-
Many California cities require homebuilders to create affordable housing or pay fees to support construction of those units. A new lawsuit contends those fees are unconstitutional.
-
What happens when you take high interest rates, unpredictable tariffs, a shortage of homes, a 50-year-old property tax law and mix them together? A housing market stuck in molasses.
-
Factors that led to Redding, CA. and Medford, OR. hitting top 100 places to live.
-
Rogue Valley Street Dogs works with pet owners living homeless, to provide some care and food and spay/neuter for the pets who are their companions.
-
AllCare Health, which provides Oregon Health Plan (Medicaid) services in Jackson and Josephine Counties, puts money into housing in its service area. And it recently granted $177,500 to the Ashland School District, to help the district build and renovate housing for education workers.
-
This past weekend, community members celebrated the official groundbreaking of the first cooperatively owned mobile home park formed in the Rogue Valley. This fall, families will be returning after the 2020 Almeda Fire destroyed most of the park.
-
The site will be run by the nonprofit Mobile Integrative Navigation Team, or MINT.
-
Richard Rothstein's 2017 book The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America.
-
Vicki Sokolik helps homeless teens and wrote about it - If You See Them: Young, Unhoused, and Alone in America.
-
The governor said she wanted more information on specific projects, including two in the Rogue Valley, that are part of the housing package approved by the Legislature earlier this year.
-
A U.S. District Court judge recently sided with the City of Medford in a lawsuit over its public camping regulations.
-
Tenants in many new privately owned, low-income units will be protected from double-digit increases. So will some in existing units, after a state committee on affordable housing imposed a rent cap.
-
Umpqua Community College purchased three commercial buildings in downtown Roseburg a year ago to develop housing for students.
-
Some of California’s top lawmakers want to clear up, but also rein in, the state’s most controversial housing statute