Bryan

Bryan

IMO, Portland realtors should be subject to truth in advertising laws.

[Here’s a home](https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/3634-SW-Logan-St-Portland-OR-97219/53939075_zpid/?utm_campaign=iosappmessage&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=txtshare) listed as being 2,246 square feet when the Multnomah County Assessor [lists it as just 1620 square feet](https://www.portlandmaps.com/detail/property/3634-SW-LOGAN-ST/R251088_did/).

Far from an isolated occurrence, too. Nearly all of them are like this.

Real estate prices have been going down a little, but affordability is still a major issue. For example, a 984 sq. ft. house with 3 bedrooms and 2 baths in my area just sold for $400k.

To put this price into perspective at current interest rates, a buyer would need an annual household income of about $120,000 to qualify with 5% down.

The median income for a family of 4 in the Portland region is $114,400. Median income for all households was $81,149 in 2021, according to the Oregon Employment Department.

You would have to be in about the top 85th percentile of households in terms of income to afford this home in today’s market. The payment would be about $3,100 per month on a standard 30-year mortgage.

Having been in a software developer heavy social media world for the last year (Mastodon et. al), I’ve come across the word “opinionated” often to describe certain FOSS or site templates.

I understand it doesn’t exactly have the same meaning in that context, but it got me thinking that being opinionated in my field (urban planning) is equivalent to activism and is heavily discouraged. It can ruin people’s careers.

This is probably the most difficult part of the job for me. When your livelihood and family rely on you for support, it’s very difficult to risk it all just to share opinions, particularly unpopular ones.

When I was younger, I thought conformity was stupid. As an adult, I see it as necessary for survival. And my thoughts on freedom have changed as a result. I’m now thinking that people that make their own lunch so to speak, the business owners and self-sufficient, the wealthy, are the only ones who can truly share their open and honest opinions without major repercussions.

1 min read