Two main reasons contribute to why I would love to become a Housing Ambassador. To help get many prospective and current students excited and involved in campus housing is the first reason. So many people shoot down on campus housing because of the price; however, people do not realize housing is more than just a room you pay for. You live here, study here, and have fun here. There are many events, free stuff, and free food that residence halls and RSA provide for students. I want to be able to show students that off-campus students do not have the same experiences as on-campus students. The second reason I would like to become a Housing Ambassador is for the experience. Ultimately, I would like to become a dean or chancellor of a college in my golden years. Being an Housing Ambassador would provide me with life-long experiences that I could take into my future careers as a business leader, politician, and dean/ chancellor.
I possess many unique skills that would make me a great Housing Ambassador, but will only talk about two. One of those skills is being social. I am a very social person and I love being around people. Being social would benefit me as a Housing Ambassador because a quiet tour would be a little awkward for the tourist. People enjoy a guide who is talking to
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The socials provide great opportunities to meet a lot of people. I know at the socials in Lynch Hall, I am able to meet new people every time. I came to UNC Charlotte alone and did not know anyone. During the first week of school, Lynch Hall had an ice-cream social for the building. At the social, I was able to meet a lot of people. I laughed, ate, and had so much fun. Most of the friends I have now live down the hall from me. I would have never meet those friends without the ice-cream social Lynch Hall had. Socials prove that a student just does not have to sleep here, but have fun here
New Hope Housing likely had strengths related to their employee development program, their effectiveness in housing people in need, and their niche for ensuring individuals who would typically be rejected housing. Some of their weaknesses likely related to their secured funding and current dependence on government funding. Some of their opportunities relate to finding solutions for permanent housing, as this is currently a struggle for the people they serve. Lastly, their threats likely also have to do with their government funding. As budgets change, money is moved around and can impact this organization for the better or for the worse.
Over the last couple of decades, Buffalo has found itself in a grave housing crisis. The urban population is shrinking and the population in poverty is growing, leaving houses abandoned and left to fall apart. Although many cities in the Rust Belt are facing similar problems, about 15.7% of Buffalo housing was left vacant as of 2010, which places Buffalo as ninth in the nation for vacancy rate. As the masses abandon their homes, run down neighborhoods see an increase in crime and drug use, and a rapid decrease in property value (Armstrong et al. 1-2). Many see this deterioration, however, as an opportunity to renovate impoverished neighborhoods and make them more attractive to the upper and middle class. This process, known as gentrification, should increase the overall well being of residents by making neighborhoods safer,
On 03/22/2016 Ms. Donna Williams stopped by the office to meet with HS De La Torre to discuss a Housing Plan in order to find any opportunities that family may be eligible to transition into permanent housing. The following was discussed during meeting:
Tenure describes the legal status of and the rights associated with different forms of housing ownership and occupancy (Mullins & Murie, 2006). There are three categories of housing tenure, which are home-ownership, private rent and social rent. Home-ownership is the households that live in a home they owned. The home-ownership tenure includes home that is owned outright, where the owner has paid off their mortgage and own their home without qualification, and bought with a mortgage, where mortgagors have taken out mortgage to help purchase their home that repaid over a period of 20 years or more and are still in the process of repaying the debt. The lender will require the evidence of a household income sufficient to repay the loan, while
Affordable housing can get very complex, as Los Angeles offers several types of assistance for those in need. There is Affordable Housing which is provided for those who are working and are low-income., Senior citizen Housing, Rapid Re-housing, which provides temporary assistance such as hotel vouchers and/or payment of security deposit, and finally, Section 8 which provides affordable housing designated for people that receive public assistance. There are many prerequisites to complete before allowed to sign up and be considered a potential qualified participant. The following prerequisites are part of the process leading up to signing up for Section 8; apply at the Department of Public Social Services (DSPPS) office, complete the Temporary
Residential electricians are trained professionals dealing with any type of electrical work that a home has. The broad nature of the amount of electrical work inside a modern home is also why mostly all electricians are licensed and were properly trained at the trade. The work typically goes in phases, and starts with the simple rough wiring of the entire house, and will eventually end as a finished product with lights, outlets, and everything else you see that is powered.
The Fair Housing Act also popularly known as the 1968 Civil Rights Act was signed into law in April 1968 by then President B. Lyndon (History.com Staff). The piece detailed that it “prohibited discrimination concerning the sale, rental and financing of housing based on race, religion, national origin and sex” (History.com Staff). The Fair Housing act also was meant to be an expansion to the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as it extended its rules and laws since there were no federal enforcement provision in the 1964 act. The act was a direct response to the structural inequality going on during the time and it is noted as the last significant lawmaking accomplishment of the civil rights era (History.com Staff).
With currently about 87% of properties qualifying for downpayment assistance and historically low interest rates coming from the Federal Reserve, one has to wonder just how long the present housing recovery can last. Credit restrictions at the present are very tight and job growth is anemic at best. This combined with the fact that the National Association of Realtors' pending sales index fell in June by 1.8% certainly leads one to believe that a slowdown in the housing market is a good possibility.
This research paper intends to navigate its focus on a current social issue over the shortage of affordable housing in the United States. The affordable housing becomes a concern for the society as there is a group of influential people raises their concern over the housing market to the public. In an effort to generate public attention, Laura Kusisto who is a US housing and economic reporter claims that Americans are now on the edge of next housing crisis in her column on The Wall Street Journal (2018). Her claim is supported by the statistic generated by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City on the rate of home construction per household as it was reaching a historical low in the past
One of the most important concepts is related to the real estate value of the property. While buying a house is usually considered as an investment, as the value of the building is expected to increase with time, social housing is merely seen as an expense and with the passing of time its value decreases. Being housing subsidy the most significant monetary help poor people can get from the state over their lifetime it would be desirable for it to allow them, once become the owners of the property, to be able to considerate as a capital able to gain value over time. If social housing is seen as an investment it can be used as a tool to overcome poverty and promote social mobility. Nevertheless, housing that is located in very remote locations
Affordable housing in the United States describes sheltering units with well-adjusted housing costs for those living on an average, median income. The phrase usually implies to applied rental or purchaser housing within the financial means of lower-income ranges specific to the demographics of any given area. However, affordable housing does not include those living in social housing owned by government and non-profit organizations. More specifically, the targeted range for housing affordability sets below 30 percent of a household's annual income, including all applicable taxes, utility costs and home owners insurance rates. If the mean income per household breaches the 30 percent mark, then the agreed status becomes labeled as
You must have gone through lots of articles related to relocation before you finally decided to take the help of the shifting companies. If you have researched about the movers and packers, then it is well and good, otherwise, you may encounter some problems. This is because there are some of the prominent items, which are not allowed to be carried.
Medicaid policy has taken imperative action in acknowledging housing as a health determinant by permitting reimbursement for housing related services. Housing affects all aspects of a person’s development, impacting ability to achieve optimum health status in a myriad of ways.1 Stable housing provides a safe place to recuperate from surgery or illness, a place to properly store medication, and best allows a person to engage in and receive consistent care from a healthcare system that is not structured to deliver care to persons with unstable housing.2, 3 Housing is an important factor in health, with persons of lower socioeconomic status at higher risk of living in unsafe and toxic conditions, or in the case of the very poor, the homeless,
This causes even more issues because many of these displaced low-income inhabitants lost easy access to their inner city jobs and are forced into poverty. “It was capital that moved in, but not necessarily higher-income families,” said Davis in an interview with the Harvard Political Review. Housing stock has become less available, both low-income and middle-income residents have been either put at risk or have experienced displacement in neighborhoods. Middle-income residents are newly vulnerable in longtime gentrified neighborhoods in which low-income residents have already been displaced, such as the South End.
It is hard to ignore the fact that those who do not pay attention to recent events in history are doomed to repeat. We have been guilty of this in many situations, including housing issues. In the past, more and more immigrants began trailing into the United States as they sought better opportunities in life, but the issue resulted in too many people coming in. I am all for new people coming to the United States to receive the same opportunities natural born citizens were born with, but it is difficult when so many people enter that finding a proper home was close to impossible. Further back when having many different European nationalities entering the United States, they were forced to live in slums due to Americans perceiving them as “unwelcome guests”. In the past, racial tensions were much higher than they were now. Even those of Irish and Italian descent were placed into positions of helplessness as it was hard to find work and provide for their families because of where they come from. Small apartment buildings were overcrowded and some people remained homeless because finding a simple box