
Hernz Laguerre Jr.
Articles
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Oct 21, 2024 |
wvxu.org | Ann Thompson |Hernz Laguerre Jr. |Mark Lammers
We hear a lot about how difficult it is in Greater Cincinnati for individuals and families to find the housing they need at a price they can afford. A team of public media journalists has spent months digging deep into the problem — and identifying solutions. The regional community affairs program Brick By Brick: Solutions for a Thriving Community, brings in-depth interviews with neighbors and leaders about those solutions.
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Jun 10, 2024 |
thinktv.org | Hernz Laguerre Jr.
June 10, 2024All over the country, there are cities that have mandatory parking minimums. These minimums are written in the zoning laws of these cities and have shaped the land use of our country. There is a growing movement to reconsider or eliminate parking minimums to increase density, better utilize public transportation, create more housing, and more. Cities like Cincinnati are creating proposals to reformat the zoning laws.
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May 22, 2024 |
thinktv.org | Hernz Laguerre Jr.
May 22, 2024Alice Wood is a single mother of four who works at Procter and Gamble in line production. During her free time, she loves taking her children to the park to feed the ducks. “Trying to keep some type of routine so that there is some type of normal, cause our housing hasn’t been normal.” said Wood. Wood was facing an extensive list of maintenance issues at her duplex that she was renting for herself and her four children.
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Apr 24, 2024 |
thinktv.org | Hernz Laguerre Jr.
Zoning laws across the country have been used to divide communities along racial lines, incomes, and housing opportunity. The invisible barriers that have divided cities across the country are being readjusted, restructured, and dismantled to open opportunities for more housing and address other needs of communities. Many cities, including Cincinnati and Dayton, are considering and incrementally working on, respectfully, reforms to their own zoning laws.
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Apr 10, 2024 |
thinktv.org | Hernz Laguerre Jr.
The First Affordable Housing Project in Three Decades provides opportunities. Downtowns are commonly the most expensive parts of any city across America. Which makes what happened in the heart of the Central Business District in downtown Cincinnati more remarkable. Nonprofit organization, Over-the-Rhine Community Housing, joined forces with a Property management company, Urban Sites, to turn abandoned office buildings into affordable housing.
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