Jamboree Breaks Ground on its First New Construction Development in South San Diego County prweb.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from prweb.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
City of Monmouth authorizes sale of property for housing development; developer would build 44 units of affordable housing
By Jane Carlson
For the Review Atlas
MONMOUTH The city has authorized the sale of seven acres of city-owned property to a developer who intends to build 44 units of affordable housing.
An ordinance authorizing the sale of the property for $1 to Iceberg Development of LeClaire, Iowa, for the Monmouth Townhomes project was approved Monday by the City Council.
“This ordinance would allow us to proceed with the sale of the property,” said City Administrator Lew Steinbrecher.
A recent housing study showed rental units are in short supply in Monmouth.
The multi-million dollar Trinity development, which is planned for county property on Mullan Road and West Broadway, is expected to break ground this spring.
Press release content from Globe Newswire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation.
America First Multifamily Investors, L.P. Announces Fourth Quarter 2020 Financial Results
America First Multifamily Investors, L.P.February 25, 2021 GMT
OMAHA, Feb. 25, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) On February 25, 2021, America First Multifamily Investors, L.P. (NASDAQ: ATAX) (the “Partnership” or “ATAX”) announced financial results for the three months and year ended December 31, 2020.
Financial Highlights
Total revenues of $13.5 million
Net income, basic and diluted, of $0.00 per Beneficial Unit Certificate (“BUC”)
Cash Available for Distribution of $0.06 per BUC
Total assets of $1.2 billion Total Mortgage Revenue Bond (“MRB”) investments of $794.4 million
The board of the Berkeley School District wants to build housing for teachers and staff on the parking lot of the Berkeley Adult School at 1701 San Pablo Ave. Currently, the lot is being used by Curative, which runs a COVID-19 test facility there. Photo: Pete Rosos
Cornelius Smith pulls into the parking lot at Oxford Elementary at 8 a.m. He leans the driver’s seat back to get some shut-eye, two hours before his shift starts.
By day, Smith works as a school safety officer at the high school. By night, he is an armed officer at the Federal Reserve in San Francisco. He sleeps when he can, crashing for a few hours in the evening at his cousin’s place in Emeryville or at his parent’s in Hercules, and in his car in the mornings. The drive home to Antioch takes up to an hour and a half, depending on traffic, and he makes it back only on the weekends.