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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Just can't stay away
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Quote:
Ditto
Posted on: 2006/7/28 13:39
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... When life gives you lemons - Make Lemontini's!!
Dennis Deyoung is a musical genius |
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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1) Bergen Lafayette is not really an "upscale neighborhood." In fact 10 years ago 80% of the people wouldn't have considered living anywhere near it. It's a little disingenuous to gentrify someone's neighborhood and then say "why don't you take some responsibility and move out."
2) I'm amazed at how people automatically assume that most of the people moving into these townhouses are going to be the lowlifes that hang out on the street drinking all day or muggers. Haven't you ever heard of struggling single mothers? Haven't you ever heard of the working poor? It's just really downright disgusting honestly. You're a bunch of smug, ignorant, self-important idiots. I'd like to see any of you survive one month in the ghetto.
Posted on: 2006/7/28 13:33
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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2004/9/15 18:45 Last Login : 2023/5/12 21:59 From Harsuimus Cove
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I wrote the following in another thread, but I'm posting it here again because it applies to the subject at hand.
First of all I know it's long. sometimes, though, things cannot be reduced so that they are easy, quick and sound bite ready. If every problem was as simple as some people make them out to be, then we likely would have solved them long before now. Secondly, I've tweaked the old post so it makes more sense in the context of this thread. I just wanted to be upfront about that. Quote:
Posted on: 2006/7/28 13:28
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Quite a regular
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I understand needeing a little bit of help sometimes, but people need to take responsibility for themselves. I don't live in nyc because I can't afford it, should I be able to live in subsidised housing there? I don't have kids because i can't afford it. Should I make others pay for my kids so I can stay home and drink 40s on the stoop?
If you can't afford to have three kids don't have them, if you can't afford to live in an upscale neighborhood move out. Sorry, but I make sacrifices for myself and I'm not woking so others can have a free ride. It really hurts when I'm on my way to work and I walk past the projects to see people still drinking from the night before as the sit in their own chicken bones and broken bottles. When I come home they are sitting on my steps leaving their crap for me to clean up. F that. I don't care where they go as long as its far from my house.
Posted on: 2006/7/28 13:27
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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Yeah, I guess it was sarcasm, but a lot of the others clearly weren't ("Great, now they have all this money left over for college tuition!")
Posted on: 2006/7/28 13:26
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Just can't stay away
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I thought the au pair comment was a form of sarcasm?
Posted on: 2006/7/28 13:22
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... When life gives you lemons - Make Lemontini's!!
Dennis Deyoung is a musical genius |
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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I would love to read a thread from long time Jersey City people about growing up "Mobbed up"
Oh and nice post JennyMayla! Quote:
Posted on: 2006/7/28 13:22
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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30% of one's income means something VERY different to a person taking home $1000 a month than it does to someone taking home $4000 or $8000 or $12000, and I don't think the usual ratios apply.
If you're talking about a mom with two kids, grocery bills alone could easily eat up another $300-400 a month (though they might get some other public assistance as well). You're not exactly talking about "money left over for an au-pair." Man, some people are just really out of touch with reality.
Posted on: 2006/7/28 13:09
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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Quote:
One problem with rent control is that tenants in ordinary, private-market rent-controlled buildings can end up paying wildly different rates for similar units. So, to me, that's not the problem. The question would be why someone would pay that much rent to live in Bergen Lafayette. Another question would be what the units are really like. It's famous that developments like these tend to suffer from a lot of construction defects. I remember reading some horror stories about another new batch of Jersey City affordable housing units a few years ago.
Posted on: 2006/7/28 12:54
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Just can't stay away
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Quote:
JSquare wrote: Banks, when computing your ability to qualify for a mortgage, look to the ratio of your gross income to your estimated mortgage payments. 28% is considered conservative where as 33% is considered aggressive. And this is for a couple's (assuming there is a couple) combined income. The ratios of 28% and 24% (after October 1) were calculated assuming only one person working full time at a minimum wage job in NJ and living in the two bedroom $300 a month apartment. I never suggested that we do away with public housing. Van Vorst Park is already at capacity. My computations were merely to show that the amount of rent paid was low in proportion to what even one person would make working full time at a minimum wage job. If you have two people working full time minimum wage jobs (which you should, assuming that you have that two bedroom apartment, otherwise get a one bedroom) then the ratio is very low. That means you have more money for other things; how about taking classes for yourself or maybe saving for your kid's education. That's the only way you are going to get out of poverty.
Posted on: 2006/7/28 12:52
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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glx wrote:
Quote:
If you really believe this is not some form of subsidy, then why are all the developers asking for them in the first place? Why would they want something that didn't benefit them in some way? The fact is that people with PILOTs do not pay the same rate of taxes that those without them do. I'm fairly sure the amount an owner with a PILOT pays is roughly 20% less than an owner without a PILOT pays. Yes, you are correct that the city gets more money. This is simply due to the fact that they don't have to share income from PILOTs with the other entities. But our property tax bills (those of us who don't have PILOTs) aren't just a city thing. We have to pay those other portions. And, we have to make up for the portion that those with PILOTs don't pay. That alone is a subsidy. Don't think for a minute that those who live in buildings with PILOTs aren't affected by the school systems or what happens in county government. That's a fallacy. Even if you don't have children or send your children to private schools, we are all affected by the state of our public school system. My God...as a society, we have become such narcisists.
Posted on: 2006/7/28 12:50
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Just can't stay away
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Quote:
Struggling in theory, I suppose, but in general PILOTs have actually cost builders/rehabbers more than the actual property taxes would have cost. In reality everyone's paying near the same proportional amount, and it would seem as property taxes go up the base on which PILOTs are calculated go up as well. Quote:
Because PILOTs are not subsidised - everyone's paying their fair share, it's just the destination of that share is changed. Comparing that to someone who's getting a house basically for free is ludicrous. Quote:
Only if you're making it one.
Posted on: 2006/7/28 12:26
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Quite a regular
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2004/11/16 19:52 Last Login : 2008/9/28 23:53 From Moved to Dallas TX
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Quote:
No one is disputing that PILOTs pay more to the city however there are other entities that depend on these tax dollars (county and schools). These properties that have received PILOTs pay into the city but they're not paying into the schools (which is one of the main reasons why education in JC is such that it is and helps to perpetuate a cycle of poverty). Non PILOT property owners are struggling to make up not just their share of the school tax but also the share not being paid by folks who have PILOT properties. I'm simply mystified that your only concern is how much is paid to the city coffers. Explain to me if you can why you would be against subsidised housing for the working poor when these PILOT properties are subsidised. Could there be an underlying class issue here?
Posted on: 2006/7/28 11:53
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Just can't stay away
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WTF does your credit card have to do with it? PILOT's aren't lines of credit. They're payments, due, just like taxes. PILOTs put just as much money if not more into the city coffers. The question was why is the city not getting the tax revenue. It is, in a different form. The county gets short changed, yes, but that wasn't the question posed. Would you rather see *all* of that money go into Jersey City in the form of a PILOT, or would your rather see it get split up 10 different ways and go to Weehawken, Hoboken, Secaucus and Bayonne, etc. as a tax?
Posted on: 2006/7/28 11:39
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Newbie
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Sorry about the math, I didn't look up the NJ minimum wage. Yup, they are earning so much more than $5.15 and hour that they can hire an au pair and she/he can live in the second bedroom with the child.
Has anyone read Life and Death of Great American Cities? I love Jane Jacobs. This apartment complex seems to be born of her ideas for mixed use/mixed income neighborhoods. Quote:
Posted on: 2006/7/28 2:53
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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2005/6/8 3:24 Last Login : 2022/11/28 0:04 From New Urbanist Area
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Wow, the hostility some people have toward recipients of government assistance is frightening!
Look, we can debate the efficacy of social welfare programs and the like, there is no reason to start demeaning the people who get the assistance. Overall Hope VI is a pretty successful program. It gers rid of the monstrosity type projects that were little more than prisons, and creates well built housing that is better integrated into the community. My only quibble with this project is that it is somewhat isolated. Not much of a neighborhood center that is visible. I also will say that, as far as the various projects go, Lafayette Gardens didn't seem to be designed that badly in terms of density. It was one of the first housing projects built in the country, and was done before urban planners made the isolated towers of hell. Having said that, I also understand that there were some structural and other problems which would have eventually required demolition. So we might as well take advantage of HOPE VI reconstruction funds. There's quite a bit of history behind the original project, but that's another story for another post. The Conservancy has asked that when they demolish the final building, they preserve the cornerstone. We also suspect that there is also a time capsule in or behind the stone. So it would be really cool to find that and see what was put in there from the Hague era! Joshua Parkhurst President Jersey City Landmarks Conservancy
Posted on: 2006/7/28 2:28
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Quite a regular
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Quote:
Then I'll explain for the 50th time since you still haven't gotten it that PILOTs do NOT pay equally into the county and not a dime to the schools. Unsubsidised property owners pay YOUR share...they are subsidising you.
Posted on: 2006/7/28 2:13
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Just can't stay away
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Quote:
Please feel free to explain it to me for the 51st time because if not paying property taxes allows me to put just as much money into the city coffers as you do then I will gladly opt out! And please don't tell me the developer is paying the city a wad of cash up front, woohoo, my credit card company offers me 15,000 buck credit lines, doesn't mean that 15 years down the line my bill is not going to be due. If PILOTS are so wonderful why can't we all have them?
Posted on: 2006/7/28 1:25
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Just can't stay away
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Slam? You're both clueless. How many times does it have to be stated? Properties with tax abatements still pay just as much if not more money into city coffers. PILOTs. I don't think I need to define them for the 50th time. That is all.
Posted on: 2006/7/28 1:17
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Quite a regular
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SLAM!!!! Now it looks like the shoe's on the other foot. Non-abated property owners look at abated owners just the same way as you're looking at these people in these subsidized apartments. Don't throw stone if you live in glass houses people!
Posted on: 2006/7/28 0:50
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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I'm jumping in late to this convo but it reminds me of what my mother used to say while I was going through my grunge phase: "It takes as much time to dress nicely as it does to dress unnicely."
In other words, if low income housing is going to be built to look like "private homes," is that really so awful? Is making a building look like a prison any cheaper? Whether we agree on the subsidy or not is another matter entirely, but if we are going to build these homes, we may as well make them relatively attractive. Since when does being poor mean that you need to live in an ugly environment? Why should DeQuan have to grow up in a shithole? As for the race thing, it's irrelevant and the jokes about baby daddy's and names are just kind of silly. This city was built by poor immigrants most of whom were white, by the way. And a lot of them were mobbed up -- my family included (I type with a sick sense of Irish and Ukranian pride). Last but not least, for those of you have decided that every low-income person in this city is a mugger and out to get you, watch your backs. Karma is a bitch. Sleep tight in your smug little beds tonight, folks. (PS: clearly one of the pissiest posts I've ever written but some of you just KILL me.)
Posted on: 2006/7/28 0:25
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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"For him (DaQuan), it beats living over a liquor store or a Laundromat," Thomas added. "It's less violent."
I hope Mr. Thomas has a job, so that DaQuan can go to college. Many parents in this country (particularly new immigrants) are killing themselves holding multiple jobs so that their kids can get an education. At $300/month for housing, you better save a tidy sum for DaQuan's education, yo.
Posted on: 2006/7/28 0:14
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Not too shy to talk
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I wonder how many people will sign up for the market rate apartments knowing how little others will be paying for something as new and similar in size?
What would happen if Daquan's dad married Daquan's mother? Would they still get the $300 2 bedroom apt? They know how to work the system and it is completely disgusting. They keep making illegimate children and the system covers their a$$.
Posted on: 2006/7/27 23:55
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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Quote:
The weird thing about the hostile reaction here is that most of the units are clearly aimed at people who are working and earning pretty good money. The organizers clearly were trying to figure out a way to help people trapped in the welfare system into the workforce. That's the sort of thing Republicans used to favor. Anyhow, another way to look at this is that a lot of the residents will probably be service workers with steady but low-paying jobs in Jersey City. This project may be at least as much of a hidden subsidy for Goldman Sachs, the Newport Mall, the school board, etc. who employ some of the residents as it is for the people with the subsidized units.
Posted on: 2006/7/27 23:50
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Just can't stay away
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To the people who think their tax money should not be spent on public housing, what would you spend it on? More bombs to keep us safe? Maybe some nice levees to shore up the Beaver Crack retirement community you are planning to move to in Bumhole, FL when you are older.
I am of course assuming that you pay taxes! Yes, I know you pay federal and state, we all do! But do you pay property? I am sick of hearing about 20-year tax abatements given to Downtown buildings when my house in JSQ is paying for YOU!!! And I wonder why there are no cops on the beat! No more property tax subsidised lattes!!!!!!
Posted on: 2006/7/27 23:07
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Not too shy to talk
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karindiann wrote:Quote:
I agree, Mercer...but "classism" is perhaps the more appropriate term. Some of these same posters would be the first to advocate for much-higher-cost subsidized housing via the criminal justice system. Why not afford lower-income citizens an opportunity to achieve financial stability and live socially productive lives? Do they somehow believe that those with less skills and education only deserve to live in dangerous, run-down slums? yeah, classism is the better term. and i agree with your point here. maybe i'll feel different when one of the thugs living there muggs me. love when people complain about this crap, but don't take any steps to help fix it.
Posted on: 2006/7/27 22:09
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Just can't stay away
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I think the right work is Classism. I don't see one mention of the word welfare on the whole article. Anyways back in the day in Jersey City they used to describe Italian, Irish, and Jewish immigrants in the same terms that you guys used to decribe the residents of this complex.
The reason why public housing is messed up is years of federal government interference with local and state housing. After WW2, the feds passed a law saying that all public housing that recieved federal funds had to be built in such a way that made it unattractive to middle class tenants, and then they switched to the fraud-enabling system of housing vouchers instead of directly building housing. You also have a system with ridicoulously low income cutoff points. So if you have someone who makes above minimum wage, they lose their public housing apartment, but they are not making enough money to get a private apartment. Also, many people would like to buy the apartment in the projects where they grew up, but they are not allowed too. Also, the current system doesn't allow people to move from one project to another to be closer to their job, cementing poverty permanently. You have a system that discourages middle class people from staying in the projects they grew up in, which totally destabilizes neighborhoods. These policies where put into place very delibratly, it was not some misguided bleeding heart liberal sceme, it was openly racist and classist elements - both left and right wing - of the US government, who saw a way to control and opress people. Let's not forget that Blacks and Latinos and all Women in Jersey City are blatantly underpaid for doing the same jobs as white people and men.
Posted on: 2006/7/27 22:08
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Home away from home
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You're all paid way more than you're worth in America anyway.
Assholes.
Posted on: 2006/7/27 21:58
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Re: New face of public housing - 72 homes in the Lafayette section of Jersey City
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Just can't stay away
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Quote:
Jsquare wrote: Actually, assuming the $300 a month rent cited in the article, it costs about 28.14% of gross salary (NJ's minimum wage is currently $6.15/hr) and as of October 1, 2006 (when the rate rises to $7.15/hr) it will cost about 24.2%. Of course that's ONE person with a minimum wage job and for the TWO bedroom.
Posted on: 2006/7/27 21:57
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