Tenant cap could tap down rents

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15 Comments

  1. Terri Buckner

     /  January 6, 2014

    Slave mentality? A really unfortunate attempt at humor if that’s what it is.

  2. Don Evans

     /  January 6, 2014

    Terry

    French writer Louis-Ferdinand Celine once opined, “Fifteen percent of the galley slaves were volunteers.” So there is a mindset that willingly enters into such a state of dependency, be it as rowers or as apprentice lawyers.

    Of course, given the column topic, it might be better to debate perceptions of landlord/town occupancy rules and student entitlements, not diversionary semantics.

  3. Terri Buckner

     /  January 6, 2014

    Don,

    Students come here to learn; we should hope they learn in a civil society. Starting off a column by name calling a young person totally overshadows any content in the column.

  4. anonymous

     /  January 6, 2014

    >>> Bunkbeds… problem solved

  5. Nancy

     /  January 6, 2014

    Terri — What was most disconcerting to me when I read the student’s essay was her willingness to acquiesce to landlords who flout laws to take advantage of students solely to feed the landlords’ greed. I grew up in a different era, when young women fought to change unfair practices, and it troubles me deeply to see the emergence of a mindset that would have this young woman pleading for something that ultimately will hurt her.

    My overall point is to bring to light the town fighting for the best interests of the students by enforcing consequences for landlords who engage in these illegal schemes that hurt students.

  6. Terri Buckner

     /  January 6, 2014

    I haven’t been able to find the essay you say this student wrote but I did find a student by that name who is a sophomore–someone who is 19 years old? Probably not very experienced with economics or politics, certainly not deserving of being labelled as having a “slave mentality.” I suspect, Nancy, that if someone older and more experienced disagreed with something one of your children wrote and did so by applying such an appalling descriptor to your offspring that you would be up in arms and have some interesting words to write about that adult. You could have made your point in a way that was instructive and not so offensive. In a couple of days, the Google search engines will have linked her name with “slave mentality” forever.

  7. Fred Black

     /  January 6, 2014

    Didn’t take long to get this with a “slave mentality” search.

    chapelhillwatch.com
    chapelhillwatch.com/
    … in a big-city law firm: a willing slave mentality that all but welcomes abuse. ….

  8. Don Evans

     /  January 7, 2014

    Fred

    And your point is . . .

  9. Deborah Fulghieri

     /  January 7, 2014

    “The Princeton Review estimates that more than half – 58 percent – of UNC students live off campus.

    The 1996 fire codes require sprinklers only for apartments and Greek houses, leaving some students with possible safety concerns.

    “The biggest risk right now is boarding houses and individual rental properties,” said Chief Jones, who still keeps the names of the five 1996 fire victims attached to his desk as a remembrance.

    Rental properties must have smoke detectors, Jones said, but the fire department has no authority to inspect them. He said students need to check that smoke-detector batteries are charged and window exits are not painted or screwed shut.”

    From a 2007 article about a 1996 fire that killed 6 students the day before graduation. We have to remember that the rules were put in place for a reason, in an effort to learn from a prior tragedy that today’s students (or landlords) may have forgotten or never heard about.

  10. Anita

     /  January 7, 2014

    I think it’s important to hear what students think and what they have to say. This young woman is legally allowed to vote in this town and her opinion should be heard. I disagree with her, but then I disagree with other opinion pieces written by people much older and presumably wiser. Instead of castigating her, maybe we should all chip in and take her to lunch and try to learn more about her experience.

  11. many

     /  January 7, 2014

    Is there a link to Ms. Wooten’s essay somewhere? I would like to read it objectively and judge for myself.

    Note to Nancy: I think if the term “Helsinki” or “Stockholm syndrome”, or a reference to the “Stanford Prisoner Experiment” had been used instead of “slave mentality” the hyperbolic ultra sensitives on this list would not be so upset, but I think I understood your intended meaning without reading too much into it.

    I think you have made a much sadder comment that education has become antithetical to free thought and creative solutions, and that a “mindset to succeed” is now synonymous with mind control and settling for the status quo.

  12. JWJ

     /  January 7, 2014

    “Some Town Council members – Donna Bell and George Cianciolo, among them – believe that building more apartment complexes will lower rents. But I challenge you to find a desirable city where that philosophy works.”

    “Shrink that pool, and rents will decrease as well.”

    So you are saying that increasing supply does NOT work, but decreasing demand DOES work?
    I can’t imagine that if say a net 3000 units were added that the rental price would drop relative to other prices.

  13. Linda

     /  January 7, 2014

    Just to clarify – almost 60 percent of UNC undergrads live either in campus res halls, Greek housing (which is privately owned) or in Granville Towers. First years are required to live on campus and most sophomores do also.

  14. Concerned

     /  November 8, 2014

    Can you provide the specific ordinance number you are referring to in your article. I have heard of this tenant cap before and now have a child and friends considering signing a lease for next year that may ultimately be illegal. 6 in a house. Has the ordinance changed since Jan 2014? Thanks.