The New Wild, Wild West

The New Wild, Wild West

The lawless and destitute, pushed out of their natural habitat.

Originally shared by Damn interesting
http://www.5280.com/2018/01/danger-in-the-forest/

Comments

  1. I've a very good friend who lives in the Rocky Mountain National Forest, and has for many years. He caretakes an area on behalf of the Forest Service in the Magnolia area (between Nederland and Boulder) and regularly brings down bags of trash left by others.

    Boulder County has increased the problem by allowing the gentrification of downtown Boulder, instead of increasing the number of Affordable Housing units in Downtown.

    I left Boulder myself, because of the gentrification and the way it impacted housing; I made my living downtown, but could not find housing downtown, or, indeed (towards the end of my 15 years there) in Boulder at all - the "Affordable Housing" was in Gunbarrel (which really ISN'T part of Boulder, unless you drive), Longmont, and Lafayette.

    Homelessness is not going to "go away" simply through the wishes of the slightly-well-to-do. Boulder's original approach of integrative housing was effective and useful. Boulder's caving to the demands of developers and allowing the gentrification is not.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Right. Nobody wants to talk about who directly and immediately profits from home prices doubling in five years... and what the distributed cost to the community is...

    ReplyDelete
  3. 15 million homeless people in America.

    And upwards of 35 million empty luxury homes, with more being built. What?!?

    ReplyDelete

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