Jim DeVito wrote:I do not believe section 8 is a threat to Lakewood. While Mega Churches are IMO a threat to religion, I am still up in the air as to weather or not they are a threat to Lakewood.
I still think ONE of the biggest threats to Lakewood is Absentee Landlords who care less about the city. We need to drive them out. Sorry if that sounds to militant for some but that is the way i see it.
Jim
You are correct though we should always think "some" absentee landlords. I know some that are good people.
Meanwhile Mega-Churches tend to attack parishioners from around the region. As they drive to the suburbs, people look at homes for sale, join local groups and before anyone realizes their lives have leaked out of Lakewood, and they move.
My point was not to point fingers, but to underline how many different things are working against Lakewood right now. It is not section 8, it is not some landlords, it is a vast combination working against Lakewood.
The question is: Are Lakewoodites up to the tasks at hand?
When government, media, schools, religion, social structure, peer pressure, developers and more are working together it becomes a very tough proposition to withstand.
At one time, I thought we were.
FWIW
Don
Foreclosures are merely the outward signs of the virus.
But as you brought it up.
Why are politicians so quick to foreclose? Which is more glamorous? Saving a home, or announcing a new development? Who gives more? Developers, or the person struggling to make ends meet?
Again the question is...
Lakewood, worth saving, or let it go to hell and catch it 30 years later on the rebound?
FWIW
.
.