Absolutely not. This whole mob mentality of “kill the rich” is so overplayed and comes out jealousy or spite rather than rational thought. Of course, there are instances where big corporations may take advantage of the regular consumer but i assure you the government is significantly worse by wasting your tax dollars. Instead of a private firms building housing and cleaning up broken neighborhoods for a fraction of the price, the government will do it at for 10x the price and time. Look at Los Angeles Weignart building that was recently built for the homeless, they spent nearly $170 million dollars building a complex that could’ve been built for $45 million if it was done by a corporate firm. Except you as consumers don’t directly feel the “hit” bc it’s taken from your taxes then the actual rent you pay to corporations. The biggest scam aren’t the corporations, it’s the government. If they weren’t regularly taking 25% of your paycheck every month and blowing it on god knows what and who, you wouldn’t have as much of a problem paying off your rent or mortgage. Secondly, if you look carefully at the “Bring Chicago Home” tax bill, it screws over the small family investors. I don’t own any homes in Chicago and i can see this is absolutely ludicrous
@@scorpiocara6798She ran on a very progressive platform but ended up not playing fair with citizens, unions, or departments..she betrayed everyone's trust. Brandon Johnson seems to be off to a better start even tho he's snoozing on things
My initial thought was, "Genius move making the plan _lower_ taxes for regular homes. That'll incentivize people to vote for it even if they don't care about the homeless," but then I realized that's just going to encourage rental companies to gobble up more of the smaller residential properties on the market to dodge the tax. What we _really_ need is there to be a law prohibiting any non-human entity from owning a residential property, period. If corporations and hedge funds buy all the properties, that creates an artificial housing shortage that raises home prices and forces more people into renting, and those people are forced to rent at ridiculous rates because a select few hold an oligopoly on the majority of homes so they can charge whatever they want in rent. It's a vicious cycle that can only be broken with major government intervention that turns homes back into homes instead of assets.
@@alexcarter8807not even four homes should be taxed like that. It should be 5 and above and you have to disclose any company you have ownership that has housing as assets. Going after a middle class family because they had a primary home and prefabricated home on a lake isn't gonna do anyone good. What if the married couple both lose their parents and acquire multiple houses and you need to do maintenance to sell to pay off their parent's debt?
> What we really need is there to be a law prohibiting any non-human entity from owning a residential property, period. Something in this direction does seem better at the end goal impact. Could impose a small transfer tax on a property owned by an individual, and if the property is owned by a corporation or LLC, impose a larger transfer tax. Another approach is to increase property taxes on properties owned by corporations / LLCs. Would be nice to provide an option for people who own shares in a single LLC / private corporation to be exempted if their revenue falls below a certain threshold. Of course, this is all just a roundabout way of increasing taxes on the wealthy. This would all be simpler if we raised income taxes on the wealthy, eliminating loopholes like depreciation on a residential property, and raising taxes on capital gains (this last one would deliver the most bang for the buck of these three options).
No, zoning creates housing shortages. Repeat after me Zoning creates housing shortages. Corporations can buy (and often build) tons of housing properties but if Zoning Laws allow additional units to be built they is enough supply. Banning corporations from owning and therefore building housing will lead to a massive housing shortage.
China does it quite well: a few years back they implement a law that says: A) only private people can own residential units B) No more than 3 per person Worked like a charm.
Yes. Realpage is being sued for price fixing. I hope and pray the courts rule against their price fixing. Realpage used an algorithm to set rental prices high and then they "enforced" to ensure their members were compliant. They are all across the US.
Yup, during the decade I was homeless I was working the whole time. Unfortunately it was for minimum wage so definitely not gainfully employed. And the number of my coworkers that were some flavor of homeless as well would have shocked most people.
It's not homelessness, most of it is due to Dr0ug problems, mental disabilities and lack of psychological help/counseling. Housing them won't solve the core issue. They need help to learn how to care about themselves, many of them never had real care, love or family members.
It's not homelessness, most of it is due to Dr0ug problems, mental disabilities and lack of psychological help/counseling. Housing them won't solve the core issue. They need help to learn how to care about themselves, many of them never had real care, love or family members.
There is no such thing as affordable cost or living wage, because any society that depends on money for food and housing will experience rich and poor divide
I hate the corporate real estate agents to a degree difficult to quantify, but somehow them going against helping the homeless has tipped me over! I'm not even a US citizen but I want to help(though a Chicago resident)
@@acacacacacacaccaca7666I disagree with you but find it interesting that you concede the coercive nature of america's economic paradigm, and the influence capital exerts on governments and populations. This certainly is "the way it is" but it doesn't have to be. Poverty and homelessness are policy decisions that can be changed when people recognise what's truly in their own interests, and vote accordingly.
I completely and totally agree with your sentiment, but if you could find a more class conscious way to phrase what you're saying I think you could do a lot more good for everyone who hears you.
Yes, landlords have to go! Of course, without landlords, there is no renting. That mean people who don't qualify for a mortgage are also now homeless. Still, so long as the rich suffer, it's worth it!
There really isn't much nuance to see when big corporate landlords are generally bad for the well being of the population. Sure some of them may be nice people, but it doesn't change the fact that their position monetizes a basic need and that a lot of them get mad when people get basic needs and don't suffer for their benefit. People who get mad because others AREN'T suffering are generally shitty people, lol. Last time I checked, they don't actually work either, they are just getting an income by owning property they purchased ONCE and saying "I own this property you need to live, pay me while I don't fix it/update it enough, upcharge you because I can far beyond regular inflation rates, and make people homeless while laughing." I'm not even kidding. There are far more landlords who laugh about kicking out single mothers, than there are the ones who gave rent relief during covid. And no matter how good of a person you are, you should never hold a position where you have the power to take away someone else's basic need. It's just cruel and obviously not necessary in literally the richest nation that has ever existed in human history. @@joleaneshmoleane8358
Finland addressed it in two years. Get people into housing FIRST, not last. Once they're in housing the things which made them homeless are less of a pressure and people can climb out. Our Housing LAST policy is cruel, forcing broken lives to perform like circus animals to earn housing.
Exactly. In so many cases in the US the opposition really seems to come down to plain spite. "I had to work for my home, don't give homeless people homes if they didn't do what i did!" i mean.
It's a little bit more complicated to be able to implement it. But yes, ideally housing first. Finland owns a bit of the land, another thing that would happen here cuz it would absolutely happen here, because we already have a problem of this is city to city, county to county, state to state bus, and even fly there homeless, diverting their responsibility. So as soon as you have something like that it will become a magnet, and a project that could have been feasible will end up becoming unfeasible, simply due to the geographical conditions we have. I have personally thought about this and I think it would be lovely but you would have to have some very strict rules about it. For one thing you should have to have proof of residency for several years, work, or proof of birth( lets at say at city). Number 2 is that trying to reconnect the homeless to their families, while receiving short-term shelter. Especially if they are not from the said area that is providing the resources. Number 3 finding permanent housing solutions for the long term for those who qualify. The best solution of the course would be if it was done on a national basis, but we know how that goes. It probably wouldn't happen but there you go. Personally, I would at least like it to be that states/cities have a personal responsibility to dealing with their own residents, instead of diverting their responsibilities onto other places like they do.
The entire country of Finland has a population smaller than the city of New York. They were able to take funds from their state carbon fuel exports and subsidize a couple thousand people out of homelessness. The number of people who get housing assistance in the US is close to the population of the whole country of Finland.
@@alejohernandez75 This argument has always been tried and it doesn't make any less stupid. The country of Finland have less homeless and but also less people so burden on individuals can be more or less than USA based on ratio of homeless/population, scale doesn't make social programs inheritably more or less complicated
it's proven that paying for housing for the homeless is actually *cheaper* than letting them live on the street, racking up health expenses and so on. i hope this goes through!
@@gigahaHopefully people are able to get it passed eventually. When people really push for something, at the local level, it can happen. Just look at marijuana legalization
*I think the retirement crisis will get even worse. A lot of people can't save because of low paying jobs, inflation, an insane rental rates. And now that home ownership is out of reach for middle class Americans, I was once homeless, thank God I was able to make $279k in forex bought my first house last week*
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I mean, like a small contribution could potentially help a lot of people. I felt that if I was that wealthy, I would be like who cares great. that’s how these people are. They just scrounge for every nickel and penny and don’t want to give anything up even if it may help a bunch of people.
The mistake in what you're saying is that someone buying a home for a million dollars makes them a millionaire. It absolutely does not mean that at all. Home mortgages are amortized over a 30 yr period. Someone who only makes $300k annually can finance a million dollar home and it's INSANE to expect people to finance a 2 or 3 percent fee because it become SO MUCH MORE MONEY that buyers will be stuck paying over the life of a loan. This is yet another way to punish the middle class who is desperately hanging on by their teeth while paying the lion's share of all the debts in the US.
@@PureMagma "only $300k annually" Do you hear yourself ever. At all. That's the medium income of the entire US in like 3 months. If you can't figure out how to live on that cut down on the fuckin lattes
Over 70% of Americans are currently living check to check. With rising inflation and cost of living along with stagnating wages, sadly homelessness will only continue to worsen as it has for the past 15 years. Meanwhile 60 corporations paid a combined $0 in federal taxes on their profits last year. Greedy corporations and crooked politicians got us here.
Hmm... But why don't Americans just elect honest politicians who will solve their domestic problems by turning greedy corporations into innovative businesses? Isn't the USA a democracy? So why year after year, decade after decade, century after century there are always crooked politicians and greedy corporations? I can't find any other explanation than that the American people just want things to stay the way they are. For example, the US always preached my country to be more democratic while we had 0% unemployment or homelessness. But as the democratic institutions in my country start to develop under the strong guidance of the US, we begin to have these things. So it turns out that people everywhere, deep down, just want to be homeless. There is just no other logical explanation that I can think of.
For real. This is a prime example of why capitalism doesn’t work. Commodifying basic needs is a horrible idea, especially in this day and age with our current knowledge, infrastructure, and resources.
That is half the solution. The other half is regulations to stop capital owners from scooping up these properties and jacking up the prices for them again or from turning them into rental units.
Especially foreign capital. After learning how Switzerland manages things it became kind of weird to me how other countries, among them my own, allow for foreign investors to buy up the one thing that is finite in supply. The Swiss will have you wait for several years, even if you live and work there, before you are allowed to purchase a home.
@@angelasylvain2476for sure. I’m not in the agreement of “banning” foreign capital but they should have to pay an extra fee or fine to discourage these practices. Make sure it costs them more to sit on a property than it would to wait for the value to skyrocket.
Exactly thank you. Democrat solutions are always about raising taxes which the price get passed on to renters to pay. The root of the problem is corporations owning homes simply stoping them from doing that will settle the housing issue, no one will get hurt but corporations with this solution. Why can’t they ever push for a solution that doesn’t involve taxes.
The lady at the end is a wonderful voice of reason. “Tax break? Hallelujah.” This is an actual middle class/upper middle class person who would meaningfully benefit, who also wants the best for their fellow man.
This problem is everywhere, not just in the city. Private equity firms and slumlords are buying up all the residential properties. I moved almost 50 miles west of Chicago to find barely affordable housing, and they jack up the rent every year. One guy owns half the residential properties in this town and the mayor owns a real estate company. This has to stop. The only real way a normal person can build any kind of wealth to retire on in this country is through owning property. I am so tired of getting screwed around by slum lords and their unscrupulous property managers. There's little to no legal recourse when they screw tenants. I suppose we could try to get our congress to do something about it but that will never go anywhere and homeless people don't have the time. I vote for the torch and pitchfork option.
It's not homelessness, most of it is due to Dr0ug problems, mental disabilities and lack of psychological help/counseling. Housing them won't solve the core issue. They need help to learn how to care about themselves, many of them never had real care, love or family members.
You can not solve anything with violence, threats or petty revenge murders, which is why I am extra terrified when you insinuate that is the only way to solve this thing, the only way to force the people in charge of our nation to solve homelessness instead of letting the rich buy all the homes to make them more expensive for the rest of us. My mom told me not to outburst about every big serious unfair thing like this because ranting and shouting does nothing to help matters whatsoever. If being/playing/talking nice does not work for you, then I worry for where your mind will go next on this issue because I will not choose the most violent solution.😟
I don't mind this plan so far - but the brackets should be adjusted for market price change every 5yrs or something....otherwise in 20yrs all the homes might be over 1M like places like in most of the Bay Area...
You can easily crunch some back-of-the-envelope numbers and come up with the fairly simple fact that America could end homelessness nationwide *today* by spending less than the budget for *just air conditioning* at Afghanistan militarily bases. It’s not that we can’t do it. We just don’t want to.
The thought that anyone working/has a job is homeless, is utterly bewildering, as is.. it's objectively inexcusable and unacceptable that there's people out there working TWO fucking jobs, and STILL homeless. Hell, I say that, but it's unacceptable for anyone to be homeless, really.
@@KesSharann yeah, I learned that a while back, couldn't believe that shit. I make sure to mention that any and every time I hear some far-right ass saying they should just get a job and that they're just lazy. Of course, they always just ignore it, or claimed that the statistics were fabricated by the 'woke media' for their woke agenda or some shit🙄.
I work full time and homeless in California . What's crazy is CA spends so much yearly to fight homelessness it actually be cheaper to buy every homeless person a 30k house. I mean like way cheaper . Most programs and shelters are crap beggars can't be choosers but when you know how much is being donated you know for a fact they are miss allocating funds and alot goes to wages of staff. And then showers don't work PBJ for dinner everything's broken or dirty and it's like on public record the foundation made millions last year its like obviously people's are taking the money. No on really monitors how money is spent in shelters or programs its just a money bag. Then someone with out a college degree has the balls to tell you you don't know how to manage money. Also alot of people called " social workers " have literally 0 education one of my social workers made 70k a year didn't even graduate high-school Its like insane and they are giving life advice to people while blaring rap and smoking weed . .. I could technically not be homeless but rent is so high I'd spend about 80% of my monthly income on rent which is financially a horrible investment and also it be extremely difficult to find a person to rent to me but i make enough where i could rent maybe a room off craigslist but I need to save for retirement, medical expenses, emergencies which I guess is now a luxury??
@@acacacacacacaccaca7666 THAT'S WHAT I WANT. I have no problem living in a studio. Zoning doesn't allow it and continues to flood the market with single family units, $2400 a month.
@@acacacacacacaccaca7666 Yep. That's what their doing, as well as dividing up single family homes to rent by the room. Corporate investors/investment groups need to be out of the residential market. Housing should not be a Wall Street commodity (neither should water).
I just learned of this initiative and I am heart broken to have googled the results to find that it did not pass 😢HOW!? How could this not get passed?? This would have brought SO much good to the people of Chicago. I really hope the organizers of this push for another try to get something like this passed
I live in a mfg home community in Davie Florida Being self employed, I chose this property in 2019, 1st as a rental which I later purchased for 30K, the Lot lease for the long time owner was under $800, once it sold, ELS has raised my lot lease annually and as of May 2024 I will begin to pay $1,323.07 I wrote a letter to one of my state politicians and received back a response that basically brushed me off. This home is old and unhealthy but it’s all I can afford and I can’t afford the repairs to make it safe for me and my 2 cats. The system pushes us down. For people like me there isn’t a hopeful end on the horizon. The rich get richer and the poor are the stepping blocks to their wealth.
You nailed it. Your situation is all too close to homelessness, and it's a lot of stress because you know there's basically no buffer between you and rock-bottom, as is true for far too many people in the USA. Not your fault, but who gets the blame when people like you and me get into deeper and deeper poverty? We get the blame, because that's who politicians and corporations WANT to take the blame.
That's why unless you own your own land, you should never buy a trailer on somebody else's lot. Because when you factor in what you're paying for the trailer and then you factor in the lot rent you're paying more than you would for a house. I'm in a house that we bought in 1992 on 3/4 of an acre. The house is a three-bedroom two bath 1600 square foot home and our mortgage payment is $520 a month.
Oh, good, then it's just a simple trip to the time machine to fix that then. Phewww! I don't know if you can afford to move, but due to the way Tax Repositories are handled in Pennsylvania, you can buy a chunk of land for $500 or less on the County Tax Repository list in some places. Granted, your trailer would never survive that long of a move, but if you are forced to start over eventually anyway, maybe a way forward. I wish I could offer you something more tangible than that.
Corporate landlordship should be hugely aggressively controlled and limited in this country in every way. To do otherwise only brings us to where we are now.
We need a greater control over everything in the us, letting capitalism have its way with every sector has brought us where we are today. We can still make profits, but we need to ensure taxes are collected effectively and used for the public good!!!
There should be a cap on how much money trades people can charge a landlord and how much money repair supplies can be charged to a landlord and how much insurance. increases can be charged to a landlord and how much property taxes can be charged to a landlord...
@@Joce123 holy cow why are you stanning for landlords? Are you one? There's a difference between expecting LLs to operate at a loss and controlling the excessive profiteering. Are you a LL? I'm not saying it has to be either or. Everyone has the right to afford a roof, a most basic human need, and private providers have a right to make a reasonable profit. But where do we draw the line between reasonable profit and extreme profit? How do you expect to end homelessness if 60% of people cannot afford the current rates being demanded? Local authorities could just leave the tent cities alone after all they're not doing anything good by just treating them like animals, that shouldn't be allowed either. That's completely unethical. So either we commit to housing everybody who wants a permanent address or we commit to accepting the fact that tent cities are the new normal. You know, like under the Depression. Which would you prefer? And what is your plan?
@@lisa5249 we need to reverse the supreme court decision that classifies corporations as 'people' when political campaign donations are concerned. that way politicians could actually get in trouble for accepting bribes.
As a realtor I don't get how any realtor could be opposed to this. It makes housing more affordable to those who need it, and more expensive on people with gross excess. Together those forces will help balance out a tumultuous real estate market and shift supply and demand towards the center. That's called a healthy market.
How do you explain many cities don't have a transfer tax. They don't have the high property taxes. Chicago spent over $200 million on migrants and the homeless get virtually nothing. The money is there. It's going to the friends of the governor and mayor.
This wouldn't have done anything about supply or demand. What are you talking about? It might have subsidized some units to make them "affordable" but that's not solving any problem long term, and even that much is unknown because they never bothered to commit to a real plan that would be legally restricted to prevent the usual abuses of routing tax dollars to someone's new stupid project down the road.
Housing should be free to anyone that wants it and in fact, everything should be free. You're 2.5% commission can stay the same but 2.5% of zero is still zero so who cares?
They also need options for people who are disabled and can't work or who take care of disabled family. You can't get an "affordable" place on something like ssi where you get around $900 a month when "affordable" housing is $900+ a month. Some places will even charge you $900 per person living there, on top of having 2-3 xs the rent!! For some people living in a shelter or living with strangers isn't an option.
I was homeless in Chicago for a year and a half until this last September. Chicago has some of the most helpful, well funded homeless programs in the country. If you take advantage of these programs you will get help. I now have my own studio apartment (Single Occupancy)
It's not homelessness, most of it is due to Dr0ug problems, mental disabilities and lack of psychological help/counseling. Housing them won't solve the core issue. They need help to learn how to care about themselves, many of them never had real care, love or family members.
Even full time jobs don't guarantee enough money, and you can't live off of benefits. I know some people who work two jobs - one of them offers really low pay but great benefits, the other offers higher pay to help get enough money to afford living
👏👏👏👏 I’d LOVE to see one about the homeless in NYC!!! I’m in a shelter here and I totally agree with everyone, what I’d like to add is how lack of medical accessibility also makes most people homeless. I’ve met so many people in shelters and I’ve stayed in several myself. I have several disabilities and I only found out while staying in my 4th shelter. I’m autistic and I’ve developed a “special interest” in mental health/disability/domestic abuse. Going through my own and my daughter’s diagnosis journeys, I’ve learned a great deal about symptoms and behaviors that show up from untreated medical conditions. I’ve never met someone in a shelter who did not display signs of major disabilities (I’m including those developed from domestic violence). Being unhoused is traumatic and it stays with us. I’m not saying people cannot overcome this, but we cannot deny the real daily challenges that we face. 💖💖💖 Thank you for your humanity and empathy towards us. I hope this catches on!!!!!!!!
This is NOT radical change. A step in the right direction perhaps, but a mild tax increase on only the wealthiest properties and a drop on everything else is BASELINE, not radical. Radical would be that you OUTLAW corporations and companies from owning homes in the first place and get rid of the incentive to own homes for profit. Homes should be owned to LIVE in, not to make money.
Landowners are the biggest leeches, I'm not american but my city in brazil has a problem, a lot of neighbourhoods have empty lots that lazy locals use as trash dumps, those empty lots become breeding grounds for mosquitos, snakes, scorpions etc. Those lots are owned by speculators, I lived for 20 years and there are lots that are surrounded by development, so their land gains value while they don't only not contribute but also take away value, not from jus land but endangering locals with several disease carrying pests They dont even cut their grass, nor fence it off or allow community gardens, they just put up a sign saying not to dump trash
@@furinickif the lot isn't developed in a certain time frame, it's deeded to a fund for community improvement. We have properties around in Florida that are land banked the same way. There is one particular that has a structure on it, but has remained untouched for 30 years. They have paid more taxes in 30 years than it's currently worth.
My friend started studying law 6 years ago, he decided the best course of action was to get into cheap affordable home building, because our country was headed for homeless epidemic. He got ran over in a parking lot working a double 16 lol. I swear, people that decide to try and help and do better, they just die. It's really hard to fight the normal course of things alone or in small groups, takes unity and organization imo.
What about apartment buildings? Condos? Duplexes? What you're saying is no one should ever rent houses. What do you do for people who don't have the down payment for a home?
@@darrennew8211 First of all do yourself a favor and stop responding out of emotions, it does not paint you in good light. Secondly educate yourself, multifamily properties are considered commercial property. Third if there is money to double the debt deficit for millionaire's tax breaks, then there certainly should be aid for the common working people.
@@VictorBarrera-p9c I'm not arguing about tax breaks. I'm pointing out that preventing corporations from owning places people live in would pretty much eliminate a huge number of places people live. Condos are residential units, yet the building is owned by a corporation, namely a Condo Association. That said, it's youtube comments, so we can expect things to be ambiguous. Are you saying if I buy a new house and move out of my old house, I shouldn't be allowed to rent my old house out? I have to sell it? Or that I should be legally responsible personally if you fall down the stairs and break your leg? How about if I own a corporation that owns the house I live in? Still a bad idea? I don't think it's as simple as "X should be the case, period."
This is not too different from what the Social Democratic Party of Vienna introduced when they won their first city wide election. It's essentially a tax on the rich to fund housing the poor, and this model was so successful that it has not been repealed since, and Vienna is still one of the most affordable major cities in Europe. The only thing missing in Chicago's bill is funding for more social housing.
As an Australian, housing being an investment commodity is the exact problem we're experiencing. In my city the median house price is over $1.5 million, and it doesn't look like it's going down. This is an issue that exists worldwide, and I'm glad to see people coming up with solutions.
It’s not a solution. Adults need to work and stop partying all night. There a toxic ghetto culture in certain neighborhoods in Chicago that thinks they’re owed a living. Poor neighborhoods are heavily subsidized in the wrong ways.
"What is the cost of 68,000 people in the streets in Chicago." That's the fundamental question, and is often overlooked. Most times it cost taxpayers more to have people unhoused.
5:26, yeah dude "small and middle" investors for sure who buy houses at >1 million dollar, yeah. There should be limits to number of homes one can buy as well, with increasing tax with increasig number of homes bought. Otherwise the large companies/rich people would just buy out the cheaper homes because of lower taxes.
Bring Chicago Home is fine and dandy if you're looking to buy a home AND you have an above average income WITH above average savings. It's completely worthless if you're actually in need of a home. This video was clickbait. It will not end homelessness at all. Chicago spends $2,000,000,000 (2 billion USD) on police every year and only 1% of that on helping the homeless. It's also 50% of our education budget. Homelessness is a policy choice, but the one being promoted in this video has nothing to do with it. More Perfect Union is really giving Buzzfeed and 5 Minute Crafts vibes.
And venture capital firms that buy homes to rent out should pay a 9-15% tax. Take away the incentive for these wealthy firms to stop buying up this country's everything.
The power class is afraid of the one-way money train stopping. Capitalism is not the best we can do. We have the money and resources RIGHT NOW to provide for basic necessities (housing, food, healthcare, education, internet, utilities, etc.) if we taxed corporations and cut our near $900billion military budget in half. Those who want more can work towards it in safety and ease bc they aren't threatened with living on the street. And fret not for the billionaires (of which you will never be). Even paying their fair corporate taxes, they'd STILL have centuries' worth of generational wealth. As for our political system, we have neither a democracy NOR a republic here in the good old USA. We have political theater. We have a corporate kleptocracy where CORPORATIONS are people: "people" whose lobbying and donation power give them control of our system of supposed checks and balances; "people" who don't pay taxes, who pollute the environment, and who won't pay a living wage. We can do better, and Chicago will hopefully be a start.
P.S. - Consider not feeding the trolls like @SgtJoeSmith who will, no doubt, attempt to refute what I'm saying. They're either woefully ignorant (which is not a crime; they could read 2009's Capitalist Realism by Mark Fisher to alleviate that condition); willful deniers, or unpaid lackeys.
1 - vacancy tax that increases every year things are unoccupied, including retail and officr and empty lots. eminent domain for unclaimed lots. 2 - Ban corporate and foreign sales. Tax sales of 2nd and 3rd homes a lot. 3 - Unscrew all the suffocating zoning and redtape issues. 4 - Repeal the Fairchild act and build affordable housing.
Big corporate has both helped and destroyed America. The government absolutely needs to step in and tax those making massive profits off the real estate market. Though, because they are more concerned about their bottom line, the renters will see their monthly rent go up and the cost of living will go up and we’ll just be back at where we started from. It’s a vicious cycle.
Major corporations scooping up homes left and right and then charging insane amounts of rent are a major part of the issue. Housing costs are insane these days, renting or buying, across the entire US.
Idk I think lot of people just don’t want to get the eduction to make more money. My advice is to get the education to learn a trade or medical job. What’s so hard about that
@@nofurtherwest3474 problem with that is you can do that, and then those jobs still don't pay shit, $50-$60k today isn't the $50-$60k it used to be in the 2000s where a house was affordable
@@nofurtherwest3474 Average cost of a trade school education is $17,600 a year. Let's say it's a 2 year school and they need to take out a loan. Interest on that loan will be high because of their low income so let's put that to 7%. I'm going to guess they will take loan with the lowest monthly payment. Let's say $272/mo for 20 years. That's a total of $65,497 to payback the loan. Now tell me how that will lift them out of poverty when the morning decision is to buy soap to be presentable for that minimum wage job interview or breakfast for them and or family.
@honestfriend767 because the taxes are only a half measure. If you exclude the top 1% of Americans, the average income drops from 75k a year to 53, exclude the top 20 and it drops down to 35. The reality is that they need to be taxed fairly, bc currently they profit off of price gouging the working class at every turn, and then the heaviest tax burden also falls onto the working class due to how our system operates on income taxes. It's bs, and they know it, both parties know this, the only difference is that one supports the rich, and the other fails to support the workers and poor. It's possible for change, but neither side is either willing to or capable of. It's a betrayal of every working man and woman in the entire country.
There's actually a lot of cheap housing in Chicago that is ripe for repair. The issue is safety. Think Austin (right next to affluent Oak Park) even Englewood. You can get properties there dirt cheap, but you might get shot at when you fo to fix up. The next issue is these small cities that will give you a giant hassle when trying get or close out permits. The real question but answered is how is the money going to actually be spent? 75% will probably end up in a politician's pocket or friend etc.
You'd think these investors would realize there's a connection between homelessness and their property values. You pay either way -- might as well pay the way that solves the problem.
There is nothing radical about updating a property tax policy. It's not groundbreaking. It won't end homelessness. Not in the slightest. The only thing this bill does is make homes slightly cheaper for the majority and a little more expensive for the rich. It doesn't guarantee shelter. It doesn't actually mention anything about accessibility. More Perfect Union is cooking a crock of sh*t by with this garbage. Bring Chicago Home is fine and dandy if you're looking to buy a home AND you have an above average income WITH above average savings. It's completely worthless if you're actually in need of a home.
They should definitely do it! But it's not the only solution, there needs to be more. I work with homelessness in Indianapolis, and what I've found is that most people need mental health help, along with help finding housing. A lot of them, if you gave them easier housing, then they'd lose it due to being exploited, lack of support, and because it is a giant change for most. The price of housing is one aspect, but there are more things that affect them.
@BeerMoneyforTokyo Yeah, there is a lack of mental health support. But I'm just saying from my experience working in mental health and homelessness what is needed.
@@cencent2189 "If you give them easier housing" is not a solution, because the pressure is still on them to magically solve all of their problems quickly enough to maintain that housing. They need a place that is theirs, paid for for as long as it takes until they can pay for it themselves, not conditional. The solution is Housing First, where people are housed, permanently, with no strings attached and with wrap-around support to help with the issues that stand in the way of people's health, well-being, and potential independence. If you give people housing that they CANNOT lose, then they don't lose it and they have a chance to work on all the other struggles they have in their lives. Every single problem, from disabilities to drug addiction to poverty, is easier to tackle when they're not scared of being harassed by police, beaten up by strangers, having all their property stolen, or just plain being stressed by extremes of heat, cold, mosquitoes, rain, and snow. *The idea is to not blame the individual who has ended up homeless, but to put the blame on the failures of our society that have created their situation.* We're trained by our culture to blame the victim: homeless people must have done something wrong to get there, and they're the ones who must solve their own problems. NO, it's housing costs, loss of protections for tenants, the fact that people still can't afford medical care and can go bankrupt due to accidents or illnesses, stagnant wages, loss of any social safety net, especially for single adults. Drug addicts have been looked at the same way, but that's starting to change after it was revealed that our towns and cities were being flooded with oxycontin, people not warned of the addiction potential, doctors not told the truth about what would happen to their patients. No more blaming addicts for the behaviors that addiction caused; we need to blame the factors that created the addiction to begin with. Poor people are blamed for being poor. Uneducated people are blamed for not being able to find jobs that pay enough to live on, and blamed for not going to college when they never had any hope of going. People with brain-chemistry disorders are blamed for behaviors that they had no control over, especially when there's so little access to medical care for their particular problem, "mental illness." When someone becomes homeless, and it's due to these things that they had no control over, we need to stop blaming them and asking them to fix those problems before they can get a hand up. 91% of people who are homeless are able to have long-term success in a Housing First model. The emotional and brain-chemistry issues most people face when homeless are alleviated by finally having a stable, safe place to live, which helps everyone; and for those with a brain-chemistry disorder that caused them to become homeless to begin with, it makes their brain-chemistry more managable because most Housing First programs come with to resources that help people get medical care so they can manage their brain-chemistry imbalance and emotional trauma. The price of housing is putting more and more people into homelessness, and increasingly, these are people who did not have a brain-chemistry disorder such as schizophrenia to cause it. For anyone who is homeless, the solution isn't to examine their individual reasons for living unhoused--the solution is to give them housing.
This video is clickbait. There is nothing radical about updating a property tax. It's not groundbreaking. It makes no mention of homelessness. It makes no mention of shelter accessibility. None. Bring Chicago Home is fine and dandy if you're looking to buy a home AND you have an above average income WITH above average savings, but it's completely worthless if you're actually in need of a home. Chicago spends $2,000,000,000 (2 billion USD) on police every year and only 1% of that on helping the homeless. It's also 50% of our education budget. Homelessness is a policy choice, but the one being promoted in this video has nothing to do with it. More Perfect Union is really giving Buzzfeed and 5 Minute Crafts vibes.
$100 million!!! For just taxing 2-3% on 7% of sales! That’s insane to think about. So many amazing things could be done to help homelessness. And all these talking heads talking about investors and high rises? That’s more important than people living on the streets? Smh.
@@guyserious2468well if they get free housing they won’t be homeless, which means they can get jobs and sign up for benefits that will lift them out of poverty… idk what your comment was supposed to be but I’d rather see people taken care of rather than taken advantage of so that corporations that are treated like people can build more ugly high rises downtown
As much as $100M is, it will only put a dent on reducing homelessness in a city the size of Chicago. A noticeable dent, but that's all - unless there is some innovative development such as tiny house villages where the money goes much further.
It's not a smart way to tax property. It discourages older people with larger homes from downsizing, lowering housing supply. A monthly tax on land makes more sense.
@@noonecaresaboutgoogle3219 I think we need better data on how much downsizing is a crucial part of housing supply. Unless downsizers are literally the backbone of opening up housing opportunities, I doubt discouraging them is going to outweigh the pros to this plan
Housing is a right! It will cost more for tax payers to have people unhoused because these communities use more public service while unhoused. Housing people is the humane thing to do and it will put less stress on public services.
surprisingly, it'd actually make things worse: if people have more money but the supply of homes hasn't increased, that will lead to increased housing prices. unhoused people who typically make less than housed people will be even harder pressed to afford a home. (plus increasing housing prices leads to inflation.) ... anyways, i'm not trying to attack you, lol... we also need a living wage, but I keep telling everyone that housing needs to come first or it'll backfire
I was born in Chicago and am very proud! Unfortunately I live in Arizona now but I hope the rest of the country will follow Chicago's lead. Corporate and political corruption is the norm across the States and it needs to end right now. If the rich find out they can just kill the poor en masse without consequence... where will we go from there? Lobbying must be made illegal.
Bring Chicago Home is fine and dandy if you're looking to buy a home AND you have an above average income WITH above average savings. It's completely worthless if you're actually in need of a home. This video was clickbait. It will not end homelessness at all. Chicago spends $2,000,000,000 (2 billion USD) on police every year and only 1% of that on helping the homeless. It's also 50% of our education budget. Homelessness is a policy choice, but the one being promoted in this video has nothing to do with it. More Perfect Union has become the Buzzfeed version of progressive news. It's giving brainrot.
In the same situation as I type, crashing on someone's living room. Even with a Bachelor's Degree, you'll still end up homeless in the new economy living on a dirty mattress on the floor... If you're lucky! If this doesn't pass there is something fundamentally wrong with society. Period.
I dont have a college degree and make more in construction than all of my peers... You must want to be homeless its too easy to make a fat paycheck this day and age.
It passed in Los Angeles and did not work out well. When commercial sales prices and volume drop, you'll see what a good plan it was. Real Estate is not as simple as they make it sound.
There was a large grocery store in my town, it sat empty for almost 15 years. The owners were in no rush to find someone else to open in there because the negative helped their other lots. The same can be seen elsewhere in the county (not the wealthiest but a "decent" county), with businesses closed down for years and blocks of empty buildings. I understand things take time, but when you see business after business empty for almost a decade, they could be put to better use.
so excited to see this happen!!! Chicago is ready for some change, I really think this will go incredibly well if the word is spread and a vote happens
This is no way to treat our poor billionaires who are struggling to make ends meet. How dare we ask them to pay a few extra cents on the dollar to help people who didn't have the good sense to be born obscenely wealthy.
It's funny, we never question large tax breaks for the wealthy & corporations, but the second we talk about helping the people, it's always that we can't afford it. We can afford it. We just don't want to. Housing is a human right. Everyone deserves a place to live. They also shouldn't have to use their entire paycheck to pay for housing.
Instead of a flat qualifier like 1m or 1.5m it should be a multiple of the median income of the area code to prevent 1m from becoming encroached upon by inflation.
Most people's lives are being ruined by financial capitalism. There are plenty of empty homes 🏡 that are highly inflated. We don't have a homeless issue. We have a reasonable affordable issue. 😳
7:19 I like this lady who's like "I like the idea that we will pay less taxes; who could be against this? Plus we'll help fix this social issue." Pretty heavily implies she would not be in favor of fixing this issue if it cost her more in taxes.
Housing costs have always been my biggest expense every month, whether I owned the house or rented. But, now, the rents are insane even here in FLA. At some point someone has to pay to get these people into secure housing. The Gov't can help make up the difference. But, it needs to be done - in the "richest country in the history of the planet".
"housing in America isn't being treated as housing, it's a means for people who already have money to make more money" yep, and most Americans would fight to get those people with more money than them even more money.
"...I'm closer to homelessness than I am owning a home right now" Thats a terribly sad statement that is true for more families and individuals than we can fathom.
I think Detroit might have a theoretically stronger plan in motion than Chicago, targeting underdevelopment, overpricing, absentee ownership, and speculation all in one.
Nah, rich people who pay less taxes than the rest of us could end homelessness, but they gotta have that 3rd home and 2 yacht this quarter, not next quarter.
if the corporate landlords are against it, I'm for it.
Hell yeah !
Look it's a free market... if they were charging too much no one would rent or buy from them.. dont like it move out of town
@@Gotwoh3llit’s not a free market if all of it’s owned by the same couple companies
@wolfloverone_ sure it is... vote with your wallet and move out.
Absolutely not. This whole mob mentality of “kill the rich” is so overplayed and comes out jealousy or spite rather than rational thought. Of course, there are instances where big corporations may take advantage of the regular consumer but i assure you the government is significantly worse by wasting your tax dollars. Instead of a private firms building housing and cleaning up broken neighborhoods for a fraction of the price, the government will do it at for 10x the price and time. Look at Los Angeles Weignart building that was recently built for the homeless, they spent nearly $170 million dollars building a complex that could’ve been built for $45 million if it was done by a corporate firm. Except you as consumers don’t directly feel the “hit” bc it’s taken from your taxes then the actual rent you pay to corporations. The biggest scam aren’t the corporations, it’s the government. If they weren’t regularly taking 25% of your paycheck every month and blowing it on god knows what and who, you wouldn’t have as much of a problem paying off your rent or mortgage. Secondly, if you look carefully at the “Bring Chicago Home” tax bill, it screws over the small family investors. I don’t own any homes in Chicago and i can see this is absolutely ludicrous
As born and raised Chicagoan, we need to see some uncorrupted change
What do u think of mayor Lightfoot?
@@scorpiocara6798 She's not mayor any longer.
@@scorpiocara6798 she has beautiful eyes but she's not mayor anymore
@@scorpiocara6798She ran on a very progressive platform but ended up not playing fair with citizens, unions, or departments..she betrayed everyone's trust. Brandon Johnson seems to be off to a better start even tho he's snoozing on things
There's more profit in keeping the homeless issue as is. You can't fix the issue by throwing money at it.
My initial thought was, "Genius move making the plan _lower_ taxes for regular homes. That'll incentivize people to vote for it even if they don't care about the homeless," but then I realized that's just going to encourage rental companies to gobble up more of the smaller residential properties on the market to dodge the tax.
What we _really_ need is there to be a law prohibiting any non-human entity from owning a residential property, period. If corporations and hedge funds buy all the properties, that creates an artificial housing shortage that raises home prices and forces more people into renting, and those people are forced to rent at ridiculous rates because a select few hold an oligopoly on the majority of homes so they can charge whatever they want in rent. It's a vicious cycle that can only be broken with major government intervention that turns homes back into homes instead of assets.
This is why 2nd, 3rd, etc homes need to be taxed at 33% of their value per annum.
@@alexcarter8807not even four homes should be taxed like that. It should be 5 and above and you have to disclose any company you have ownership that has housing as assets. Going after a middle class family because they had a primary home and prefabricated home on a lake isn't gonna do anyone good. What if the married couple both lose their parents and acquire multiple houses and you need to do maintenance to sell to pay off their parent's debt?
> What we really need is there to be a law prohibiting any non-human entity from owning a residential property, period.
Something in this direction does seem better at the end goal impact. Could impose a small transfer tax on a property owned by an individual, and if the property is owned by a corporation or LLC, impose a larger transfer tax. Another approach is to increase property taxes on properties owned by corporations / LLCs. Would be nice to provide an option for people who own shares in a single LLC / private corporation to be exempted if their revenue falls below a certain threshold.
Of course, this is all just a roundabout way of increasing taxes on the wealthy. This would all be simpler if we raised income taxes on the wealthy, eliminating loopholes like depreciation on a residential property, and raising taxes on capital gains (this last one would deliver the most bang for the buck of these three options).
No, zoning creates housing shortages. Repeat after me Zoning creates housing shortages. Corporations can buy (and often build) tons of housing properties but if Zoning Laws allow additional units to be built they is enough supply. Banning corporations from owning and therefore building housing will lead to a massive housing shortage.
China does it quite well: a few years back they implement a law that says:
A) only private people can own residential units
B) No more than 3 per person
Worked like a charm.
Many homeless people work for a living but have been priced out of having an affordable place to stay.
Yes. Realpage is being sued for price fixing. I hope and pray the courts rule against their price fixing. Realpage used an algorithm to set rental prices high and then they "enforced" to ensure their members were compliant. They are all across the US.
Yup, during the decade I was homeless I was working the whole time. Unfortunately it was for minimum wage so definitely not gainfully employed.
And the number of my coworkers that were some flavor of homeless as well would have shocked most people.
It's not homelessness, most of it is due to Dr0ug problems, mental disabilities and lack of psychological help/counseling. Housing them won't solve the core issue. They need help to learn how to care about themselves, many of them never had real care, love or family members.
It's not homelessness, most of it is due to Dr0ug problems, mental disabilities and lack of psychological help/counseling. Housing them won't solve the core issue. They need help to learn how to care about themselves, many of them never had real care, love or family members.
There is no such thing as affordable cost or living wage, because any society that depends on money for food and housing will experience rich and poor divide
If you're watching this months after the vote and want to know the outcome, it failed.
fuck...
Classic
Is there anything we can do to get it back!
I hate the corporate real estate agents to a degree difficult to quantify, but somehow them going against helping the homeless has tipped me over! I'm not even a US citizen but I want to help(though a Chicago resident)
Figured it would happen, these greedy bastards have too much power now…
When corporate loses their shit, you know it's citizen centered.
They ganna fight this with everything they got
Coming next companies and stores leave Chicago, unemployment crysis
@@acacacacacacaccaca7666I disagree with you but find it interesting that you concede the coercive nature of america's economic paradigm, and the influence capital exerts on governments and populations. This certainly is "the way it is" but it doesn't have to be. Poverty and homelessness are policy decisions that can be changed when people recognise what's truly in their own interests, and vote accordingly.
@@space.youtube Doing meth and fentanyl is a "policy decision"? Interesting.
I completely and totally agree with your sentiment, but if you could find a more class conscious way to phrase what you're saying I think you could do a lot more good for everyone who hears you.
I'm always happy to hear _"Big corporate land lords are not happy"_
Same! Landlords are just leeches that commodify a basic need. They gotta go.
Yes, landlords have to go!
Of course, without landlords, there is no renting. That mean people who don't qualify for a mortgage are also now homeless. Still, so long as the rich suffer, it's worth it!
i dont, because that means they're about to start lobbying and are going to win
You have a pretty simple worldview, huh? Not much room for nuance in there I see.
There really isn't much nuance to see when big corporate landlords are generally bad for the well being of the population. Sure some of them may be nice people, but it doesn't change the fact that their position monetizes a basic need and that a lot of them get mad when people get basic needs and don't suffer for their benefit. People who get mad because others AREN'T suffering are generally shitty people, lol.
Last time I checked, they don't actually work either, they are just getting an income by owning property they purchased ONCE and saying "I own this property you need to live, pay me while I don't fix it/update it enough, upcharge you because I can far beyond regular inflation rates, and make people homeless while laughing."
I'm not even kidding. There are far more landlords who laugh about kicking out single mothers, than there are the ones who gave rent relief during covid.
And no matter how good of a person you are, you should never hold a position where you have the power to take away someone else's basic need. It's just cruel and obviously not necessary in literally the richest nation that has ever existed in human history. @@joleaneshmoleane8358
Finland addressed it in two years. Get people into housing FIRST, not last. Once they're in housing the things which made them homeless are less of a pressure and people can climb out.
Our Housing LAST policy is cruel, forcing broken lives to perform like circus animals to earn housing.
Exactly. In so many cases in the US the opposition really seems to come down to plain spite. "I had to work for my home, don't give homeless people homes if they didn't do what i did!" i mean.
Rich people in this country are nasty to poor folks who didn't inherit wealth like they did
It's a little bit more complicated to be able to implement it. But yes, ideally housing first.
Finland owns a bit of the land, another thing that would happen here cuz it would absolutely happen here, because we already have a problem of this is city to city, county to county, state to state bus, and even fly there homeless, diverting their responsibility.
So as soon as you have something like that it will become a magnet, and a project that could have been feasible will end up becoming unfeasible, simply due to the geographical conditions we have.
I have personally thought about this and I think it would be lovely but you would have to have some very strict rules about it.
For one thing you should have to have proof of residency for several years, work, or proof of birth( lets at say at city).
Number 2 is that trying to reconnect the homeless to their families, while receiving short-term shelter. Especially if they are not from the said area that is providing the resources.
Number 3 finding permanent housing solutions for the long term for those who qualify.
The best solution of the course would be if it was done on a national basis, but we know how that goes. It probably wouldn't happen but there you go.
Personally, I would at least like it to be that states/cities have a personal responsibility to dealing with their own residents, instead of diverting their responsibilities onto other places like they do.
The entire country of Finland has a population smaller than the city of New York. They were able to take funds from their state carbon fuel exports and subsidize a couple thousand people out of homelessness.
The number of people who get housing assistance in the US is close to the population of the whole country of Finland.
@@alejohernandez75 This argument has always been tried and it doesn't make any less stupid. The country of Finland have less homeless and but also less people so burden on individuals can be more or less than USA based on ratio of homeless/population, scale doesn't make social programs inheritably more or less complicated
it's proven that paying for housing for the homeless is actually *cheaper* than letting them live on the street, racking up health expenses and so on. i hope this goes through!
I just read that it failed to go through, 54% against to 46% in favor.
@@gigahaHopefully people are able to get it passed eventually. When people really push for something, at the local level, it can happen. Just look at marijuana legalization
i wish more people had seen this video about it
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Don't call it "radical" when it's a 1-2% tax increase for millionaires homes, that's the least radical solution to anything I've ever seen in my life
I mean, like a small contribution could potentially help a lot of people. I felt that if I was that wealthy, I would be like who cares great. that’s how these people are. They just scrounge for every nickel and penny and don’t want to give anything up even if it may help a bunch of people.
The mistake in what you're saying is that someone buying a home for a million dollars makes them a millionaire. It absolutely does not mean that at all. Home mortgages are amortized over a 30 yr period. Someone who only makes $300k annually can finance a million dollar home and it's INSANE to expect people to finance a 2 or 3 percent fee because it become SO MUCH MORE MONEY that buyers will be stuck paying over the life of a loan.
This is yet another way to punish the middle class who is desperately hanging on by their teeth while paying the lion's share of all the debts in the US.
@@PureMagma "only $300k annually"
Do you hear yourself ever. At all. That's the medium income of the entire US in like 3 months. If you can't figure out how to live on that cut down on the fuckin lattes
@@PureMagmaare you being serious?
On what fuckin planet is $300k/year "middle class" 😂😂
Over 70% of Americans are currently living check to check. With rising inflation and cost of living along with stagnating wages, sadly homelessness will only continue to worsen as it has for the past 15 years. Meanwhile 60 corporations paid a combined $0 in federal taxes on their profits last year. Greedy corporations and crooked politicians got us here.
more homeless today than the Great Depression. This is the worst it has ever been.
i mean whats the problem with investor profits rising 10% year over year? middle class and lower get the shit end of the stick
And most homeless data points don't include people who are in long stay motels or couch surfing, so the numbers are higher than we even know.
Hmm... But why don't Americans just elect honest politicians who will solve their domestic problems by turning greedy corporations into innovative businesses? Isn't the USA a democracy? So why year after year, decade after decade, century after century there are always crooked politicians and greedy corporations? I can't find any other explanation than that the American people just want things to stay the way they are.
For example, the US always preached my country to be more democratic while we had 0% unemployment or homelessness. But as the democratic institutions in my country start to develop under the strong guidance of the US, we begin to have these things. So it turns out that people everywhere, deep down, just want to be homeless. There is just no other logical explanation that I can think of.
For real. This is a prime example of why capitalism doesn’t work. Commodifying basic needs is a horrible idea, especially in this day and age with our current knowledge, infrastructure, and resources.
That is half the solution. The other half is regulations to stop capital owners from scooping up these properties and jacking up the prices for them again or from turning them into rental units.
Especially foreign capital. After learning how Switzerland manages things it became kind of weird to me how other countries, among them my own, allow for foreign investors to buy up the one thing that is finite in supply. The Swiss will have you wait for several years, even if you live and work there, before you are allowed to purchase a home.
100% agree. May I add, and manipulating the market by buying up huge swaths of neighborhoods but sitting on properties to push the cost up.
@@angelasylvain2476for sure. I’m not in the agreement of “banning” foreign capital but they should have to pay an extra fee or fine to discourage these practices. Make sure it costs them more to sit on a property than it would to wait for the value to skyrocket.
Exactly thank you. Democrat solutions are always about raising taxes which the price get passed on to renters to pay. The root of the problem is corporations owning homes simply stoping them from doing that will settle the housing issue, no one will get hurt but corporations with this solution. Why can’t they ever push for a solution that doesn’t involve taxes.
🎯
The lady at the end is a wonderful voice of reason. “Tax break? Hallelujah.”
This is an actual middle class/upper middle class person who would meaningfully benefit, who also wants the best for their fellow man.
This problem is everywhere, not just in the city. Private equity firms and slumlords are buying up all the residential properties. I moved almost 50 miles west of Chicago to find barely affordable housing, and they jack up the rent every year. One guy owns half the residential properties in this town and the mayor owns a real estate company. This has to stop. The only real way a normal person can build any kind of wealth to retire on in this country is through owning property. I am so tired of getting screwed around by slum lords and their unscrupulous property managers. There's little to no legal recourse when they screw tenants. I suppose we could try to get our congress to do something about it but that will never go anywhere and homeless people don't have the time. I vote for the torch and pitchfork option.
It's not homelessness, most of it is due to Dr0ug problems, mental disabilities and lack of psychological help/counseling. Housing them won't solve the core issue. They need help to learn how to care about themselves, many of them never had real care, love or family members.
You can not solve anything with violence, threats or petty revenge murders, which is why I am extra terrified when you insinuate that is the only way to solve this thing, the only way to force the people in charge of our nation to solve homelessness instead of letting the rich buy all the homes to make them more expensive for the rest of us. My mom told me not to outburst about every big serious unfair thing like this because ranting and shouting does nothing to help matters whatsoever. If being/playing/talking nice does not work for you, then I worry for where your mind will go next on this issue because I will not choose the most violent solution.😟
This is what California should be proposing!
Unfortunately rich people control government here, many of them ar3 also part of government and won't allow it on the ballot.
nope. newsom is too busy being corrupt and bending over backwards for the resniks
EVERYWHERE should be proposing... A national tax standard...
I don't mind this plan so far - but the brackets should be adjusted for market price change every 5yrs or something....otherwise in 20yrs all the homes might be over 1M like places like in most of the Bay Area...
You can easily crunch some back-of-the-envelope numbers and come up with the fairly simple fact that America could end homelessness nationwide *today* by spending less than the budget for *just air conditioning* at Afghanistan militarily bases. It’s not that we can’t do it. We just don’t want to.
The thought that anyone working/has a job is homeless, is utterly bewildering, as is.. it's objectively inexcusable and unacceptable that there's people out there working TWO fucking jobs, and STILL homeless. Hell, I say that, but it's unacceptable for anyone to be homeless, really.
In the US it's around half. Half of homeless people have jobs but cannot afford housing of any sort.
Get a third job problem solved
@@acacacacacacaccaca7666 🤣
@@KesSharann yeah, I learned that a while back, couldn't believe that shit. I make sure to mention that any and every time I hear some far-right ass saying they should just get a job and that they're just lazy. Of course, they always just ignore it, or claimed that the statistics were fabricated by the 'woke media' for their woke agenda or some shit🙄.
I work full time and homeless in California . What's crazy is CA spends so much yearly to fight homelessness it actually be cheaper to buy every homeless person a 30k house. I mean like way cheaper . Most programs and shelters are crap beggars can't be choosers but when you know how much is being donated you know for a fact they are miss allocating funds and alot goes to wages of staff. And then showers don't work PBJ for dinner everything's broken or dirty and it's like on public record the foundation made millions last year its like obviously people's are taking the money. No on really monitors how money is spent in shelters or programs its just a money bag. Then someone with out a college degree has the balls to tell you you don't know how to manage money. Also alot of people called " social workers " have literally 0 education one of my social workers made 70k a year didn't even graduate high-school Its like insane and they are giving life advice to people while blaring rap and smoking weed . .. I could technically not be homeless but rent is so high I'd spend about 80% of my monthly income on rent which is financially a horrible investment and also it be extremely difficult to find a person to rent to me but i make enough where i could rent maybe a room off craigslist but I need to save for retirement, medical expenses, emergencies which I guess is now a luxury??
5:28 investors have never been and never will be the “key to providing affordable housing”, all they do is scalp supply lmao
How about when they started building really tiny apartment to shove a ton of people into one building
@@acacacacacacaccaca7666 THAT'S WHAT I WANT. I have no problem living in a studio. Zoning doesn't allow it and continues to flood the market with single family units, $2400 a month.
@@blehhleb you will live in the studio and you will pay 2400 a month for it
Warren Buffet told us years ago, "so long as they can still make a percentage point or two, they'll pay it.".
@@acacacacacacaccaca7666 Yep. That's what their doing, as well as dividing up single family homes to rent by the room.
Corporate investors/investment groups need to be out of the residential market. Housing should not be a Wall Street commodity (neither should water).
I just learned of this initiative and I am heart broken to have googled the results to find that it did not pass 😢HOW!? How could this not get passed?? This would have brought SO much good to the people of Chicago. I really hope the organizers of this push for another try to get something like this passed
The housing corp probably did a big campaign against it using words to make it sound like a bad idea for everyone. Happens all the time
I live in a mfg home community in Davie Florida
Being self employed, I chose this property in 2019, 1st as a rental which I later purchased for 30K, the Lot lease for the long time owner was under $800, once it sold, ELS has raised my lot lease annually and as of May 2024 I will begin to pay $1,323.07
I wrote a letter to one of my state politicians and received back a response that basically brushed me off.
This home is old and unhealthy but it’s all I can afford and I can’t afford the repairs to make it safe for me and my 2 cats.
The system pushes us down. For people like me there isn’t a hopeful end on the horizon.
The rich get richer and the poor are the stepping blocks to their wealth.
You nailed it. Your situation is all too close to homelessness, and it's a lot of stress because you know there's basically no buffer between you and rock-bottom, as is true for far too many people in the USA. Not your fault, but who gets the blame when people like you and me get into deeper and deeper poverty? We get the blame, because that's who politicians and corporations WANT to take the blame.
That's why unless you own your own land, you should never buy a trailer on somebody else's lot. Because when you factor in what you're paying for the trailer and then you factor in the lot rent you're paying more than you would for a house. I'm in a house that we bought in 1992 on 3/4 of an acre. The house is a three-bedroom two bath 1600 square foot home and our mortgage payment is $520 a month.
Oh, good, then it's just a simple trip to the time machine to fix that then. Phewww!
I don't know if you can afford to move, but due to the way Tax Repositories are handled in Pennsylvania, you can buy a chunk of land for $500 or less on the County Tax Repository list in some places. Granted, your trailer would never survive that long of a move, but if you are forced to start over eventually anyway, maybe a way forward.
I wish I could offer you something more tangible than that.
Corporate landlordship should be hugely aggressively controlled and limited in this country in every way. To do otherwise only brings us to where we are now.
We need a greater control over everything in the us, letting capitalism have its way with every sector has brought us where we are today. We can still make profits, but we need to ensure taxes are collected effectively and used for the public good!!!
@@lisa5249 well that plus more private sector control in my opinion but yes. 100%
There should be a cap on how much money trades people can charge a landlord and how much money repair supplies can be charged to a landlord and how much insurance. increases can be charged to a landlord and how much property taxes can be charged to a landlord...
@@Joce123 holy cow why are you stanning for landlords? Are you one? There's a difference between expecting LLs to operate at a loss and controlling the excessive profiteering. Are you a LL?
I'm not saying it has to be either or. Everyone has the right to afford a roof, a most basic human need, and private providers have a right to make a reasonable profit. But where do we draw the line between reasonable profit and extreme profit?
How do you expect to end homelessness if 60% of people cannot afford the current rates being demanded?
Local authorities could just leave the tent cities alone after all they're not doing anything good by just treating them like animals, that shouldn't be allowed either. That's completely unethical.
So either we commit to housing everybody who wants a permanent address or we commit to accepting the fact that tent cities are the new normal. You know, like under the Depression. Which would you prefer? And what is your plan?
@@lisa5249 we need to reverse the supreme court decision that classifies corporations as 'people' when political campaign donations are concerned. that way politicians could actually get in trouble for accepting bribes.
As a realtor I don't get how any realtor could be opposed to this. It makes housing more affordable to those who need it, and more expensive on people with gross excess. Together those forces will help balance out a tumultuous real estate market and shift supply and demand towards the center.
That's called a healthy market.
Chicago subsidizing small affordable home for middle class would be a real solution.
How do you explain many cities don't have a transfer tax. They don't have the high property taxes. Chicago spent over $200 million on migrants and the homeless get virtually nothing. The money is there. It's going to the friends of the governor and mayor.
This wouldn't have done anything about supply or demand. What are you talking about? It might have subsidized some units to make them "affordable" but that's not solving any problem long term, and even that much is unknown because they never bothered to commit to a real plan that would be legally restricted to prevent the usual abuses of routing tax dollars to someone's new stupid project down the road.
Less homeless on the streets would long-term improve the image and quality of life in the city leading to higher real estate value.
Housing should be free to anyone that wants it and in fact, everything should be free. You're 2.5% commission can stay the same but 2.5% of zero is still zero so who cares?
They also need options for people who are disabled and can't work or who take care of disabled family. You can't get an "affordable" place on something like ssi where you get around $900 a month when "affordable" housing is $900+ a month. Some places will even charge you $900 per person living there, on top of having 2-3 xs the rent!! For some people living in a shelter or living with strangers isn't an option.
I seriously doubt that the landlord with a six-unit property will be selling their building for less than 1M in Chicago.
I was homeless in Chicago for a year and a half until this last September.
Chicago has some of the most helpful, well funded homeless programs in the country.
If you take advantage of these programs you will get help.
I now have my own studio apartment (Single Occupancy)
That’s amazing!! Congratulations. Do you still live in chicago?
It's not homelessness, most of it is due to Dr0ug problems, mental disabilities and lack of psychological help/counseling. Housing them won't solve the core issue. They need help to learn how to care about themselves, many of them never had real care, love or family members.
I hope this gets put in place
Fuck yeah. You can see the fear in their eyes as they desperately try to convince us this isn't 100% good.
Fuck yeah. Free money for everyone!
Blockchain will fix it and a surveillance state
@@DemPilafian Um. What? I think it's trying to communicate. 🙊
Nothing i ever 100%, this will trickle down to the consumer and renters. Go walk down state street and Michigan avenue. It’s already 30-60% vacant,
@@DemPilafiancapitalism is literally “free money if you have money” 😂
How is it possible that people working 2 jobs are homeless? That's insane, the minimum salary should be enough to have a decent life.
Many jobs are not full time allowing the employers to avoid paying for benefits.
Even full time jobs don't guarantee enough money, and you can't live off of benefits. I know some people who work two jobs - one of them offers really low pay but great benefits, the other offers higher pay to help get enough money to afford living
👏👏👏👏
I’d LOVE to see one about the homeless in NYC!!!
I’m in a shelter here and I totally agree with everyone, what I’d like to add is how lack of medical accessibility also makes most people homeless. I’ve met so many people in shelters and I’ve stayed in several myself. I have several disabilities and I only found out while staying in my 4th shelter. I’m autistic and I’ve developed a “special interest” in mental health/disability/domestic abuse. Going through my own and my daughter’s diagnosis journeys, I’ve learned a great deal about symptoms and behaviors that show up from untreated medical conditions. I’ve never met someone in a shelter who did not display signs of major disabilities (I’m including those developed from domestic violence). Being unhoused is traumatic and it stays with us. I’m not saying people cannot overcome this, but we cannot deny the real daily challenges that we face. 💖💖💖 Thank you for your humanity and empathy towards us. I hope this catches on!!!!!!!!
This is NOT radical change. A step in the right direction perhaps, but a mild tax increase on only the wealthiest properties and a drop on everything else is BASELINE, not radical. Radical would be that you OUTLAW corporations and companies from owning homes in the first place and get rid of the incentive to own homes for profit. Homes should be owned to LIVE in, not to make money.
93% taxes lowered compared to slight increase tax for corporate overlords plus it helps solve a huge social issue. Sign me up!
Private equity is at fault make them pay
Privatization is the root of many of our national woes
Landowners are the biggest leeches, I'm not american but my city in brazil has a problem, a lot of neighbourhoods have empty lots that lazy locals use as trash dumps, those empty lots become breeding grounds for mosquitos, snakes, scorpions etc. Those lots are owned by speculators, I lived for 20 years and there are lots that are surrounded by development, so their land gains value while they don't only not contribute but also take away value, not from jus land but endangering locals with several disease carrying pests
They dont even cut their grass, nor fence it off or allow community gardens, they just put up a sign saying not to dump trash
@@furinickif the lot isn't developed in a certain time frame, it's deeded to a fund for community improvement. We have properties around in Florida that are land banked the same way. There is one particular that has a structure on it, but has remained untouched for 30 years. They have paid more taxes in 30 years than it's currently worth.
Seems like a reasonable and sustainable plan!
Rent gone increase good luck
My friend started studying law 6 years ago, he decided the best course of action was to get into cheap affordable home building, because our country was headed for homeless epidemic. He got ran over in a parking lot working a double 16 lol. I swear, people that decide to try and help and do better, they just die. It's really hard to fight the normal course of things alone or in small groups, takes unity and organization imo.
There's a reason union membership is near an all time low at the same time homeless is near an all time high
Corporations should not be able to own residential property, period.
Homes are for families, not profits.
What about apartment buildings? Condos? Duplexes? What you're saying is no one should ever rent houses. What do you do for people who don't have the down payment for a home?
@@darrennew8211
First of all do yourself a favor and stop responding out of emotions, it does not paint you in good light.
Secondly educate yourself, multifamily properties are considered commercial property.
Third if there is money to double the debt deficit for millionaire's tax breaks, then there certainly should be aid for the common working people.
@@VictorBarrera-p9c I'm not arguing about tax breaks. I'm pointing out that preventing corporations from owning places people live in would pretty much eliminate a huge number of places people live. Condos are residential units, yet the building is owned by a corporation, namely a Condo Association. That said, it's youtube comments, so we can expect things to be ambiguous.
Are you saying if I buy a new house and move out of my old house, I shouldn't be allowed to rent my old house out? I have to sell it? Or that I should be legally responsible personally if you fall down the stairs and break your leg? How about if I own a corporation that owns the house I live in? Still a bad idea?
I don't think it's as simple as "X should be the case, period."
This is not too different from what the Social Democratic Party of Vienna introduced when they won their first city wide election. It's essentially a tax on the rich to fund housing the poor, and this model was so successful that it has not been repealed since, and Vienna is still one of the most affordable major cities in Europe. The only thing missing in Chicago's bill is funding for more social housing.
The government should be required to build housing in proportion with private capital if it’s going to exist as a form of profit market at all
Well if big corporations don't want it then it must be good for the people.
As an Australian, housing being an investment commodity is the exact problem we're experiencing. In my city the median house price is over $1.5 million, and it doesn't look like it's going down. This is an issue that exists worldwide, and I'm glad to see people coming up with solutions.
Capitalism is a sickness everywhere. They exploit and extort the working class in the name of good business.
It’s not a solution. Adults need to work and stop partying all night. There a toxic ghetto culture in certain neighborhoods in Chicago that thinks they’re owed a living. Poor neighborhoods are heavily subsidized in the wrong ways.
I love the phrase "big corporate landlords are not happy" just has a really nice ring to it
"What is the cost of 68,000 people in the streets in Chicago." That's the fundamental question, and is often overlooked. Most times it cost taxpayers more to have people unhoused.
oh no, someone might not be able to buy their fifth Belenciaga bag if this passes!
how about we take profits from Belenciaga then? They only need $5 a bag not $2000.
#nationalizeBalenciaga@@SgtJoeSmith
5:26, yeah dude "small and middle" investors for sure who buy houses at >1 million dollar, yeah. There should be limits to number of homes one can buy as well, with increasing tax with increasig number of homes bought. Otherwise the large companies/rich people would just buy out the cheaper homes because of lower taxes.
The backbends I've seen attempted, to invent some reason why it isn't a good idea, "would be funny, if it weren't so sad"
Sounds good and responsible. Land as well. Some some elites are buying up our farmland and much more around the world--whatever they can get buy with.
Communist much?
@@neiljohnson6815 You say that like it's a bad thing. That word doesn't mean what you seem to think it means
@@neiljohnson6815 You say that like it's a bad thing. That word doesn't mean what you seem to think it means
We need this, and we need cities around the country to take a look at Vienna and emulate their non-market housing model
Bring Chicago Home is fine and dandy if you're looking to buy a home AND you have an above average income WITH above average savings. It's completely worthless if you're actually in need of a home. This video was clickbait. It will not end homelessness at all. Chicago spends $2,000,000,000 (2 billion USD) on police every year and only 1% of that on helping the homeless. It's also 50% of our education budget. Homelessness is a policy choice, but the one being promoted in this video has nothing to do with it. More Perfect Union is really giving Buzzfeed and 5 Minute Crafts vibes.
Good luck Chicago, I hope you end up being able to help your people.
And venture capital firms that buy homes to rent out should pay a 9-15% tax. Take away the incentive for these wealthy firms to stop buying up this country's everything.
The power class is afraid of the one-way money train stopping.
Capitalism is not the best we can do.
We have the money and resources RIGHT NOW to provide for basic necessities (housing, food, healthcare, education, internet, utilities, etc.) if we taxed corporations and cut our near $900billion military budget in half.
Those who want more can work towards it in safety and ease bc they aren't threatened with living on the street.
And fret not for the billionaires (of which you will never be). Even paying their fair corporate taxes, they'd STILL have centuries' worth of generational wealth.
As for our political system, we have neither a democracy NOR a republic here in the good old USA. We have political theater. We have a corporate kleptocracy where CORPORATIONS are people: "people" whose lobbying and donation power give them control of our system of supposed checks and balances; "people" who don't pay taxes, who pollute the environment, and who won't pay a living wage.
We can do better, and Chicago will hopefully be a start.
preach~
@@charvisaur4184 ❤️
the poor stopped the 2 way train. we want to give the money back to you but you wont come get it!
P.S. - Consider not feeding the trolls like @SgtJoeSmith who will, no doubt, attempt to refute what I'm saying. They're either woefully ignorant (which is not a crime; they could read 2009's Capitalist Realism by Mark Fisher to alleviate that condition); willful deniers, or unpaid lackeys.
I could not agree with you more. 💚
We need to unite and ensure this gets implemented in Chicago and everywhere in America!
1 - vacancy tax that increases every year things are unoccupied, including retail and officr and empty lots. eminent domain for unclaimed lots.
2 - Ban corporate and foreign sales. Tax sales of 2nd and 3rd homes a lot.
3 - Unscrew all the suffocating zoning and redtape issues.
4 - Repeal the Fairchild act and build affordable housing.
Big corporate has both helped and destroyed America. The government absolutely needs to step in and tax those making massive profits off the real estate market. Though, because they are more concerned about their bottom line, the renters will see their monthly rent go up and the cost of living will go up and we’ll just be back at where we started from. It’s a vicious cycle.
Major corporations scooping up homes left and right and then charging insane amounts of rent are a major part of the issue. Housing costs are insane these days, renting or buying, across the entire US.
Idk I think lot of people just don’t want to get the eduction to make more money. My advice is to get the education to learn a trade or medical job. What’s so hard about that
Exactly so why isn’t the solution to address that. Why do democrats always want to raise taxes which the cost gets passed on to renters.
@@nofurtherwest3474 problem with that is you can do that, and then those jobs still don't pay shit, $50-$60k today isn't the $50-$60k it used to be in the 2000s where a house was affordable
@@nofurtherwest3474 Average cost of a trade school education is $17,600 a year. Let's say it's a 2 year school and they need to take out a loan. Interest on that loan will be high because of their low income so let's put that to 7%.
I'm going to guess they will take loan with the lowest monthly payment. Let's say $272/mo for 20 years. That's a total of $65,497 to payback the loan.
Now tell me how that will lift them out of poverty when the morning decision is to buy soap to be presentable for that minimum wage job interview or breakfast for them and or family.
@honestfriend767 because the taxes are only a half measure. If you exclude the top 1% of Americans, the average income drops from 75k a year to 53, exclude the top 20 and it drops down to 35. The reality is that they need to be taxed fairly, bc currently they profit off of price gouging the working class at every turn, and then the heaviest tax burden also falls onto the working class due to how our system operates on income taxes. It's bs, and they know it, both parties know this, the only difference is that one supports the rich, and the other fails to support the workers and poor. It's possible for change, but neither side is either willing to or capable of. It's a betrayal of every working man and woman in the entire country.
There's actually a lot of cheap housing in Chicago that is ripe for repair. The issue is safety. Think Austin (right next to affluent Oak Park) even Englewood. You can get properties there dirt cheap, but you might get shot at when you fo to fix up. The next issue is these small cities that will give you a giant hassle when trying get or close out permits. The real question but answered is how is the money going to actually be spent? 75% will probably end up in a politician's pocket or friend etc.
You'd think these investors would realize there's a connection between homelessness and their property values. You pay either way -- might as well pay the way that solves the problem.
All cities facing increased homelessness should consider doing something like Bring Chicago Home
There is nothing radical about updating a property tax policy. It's not groundbreaking. It won't end homelessness. Not in the slightest. The only thing this bill does is make homes slightly cheaper for the majority and a little more expensive for the rich. It doesn't guarantee shelter. It doesn't actually mention anything about accessibility. More Perfect Union is cooking a crock of sh*t by with this garbage. Bring Chicago Home is fine and dandy if you're looking to buy a home AND you have an above average income WITH above average savings. It's completely worthless if you're actually in need of a home.
They should definitely do it! But it's not the only solution, there needs to be more.
I work with homelessness in Indianapolis, and what I've found is that most people need mental health help, along with help finding housing. A lot of them, if you gave them easier housing, then they'd lose it due to being exploited, lack of support, and because it is a giant change for most.
The price of housing is one aspect, but there are more things that affect them.
@BeerMoneyforTokyo Yeah, there is a lack of mental health support. But I'm just saying from my experience working in mental health and homelessness what is needed.
Absolutely. It's a good start to solving a very solvable problem.
@@cencent2189 "If you give them easier housing" is not a solution, because the pressure is still on them to magically solve all of their problems quickly enough to maintain that housing. They need a place that is theirs, paid for for as long as it takes until they can pay for it themselves, not conditional.
The solution is Housing First, where people are housed, permanently, with no strings attached and with wrap-around support to help with the issues that stand in the way of people's health, well-being, and potential independence.
If you give people housing that they CANNOT lose, then they don't lose it and they have a chance to work on all the other struggles they have in their lives. Every single problem, from disabilities to drug addiction to poverty, is easier to tackle when they're not scared of being harassed by police, beaten up by strangers, having all their property stolen, or just plain being stressed by extremes of heat, cold, mosquitoes, rain, and snow.
*The idea is to not blame the individual who has ended up homeless, but to put the blame on the failures of our society that have created their situation.*
We're trained by our culture to blame the victim: homeless people must have done something wrong to get there, and they're the ones who must solve their own problems. NO, it's housing costs, loss of protections for tenants, the fact that people still can't afford medical care and can go bankrupt due to accidents or illnesses, stagnant wages, loss of any social safety net, especially for single adults. Drug addicts have been looked at the same way, but that's starting to change after it was revealed that our towns and cities were being flooded with oxycontin, people not warned of the addiction potential, doctors not told the truth about what would happen to their patients. No more blaming addicts for the behaviors that addiction caused; we need to blame the factors that created the addiction to begin with. Poor people are blamed for being poor. Uneducated people are blamed for not being able to find jobs that pay enough to live on, and blamed for not going to college when they never had any hope of going. People with brain-chemistry disorders are blamed for behaviors that they had no control over, especially when there's so little access to medical care for their particular problem, "mental illness."
When someone becomes homeless, and it's due to these things that they had no control over, we need to stop blaming them and asking them to fix those problems before they can get a hand up.
91% of people who are homeless are able to have long-term success in a Housing First model. The emotional and brain-chemistry issues most people face when homeless are alleviated by finally having a stable, safe place to live, which helps everyone; and for those with a brain-chemistry disorder that caused them to become homeless to begin with, it makes their brain-chemistry more managable because most Housing First programs come with to resources that help people get medical care so they can manage their brain-chemistry imbalance and emotional trauma.
The price of housing is putting more and more people into homelessness, and increasingly, these are people who did not have a brain-chemistry disorder such as schizophrenia to cause it. For anyone who is homeless, the solution isn't to examine their individual reasons for living unhoused--the solution is to give them housing.
When the ownership class is angry, that means the working class is close to actually getting a crumb or two for once.
Sadly, it failed.
We need this in the whole country fr.
To many people are making money off homelessness...To end homelessness...
... and that's the problem. Playing Robin Hood never truly helped anyone except Robin Hood himself. I bet Robin Hood never went hungry.
This could be a viable solution.
Agreed! I hope it’s implemented. We have to try something…
they could build 1000 units of social housing per year
@@HesterPrynne293nope not at all. An average 3 unit apartment in pilsen is 1mil. Now you living in unit 1 rent will increase from 1500 to 2500.
This video is clickbait. There is nothing radical about updating a property tax. It's not groundbreaking. It makes no mention of homelessness. It makes no mention of shelter accessibility. None. Bring Chicago Home is fine and dandy if you're looking to buy a home AND you have an above average income WITH above average savings, but it's completely worthless if you're actually in need of a home. Chicago spends $2,000,000,000 (2 billion USD) on police every year and only 1% of that on helping the homeless. It's also 50% of our education budget. Homelessness is a policy choice, but the one being promoted in this video has nothing to do with it. More Perfect Union is really giving Buzzfeed and 5 Minute Crafts vibes.
Then nobody will build homes in 5 years because all new homes will be over a million dollars.
$100 million!!! For just taxing 2-3% on 7% of sales! That’s insane to think about. So many amazing things could be done to help homelessness. And all these talking heads talking about investors and high rises? That’s more important than people living on the streets? Smh.
Does this encourage more homeless people to move to Chicago for free housing?
@@guyserious2468well if they get free housing they won’t be homeless, which means they can get jobs and sign up for benefits that will lift them out of poverty… idk what your comment was supposed to be but I’d rather see people taken care of rather than taken advantage of so that corporations that are treated like people can build more ugly high rises downtown
As much as $100M is, it will only put a dent on reducing homelessness in a city the size of Chicago. A noticeable dent, but that's all - unless there is some innovative development such as tiny house villages where the money goes much further.
It's not a smart way to tax property. It discourages older people with larger homes from downsizing, lowering housing supply. A monthly tax on land makes more sense.
@@noonecaresaboutgoogle3219 I think we need better data on how much downsizing is a crucial part of housing supply. Unless downsizers are literally the backbone of opening up housing opportunities, I doubt discouraging them is going to outweigh the pros to this plan
Love this! A bill that gives 93% of home buyers a tax CUT and still will raise a ton of money for affordable housing? Sounds good to me
Housing is a right! It will cost more for tax payers to have people unhoused because these communities use more public service while unhoused. Housing people is the humane thing to do and it will put less stress on public services.
For the $2 billion they spent to try and not get this to pass they could have just housed all the homeless.
Well, that would make too much sense…😏
Yeah that's crazy
$2 million not $2 billion
@@hopefloats7573 ah, they said billion in the video.
@@BladeoftheImmortal2005 No, they said million. 8:01
A living wage would help.
surprisingly, it'd actually make things worse: if people have more money but the supply of homes hasn't increased, that will lead to increased housing prices. unhoused people who typically make less than housed people will be even harder pressed to afford a home. (plus increasing housing prices leads to inflation.) ... anyways, i'm not trying to attack you, lol... we also need a living wage, but I keep telling everyone that housing needs to come first or it'll backfire
I was born in Chicago and am very proud! Unfortunately I live in Arizona now but I hope the rest of the country will follow Chicago's lead. Corporate and political corruption is the norm across the States and it needs to end right now. If the rich find out they can just kill the poor en masse without consequence... where will we go from there? Lobbying must be made illegal.
Bring Chicago Home is fine and dandy if you're looking to buy a home AND you have an above average income WITH above average savings. It's completely worthless if you're actually in need of a home. This video was clickbait. It will not end homelessness at all. Chicago spends $2,000,000,000 (2 billion USD) on police every year and only 1% of that on helping the homeless. It's also 50% of our education budget. Homelessness is a policy choice, but the one being promoted in this video has nothing to do with it. More Perfect Union has become the Buzzfeed version of progressive news. It's giving brainrot.
Spoken like a lobbyist.
@@crimson4066 Police are necessary as well as good judges, prosecutors and jails.
An item being bought and sold as an investment to derive a profit is specifically not a commodity. It's an asset.
How come the referendum didn't pass?!
My home city. I don’t live there anymore but still love it and love this idea.
In the same situation as I type, crashing on someone's living room. Even with a Bachelor's Degree, you'll still end up homeless in the new economy living on a dirty mattress on the floor... If you're lucky! If this doesn't pass there is something fundamentally wrong with society. Period.
I dont have a college degree and make more in construction than all of my peers... You must want to be homeless its too easy to make a fat paycheck this day and age.
skills>degree
It passed in Los Angeles and did not work out well. When commercial sales prices and volume drop, you'll see what a good plan it was. Real Estate is not as simple as they make it sound.
Shouldn’t the burden of this taxation fall on landlords and homeowners rather than homebuyers?
Yeah this. A progressive Land Value Tax would put the tax on landlords as opposed to homebuyers
@@illiiilli24601nice to see a fellow land value tax supporter
The big rich derp pocketed RE industry is not in an ‘existential crisis’ - What a gaslighter
There was a large grocery store in my town, it sat empty for almost 15 years. The owners were in no rush to find someone else to open in there because the negative helped their other lots. The same can be seen elsewhere in the county (not the wealthiest but a "decent" county), with businesses closed down for years and blocks of empty buildings. I understand things take time, but when you see business after business empty for almost a decade, they could be put to better use.
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so excited to see this happen!!! Chicago is ready for some change, I really think this will go incredibly well if the word is spread and a vote happens
This is no way to treat our poor billionaires who are struggling to make ends meet. How dare we ask them to pay a few extra cents on the dollar to help people who didn't have the good sense to be born obscenely wealthy.
It’s only radical when poor people get help, not when large corpos get massive subsidies by the government. Socialism for rich needs to change.
Holy crap, they actually lowered the taxes on anything I'd buy. Chi Ca Go, Chi Ca Go!
Let's
f*ckin
GO!
Imagine what good the nearly $2,000,000 could have done on this issue instead of fighting against this initiative.
It's funny, we never question large tax breaks for the wealthy & corporations, but the second we talk about helping the people, it's always that we can't afford it.
We can afford it. We just don't want to.
Housing is a human right. Everyone deserves a place to live. They also shouldn't have to use their entire paycheck to pay for housing.
Instead of a flat qualifier like 1m or 1.5m it should be a multiple of the median income of the area code to prevent 1m from becoming encroached upon by inflation.
Thanks for posting.
Most people's lives are being ruined by financial capitalism.
There are plenty of empty homes 🏡 that are highly inflated.
We don't have a homeless issue. We have a reasonable affordable issue.
😳
I just went to Chicago, and saw some ads for it. Hope it passes on March 19!
Imagine wanting people to stay homeless for the sake of your profits when you already have hundreds of millions of dollars. Humanity is so pathetic.
When corporations are unhappy you can be assured its the right choice
7:19 I like this lady who's like "I like the idea that we will pay less taxes; who could be against this? Plus we'll help fix this social issue."
Pretty heavily implies she would not be in favor of fixing this issue if it cost her more in taxes.
5:41 waiting for landlords to provide lower rent properties is like waiting for a weasel to return your chicken.
Housing costs have always been my biggest expense every month, whether I owned the house or rented. But, now, the rents are insane even here in FLA. At some point someone has to pay to get these people into secure housing. The Gov't can help make up the difference. But, it needs to be done - in the "richest country in the history of the planet".
"housing in America isn't being treated as housing, it's a means for people who already have money to make more money"
yep, and most Americans would fight to get those people with more money than them even more money.
Corporate developers being angered about making slightly less money, jeez
"...I'm closer to homelessness than I am owning a home right now"
Thats a terribly sad statement that is true for more families and individuals than we can fathom.
Good luck Chicago! Hope this is the start of something big
I think Detroit might have a theoretically stronger plan in motion than Chicago, targeting underdevelopment, overpricing, absentee ownership, and speculation all in one.
"How do we get to more affordable permanent housing?" I think making it legal to build more housing would be a good start!
"Big corporations are not happy about it."
That's the sign to green light the project. Go. Go. Go.
It failed.
We need something like this in Los Angeles.
All I need is a place to park my van and exist between shifts at my full-time job. Unfortunately, American society does not allow that.
Unfortunately, it failed with 53% voting no.
Well sadly 52.2% Have Voted against it...
There's nothing radical about fixing homelessness.
Nah, rich people who pay less taxes than the rest of us could end homelessness, but they gotta have that 3rd home and 2 yacht this quarter, not next quarter.