Green social housing ordinance introduced at City Council meeting – Chicago Tribune/Yahoo

The city’s vision for green social housing is mixed-income rental buildings that are built to certain energy efficiency and decarbonization standards and in which at least 30 percent of the units are affordable. The city would own a majority stake in the buildings, a first-of-its-kind role for the city.
9 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Streeterville
1 year ago

Best affordable housing solution would be revisions to zoning code to allow ADU (Accessory Dwelling Units) to be constructed upon single-family and two/three flat housing lots. A 2nd-story apartment on top a 2-car garage is a 400 SF studio, a 3-car garage a one-bedroom apartment. These small apartments are achievable via individual homeowners, small capital improvement projects which improve property and create new property value and income. Chicago could offer short-term construction loans, priced below current interest rates, to homeowners, provide standard prototypes and prepared construction plans for such 2-story garage “carriage-houses”.

debtsor
1 year ago
Reply to  Streeterville

Disagree 100%. Many low income housing units already house two families per home. Allowing for the construction of a (likely permit-less and low quality) ADU would only pack even more families onto small sized lots. The best solution to affordable housing is to deport the several hundred thousand illegals here now that have colonized the low income housing sector. The lack of affordable housing that isn’t gang and cockroach infested in low income neighorhood reverberates throughout the entire housing market. Not long ago, before the invasion, working class natives would live in low income housing, as would young people, older… Read more »

Streeterville
1 year ago

Let’s see the cost per apartment, will it be $800,000/dwelling unit like other supposed “affordable-housing” projects heavily subsidized by taxpayers? These housing projects are grift, graft, and ghost-employee gold mines of political corruption. Wirepoints, demand financials and info on funding sources and contract awards for this grift-gift from Johnson administration to his loyal alderwoman foot-soldier.

VBB
1 year ago

It a ghost jobs program, “… will establish the Residential Investment Corp…will have its own board… and… its own executive director and other staff.” That’s probably 10-20 ghost jobs before any construction starts.

And that’s not to do any real estate development themselves, they just pass the work on to legit real estate developers. I too, would love to spend other peoples money.

Riverbender
1 year ago

Another dark hole for funds to disappear into-did I hear Chicago is financially broke?

ProzacPlease
1 year ago

This reminds of a quote from Grace Slick a few years ago speaking of the 60’s youth movement:

“We thought we could change the world, when the truth was we couldn’t even change our socks.”

Maybe the people living in these city-owned apartments can buy their food at the city-owned grocery store. Oh wait. ..

taxpayer
1 year ago

“utility costs will be lower due to the green building standards.” But construction costs will be higher. Also, it isn’t clear from the article whether the buildings would be taxable. They want to set up a nonprofit to manage these buildings. My recollection is something like this was done decades ago with the Chicago Dwellings Association, which still exists and appears to manage a few units, paying their President >$380K/year. (source: Form 990 for EIN 36-6109056)

Streeterville
1 year ago
Reply to  taxpayer

Genuine science and actual financial calculations on initial cost investments and payback of premium “green” construction and equipment costs demonstrate over and over again that there’s No tangible savings, significant additional costs, and environmental impact of discarded “green” solar panels and inefficient heating/cooling/power systems that rely on unreliable weather conditions.

For solar or wind technology to work, you need reliable sustained sunlight and winds. And all that equipment is discarded as landfill junk filled with heavy metals contamination.

The Railroader
1 year ago

The restrictions on the design of these developments make them financially unattractive from the start. Instead of making the rules simpler and more sensible, Mayor Cliff Notes piles on even more expensive solutions to sate the Climate Clerics. The claim of ‘de-commodifying’ housing is painting over another idiotic, unworkable socialist undertaking.

Chicago is flat broke, remember.

SIGN UP HERE FOR FREE WIREPOINTS DAILY NEWSLETTER

Home Page Signup
First
Last
Check what you would like to receive:

FOLLOW US

 

WIREPOINTS ORIGINAL STORIES

Mark Glennon on AM560’s Morning Answer: Chicago pension buyout plan mostly shifts debt rather than eliminating it, property tax surge doubles inflation over three decades

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

Read More »

WE’RE A NONPROFIT AND YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS ARE DEDUCTIBLE.

SEARCH ALL HISTORY

CONTACT / TERMS OF USE