this post was submitted on 24 Aug 2023
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Economics
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That's the thing, it's not a "property tax" that they want, it's for landlords to have to utilize the apartments for low income housing like they are supposed to. What's going to happen is that they are going to leave the apartments vacant for 5+ years and then say, "No one wants to live here, so I'm not making money. I have to renovate to draw in new tenants, so I'll have to increase the cost to cover my cost." This is just modern day blockbusting, and it's fucking terrible.
What is the incentive for the landlord to keep the building occupied? Why not just immediately tear it down and build luxury apartments?
The incentive is that the building was built with a grant from the government to help initial building costs with the promise that it would be section 8 for X years, but section 8 doesn't get landlords rich, so they look for loopholes to get around it. One of them is keeping the building vacant for those years and then "renovating" to make more money off of the tenants that aren't section 8.