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Thread: Influx of Immigrants Causing Housing Shortage in American Cities

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    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    Influx of Immigrants Causing Housing Shortage in American Cities

    Home prices and rents in major U.S. urban areas pushing many lower-income citizens out

    by Margaret Menge | Updated 23 Jun 2017 at 8:34 AM

    The Los Angeles Times, in a June 18 article, highlighted the growing number of Latinos in Los Angeles who are homeless and sleeping on the streets or in their cars — and pinned the blame on the high cost of housing.

    But the paper declined, as so many other media organizations have, to address one of the main causes of the severe shortage of affordable housing in many large American cities: the large influx of immigrants into those cities.

    Of the four million residents of the city of Los Angeles, 38 percent are foreign-born. In New York, 37 percent of those living in the city are foreign-born. In Boston, it’s 27 percent; in Chicago, 21 percent. In Miami-Dade County, it’s almost 52 percent. And these are the official U.S. census estimates. No one knows the real numbers, as millions of illegal immigrants likely go uncounted.

    The number of foreign-born people in the United States, according to the U.S. census, has more than doubled just since 1990, and quadrupled since 1970. Most of those immigrants have stayed in the large cities, where the jobs are, and where they have access to services and transportation.

    In Atlanta and other cities, the increase in the number of foreign-born residents has been rapid, and recent, rising more than 20 percent between 2000 and 2010.

    But middle-class Americans, we're told, can no longer afford to live in the big cities.

    "The Year in Housing: The Middle Class Can't Afford to Live in Cities Anymore," was in fact the headline on a Dec. 31, 2016, Wired article that looked at Boston (foreign-born population of 27 percent) and the sky-high rents and home prices there.

    "The casualties in this war are mostly the middle class," the story says, going on to talk about the teacher who can't afford to live in the neighborhood where she teaches.

    "A family that makes $100,000 can't afford to buy a house in most U.S. cities," Mechele Dickerson, a housing expert with the University of Texas, says in the article.

    In Los Angeles between 2011 and 2015, the average price of an owner-occupied home was $471,000. In New York City, it was $494,800.

    The Wired piece, like many others, turns to the need to build more affordable housing, and to zoning laws in cities such as Boston and New York that make it difficult, expensive, or impossible to get building going – and to objections of neighbors who want to maintain exclusive neighborhoods and high prices.

    But are more buildings really the answer?

    Such cities as New York and Boston are more or less "built out." The farther out you build, the farther people are from jobs, and the more time they have to spend away from their children, commuting.

    But there's another aspect to the effect of rising immigration on housing costs in big cities: Not only are the poor having their big-city rents subsidized, if not fully covered, by a federal government program, but illegal immigrants are also getting housing help.

    In April, a Republican state representative in Massachusetts tried to amend a budget bill to require people applying to live in state-sponsored public housing to provide their Social Security numbers or alien registration numbers, saying that housing authority directors in the state had asked her to do it to align the state's requirements with federal requirements. The current law, she said, was allowing people who are in the country illegally to be given preference over U.S. citizens and legal residents and be given free or low-cost housing.

    "Think about how many constituents call your office desperate for housing and they cannot get in because there are waiting lists of two, three, five years long," said State Representative Shaunna O'Connell. "This is the right thing to do."

    Democratic legislators disagreed, with one calling the amendment "mean-spirited" and another saying the state housing directors "ought to be taken to court" for revealing how many people applied for housing assistance without giving a Social Security number.

    And while applicants for federal housing assistance in the form of Section 8 vouchers and spots in public housing projects (where residents may live for free) must provide a Social Security number, an article in Polifact revealed that this does not mean illegal immigrants aren't getting housing assistance.

    As with Medicaid and Food Stamps, the illegal immigrant parents of U.S.-born children can apply for housing assistance, and provide the Social Security numbers of their children. The Department of Housing and Urban Development confirmed to Polifact that the families can then get Section 8 housing or other housing assistance, with only the children technically qualifying as getting the benefit, with the benefit amount for the parents subtracted...but that the whole family can then live in the unit. So U.S.-born children and their illegal immigrant parents can live in Section 8 housing or a public housing project. It is not known how many do.

    In Palm Beach County, part of the densely populated South Florida metroplex and home to high numbers of immigrants from Latin America and the Caribbean, including Cuba and Haiti but also Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras, waiting lists for Section 8 housing had become so long that a freeze was placed on the program — with no new applications are being accepted.

    http://www.lifezette.com/polizette/i...erican-cities/
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    Senior Member 6 Million Dollar Man's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jean View Post

    But there's another aspect to the effect of rising immigration on housing costs in big cities: Not only are the poor having their big-city rents subsidized, if not fully covered, by a federal government program, but illegal immigrants are also getting housing help.

    The current law, she said, was allowing people who are in the country illegally to be given preference over U.S. citizens and legal residents and be given free or low-cost housing.
    This is absolutely infuriating!

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    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    We've been set-up and stabbed in the back from inside our own government. The ways and means are countless. That's why it must stop.

    WE NEED A 10 to 20 YEAR MORATORIUM ON ALL IMMIGRATION. PERIOD.
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

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    Last edited by JohnDoe2; 06-24-2017 at 05:34 PM.
    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


    Sign in and post comments here.

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    Senior Member 6 Million Dollar Man's Avatar
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    How the hell are illegal aliens getting free or low-cost housing, when we average Americans are struggling to keep a roof over our heads? And why the hell are illegals getting preference over legal citizens for these services? Are we living on another planet or something? I am so pissed off after reading this!!!

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    Senior Member Scott-in-FL's Avatar
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    As with Medicaid and Food Stamps, the illegal immigrant parents of U.S.-born children can apply for housing assistance, and provide the Social Security numbers of their children. The Department of Housing and Urban Development confirmed to Polifact that the families can then get Section 8 housing or other housing assistance, with only the children technically qualifying as getting the benefit, with the benefit amount for the parents subtracted...but that the whole family can then live in the unit. So U.S.-born children and their illegal immigrant parents can live in Section 8 housing or a public housing project. It is not known how many do.
    Just another incentive to come to the U.S. and have anchor babies that they can't afford.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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    Senior Member hattiecat's Avatar
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    While services will be cut to Americans in need , illegals will always be given priority via their U.S. born children. Health insurance premiums will continue to rise for American citizens while illegal aliens will get free prenatal care, and give birth for free, because benefits are never cut for "the children." As long birthright citizenship continues, illegals will reap benefits at the cost to American citizens.

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    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    You all are right and spot-on! We have to change all these internal "regulations" and get them straight. It's disgusting what's been going on.
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

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    Senior Member 6 Million Dollar Man's Avatar
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    So even though most Americans are struggling to keep a roof over their head, we have to pay even more taxes so we can keep a roof over the heads of illegal aliens. Absolutely disgusting. This is our last chance to get something done, with Trump in office, or else we're screwed big time. We need to remind Trump why we voted for him and start getting on his ass to start acting on his promises. Is he afraid of the people protesting in the streets against him? Well we need to start protesting and showing him that he needs to be more afraid of us, the people that voted for him, than these wack-jobs that didn't vote for him.

  10. #10
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    Exactly. It's the worst betrayal of a people by their own government in the history of the world.
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

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