• Rob Bos@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      The important thing is that you can stay mad at any amount of good news. Sometimes you might have to work hard at it, but I believe that you can, in the brightest light, find a dark shadow to be pissy about.

      Good job. /s

      • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        How is giving people hope, then not actually delivering anything considered good news?

        Go ask New Yorkers how social housing is working out. Literally 1000 applications per unit that gets built.

        • Rob Bos@lemmy.ca
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          1 day ago

          Hey, keep it up. Getting mad about your imagined version of stuff before it even happens is pretty much peak internet.

          • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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            1 day ago

            This shit has been tried in dozens of cities worldwide, and it’s never helped. Why would it work here?

              • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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                22 hours ago

                Vienna has decade long waitlists, you have to live in the city to get on the waitlist in the first place, AND private housing is still expensive.

                The only people it works for is the people who already have a unit, and not even many of those because once you get one, you can’t move if for example you have a kid and need more space.

                https://policyoptions.irpp.org/magazines/march-2024/vienna-housing-lessons/

                People keep using it as an example, but it has failed at this policy too.

                • n2burns@lemmy.ca
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                  11 hours ago

                  Vienna has decade long waitlists

                  Your own source disagrees with you:

                  At last reading, some 25,000 Viennese were on waiting lists with approval times varying between two months and two years.

                  And the conclusion is:

                  Vienna’s model does not rescind the law of supply and demand. Vienna was able to keep costs low for many years in large part because demand remained low.

                  Which I fully agree with. As the report shows, in recent years Vienna has also failed to keep up with demand. Vienna isn’t perfect, but if their model is actually followed, and supply scales with demand, then costs can be low.

                  • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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                    10 hours ago

                    Now, do one final calculation.

                    How much would it cost the BC government to purchase or build 40% of the residential properties to replicate what Vienna has in terms of accommodations?

                    Residential properties in BC have a total value of around 1.5 TRILLION dollars in 2023. 40% of that would be $600 billion.

                    There is no realistic way to reach even 4% social housing in BC, let alone 40%, and that’s all to achieve something that as per the article I linked, isn’t actually enough to keep the market in line.

                    There are better options than social housing for the province to spend money on if they wish to address this problem. With the amount of money they can reasonably spend, as per my original comment, it’s nothing but a lottery for poor people. It’s a “look, we’re doing something” which doesn’t actually benefit anyone who doesn’t receive a unit. The only path to affordable housing for everyone is to force ALL housing prices down, and a lottery will never impact that.

                    I’m sick and tired of the government spending my tax dollars on a policy which only helps a minute fraction of people. I want it to help everyone.

                  • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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                    11 hours ago

                    Well maybe you should read a little deeper then.

                    Removing income taxes in favor of land taxes is one of the most progressive possible taxation policies. People with more wealth own more land, and therefore get taxed more. Less land owned, less tax.

                • Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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                  12 hours ago

                  That’s a frankly terrible idea, especially for lower income people.

                  Income taxes are bracketed based on income, with significant amount of deductions and exceptions for things like disability, having a family, retirement savings, education, etc.

                  Taxing land, especially rental property, means that the tax landlords pay is just passed down to the renter which makes it more difficult for the individual to then assess how much tax they have actually paid and are responsible for. If we then say the individual is not responsible for paying any of that property tax, then the government will be obligated to refund those tax payments to the individual, which means the government is losing that revenue. If the tax is not refunded, then the individual is going to be responsible for a much higher tax burden than the current system.

                  None of this actually creates new housing, it just creates a new opportunity for the wealthy to play their money shell game.


                  Viable solutions include:

                  • Build housing for low-income people
                  • Create new tax schemes to tax VACANT property
                  • Build housing for low-income people
                  • Create legislation to ensure proper classification of housing vs hotels to eliminate the use of empty housing for AirBNB type rentals - Note, this should be in combination with the above, if a person wants to rent out a home/apartment they live in for a weekend while they’re not home, that should still be allowed.
                  • Build housing for low-income people
                  • Implement/Strengthen rent control legislation so that people are not priced out of their home due to greed-driven rent increases
                  • Build housing for low-income people
                  • Create legislation to reduce or eliminate the impact of NIMBY-ism (which is why this particular building in question has not yet been built)
                  • Build housing for low-income people
                  • Create legislation to allow eminent-domain type buyback of unused/vacant property from corporations if they have not shown any progress in developing that land for their business (i.e. if they have pulled permits, submitted plans, or are otherwise showing consistent steps toward using the property, then it’s fine. If they just bought it to sit on, then ownership transfers to the municipality and the company is reimbursed at the standard rate based on acreage)
                  • Build housing for low-income people
                  • Improve public transit and reduce the number of personal vehicles, subsequently reducing the amount of surface parking required in urban areas. Use this land for parks and recreation space (reduces demand for single-family homes in urban areas)
                  • Build housing for low-income people

                  Not sure if I mentioned:

                  • Build housing for low-income people
                  • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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                    10 hours ago

                    Yea, you haven’t actually read up on LVT. You should probably go do that before arguing against it.

                    I suggest reading up on why LVT can’t be effectively passed to renters, it’s a very important concept in why they’re so good.

                    LVT are even more progressive than the income tax brackets, as a) poor people don’t tend to own much if any land, especially valuable land and b) it prevents tax evasion by wealthy people because you cannot hide land, or even work around it by paying yourself $1 or something other financial shell-game bullshit.

                    The only way to avoid LVT is to not own land, which means that land is then available for other people to own. You want a mansion in a prime part of a city? You’ll pay through the teeth for it. You’re fine with a condo downtown, the taxes will be quite cheap.

                    This whole “housing shortage” thing is fake, or misleading at best. There are more bedrooms in Canada than people. The problem isn’t a lack of housing, it’s that the current distribution of housing is simply broken. There are far too many detached houses with 4+ bedrooms and 2 retired people living in it because the kids moved out a decade(s) ago. They were supposed to downsize, but they never did, and it’s fucked up the housing market for the next generation. Land value taxes replacing income taxes effectively penalize them for not downsizing when they no longer work and don’t need the space.