Mobile homes are becoming more expensive as tenants struggle to pay rent : NPR
Housing 📍
NPR
Five years ago, Donald Strayer thought he'd bought a dream home for his extended family. It was on a pretty spot in Ohio's Appalachian mountain foothills, with room for him and his wife, his daughter's family, plus their horses and goats. And he could actually afford it.
Strayer had been turned down for a bank loan because of bad credit — he says it's because of hospital bills years ago. The 58-year-old former forklift driver has a chronic lung disease and lives off disability. Instead of a regular mortgage, he signed what's known as a land contract directly with the seller.
The price was $39,900. For a down payment he sold his childhood home, which he inherited when his dad died, "the only thing I had in the whole world."
For years he made monthly payments of $350 on his new home. And then "one day the sheriff just showed up," he says. "It was foreclosed and they wanted to take my property."
Shots – Health News : NPR
Tucked inside a residential neighborhood in Madison, Wis., and surrounded by a wooden fence and greenery, are nine little houses. With multicolored siding and roofs, they look like people-sized birdhouses. And they fit right in.
So does Gene Cox, 48. He hasn't been homeless in more than seven years. That's the point of this little development.
"This is the longest time I've stayed in one place," said Cox, nursing coffee and a cigarette outside his tiny home after working second shift as a benefits administrator. "I'm very nomadic. I've moved around Wisconsin a lot over the last 22 years."
There are 21,986 log homes in NY State.
There are 21,986 log homes in NY State.
| County | Number of Log Homes |
| Albany | 314 |
| Allegany | 350 |
| Broome | 317 |
| Cattaraugus | 307 |
| Cayuga | 275 |
| Chautauqua | 335 |
| Chemung | 167 |
| Chenango | 437 |
| Clinton | 68 |
| Columbia | 347 |
| Cortland | 192 |
| Delaware | 977 |
| Dutchess | 583 |
| Erie | 409 |
| Essex | 925 |
| Franklin | 485 |
| Fulton | 392 |
| Genesee | 135 |
| Greene | 777 |
| Hamilton | 485 |
| Herkimer | 498 |
| Jefferson | 415 |
| Lewis | 389 |
| Livingston | 286 |
| Madison | 347 |
| Monroe | 217 |
| Montgomery | 126 |
| Niagara | 154 |
| Oneida | 728 |
| Onondaga | 376 |
| Ontario | 495 |
| Orange | 542 |
| Orleans | 134 |
| Oswego | 547 |
| Otsego | 416 |
| Putnam | 229 |
| Rensselaer | 440 |
| Rockland | 17 |
| Saratoga | 664 |
| Schenectady | 115 |
| Schoharie | 478 |
| Schuyler | 180 |
| Seneca | 111 |
| Steuben | 513 |
| St. Lawrence | 711 |
| Suffolk | 34 |
| Sullivan | 617 |
| Tioga | 309 |
| Tompkins | 274 |
| Ulster | 781 |
| Warren | 1288 |
| Washington | 501 |
| Wayne | 279 |
| Westchester | 3 |
| Wyoming | 265 |
| Yates | 242 |
Planet Money : NPR
I can understand the lore of protectionism, but it's generally a bad idea -- if a country is able to do something cheaper, then it should do it. It seems silly to be protecting obsolete industries, forcing everybody to pay more.