$78 million workforce, affordable housing units moving forward in Lake Worth Beach
"Currently, the 13,000-square-foot lot is just dirt and fencing on 2nd Ave. North in Lake Worth Beach — but by the end of 2028, it’ll be nearly 200 workforce and affordable apartments for eligible teachers, nurses and hospitality workers.The majority of the 164 planned units will be county-assisted workforce housing, while the remaining 31 units will be income-restricted.
In Palm Beach County, workforce housing is meant for households earning 60%-110% of the Area Median Income (AMI), which means a family of four earning roughly between $55,000 and $100,000 a year. Affordable housing is typically for lower-income families.
Aggregate market data shows average rent in Lake Worth Beach is over $2,400 a month. [WLRN]
Lake Worth Beach, through the last decade, has intentionally encouraged poor immigrants/illegals to the city and consequently that's who lives here and who desperately need affordable housing. Only 31 units will be income restricted...nothing is going to change.
Race & Ethnic Diversity
Hispanic or Latino (Of Any Race)--48.0%
White--29.7%
Black or African American--18.3%
Other Race / Two or More Races--3.2%
Asian--0.8%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islanders--0.0%
American Indian and Alaska Native--0.0%
Not sure what decent God fearing human would want to live in this ghetto of blight and crime?
ReplyDeleteI never understood that expression, God-Fearing. Are you afraid of God? I'm not! That sounds like an expression from some Jim Jones kind of religion.
ReplyDelete"Work force Housing" Just another way for developers to wiggle their way into way more units than should be allowed. Typical Palm beach County fuking overbuilt , urban ghetto in the making bull$hit! If all of the illegals in Lake Worth had not been allowed to sub-let 10 to a room by greedy land lords and a willing city commission ,we wouldn't have these ridiculous 2,600 rents.
ReplyDelete