest developers are getting sweetheart tax deals.
Builders yanked permits and moved them over to the other side of the river?
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
dunno but developers/investors are starting to snag up vacant office buildings downtown MPLS for a fraction of the cost in hopes of revitalization of the downtown.Bammer wrote:So did Minneapolis build a bunch of new housing because St. Paul passed rent control?Strat wrote:City backtracked big time after permits fell. Now landlords can apply for extensions and some of the biggest developers are getting sweetheart tax deals.
Builders yanked permits and moved them over to the other side of the river?
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
FUCK ICE
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 15, 2026 5:55 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
FUCK ICE
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 15, 2026 5:55 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
While I’m generally pretty quick to dismiss predictions or assumptions of success (versus demonstrated historical evidence), I think your solution seems obviously destined to work. It sounds really, really good.
It also sounds like the answer to my (much less important) question is “no, there isn’t any part of the country we can point to that has spent the last 4 years achieving provable reductions in this problem through their currently enacted policies.”
It also sounds like the answer to my (much less important) question is “no, there isn’t any part of the country we can point to that has spent the last 4 years achieving provable reductions in this problem through their currently enacted policies.”
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- tragabigzanda
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
FUCK ICE
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 15, 2026 5:55 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
FUCK ICE
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 15, 2026 5:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Strat
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
Trag for pres
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Re: The Homelessness Crisis
I’m not accusing you of not answering my question. I asked it because this topic usually boils down to blues and reds attacking each other for failing to solve the problem, without bothering to address their own lack of successes. Lots of “lmao look at how these people are doing it wrong,” and very little self-reflecting.tragabigzanda wrote:Well your question is poorly formed, because it presumes there's a single set of policies that would A) work in one place, and therefore B) be transferrable to another place. So that's what I was responding to.McParadigm wrote:While I’m generally pretty quick to dismiss predictions or assumptions of success (versus demonstrated historical evidence), I think your solution seems obviously destined to work. It sounds really, really good.
It also sounds like the answer to my (much less important) question is “no, there isn’t any part of the country we can point to that has spent the last 4 years achieving provable reductions in this problem through their currently enacted policies.”
I was and am curious if anybody has an “everyone should be looking to this working model for guidance” example that shows a provable difference being made. But I also agree that your approach would succeed, which is why I referred to my question as much less important.
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