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Study Claims Charles City a Cheapest Iowa City to Live In

This just in. I m not an economist. The fact that my wife has to allocate an allowance for me should tell you something. However, I have found a study from people much smarter than me that claims Charles City is one of the cheapest Iowa cities you can live in. Get our free mobile app When you see any internet thing claiming something is better or worse or cheaper or whatever, make sure you find out what data they used to come to that conclusion. Here s what Homesnacks said they did to come to the conclusion that Charles City is more affordable than most:

His final wish //drop: In quest for a more diverse Cambridge, retired architect to bequeath his multifamily home to nonprofit for affordable housing

His final wish //drop: In quest for a more diverse Cambridge, retired architect to bequeath his multifamily home to nonprofit for affordable housing In a quest for a more diverse Cambridge, homeowner to bequeath his multifamily home to nonprofit for affordable housing. He hopes others will follow. By Jon Gorey Globe Correspondent,Updated April 14, 2021, 11:03 a.m. Email to a Friend CAMBRIDGE, MA - 4/07/2021:FOR ADDRESS COVER STORY.. Paul E. Fallon waters his sidewalk garden, a homeowner hopes to bring more diversity and affordable housing to Cambridge by bequeathing his multifamily home to a nonprofit instead of his children. He s hoping that others will follow suit. (David L Ryan/Globe Staff ) SECTION:ADDRESSDavid L. Ryan/Globe Staff

His final wish: Donating home to create more diverse Cambridge

Jon Gorey - Globe Correspondent April 14, 2021 10:47 am When Paul E. Fallon purchased a Victorian four-family in Cambridge nearly 30 years ago, he wasn’t angling to become a minor real estate tycoon. But he wanted to raise his children in the city, and a single-family home was, even then, more than he could afford. “I bought it when a four-family house in Cambridge was a pariah because it was under rent control,’’ Fallon said. “There was no crystal ball in 1992 that told me this house was going to make me rich.’’ But it did. Fallon lived in one unit and rented out the others, first under rent control, then at fair market rents. Now a single man in his mid-60s, the writer and retired architect owns his property outright, like many retirees, but in just one generation, his home in what had long been a middle-class neighborhood of plumbers and electricians has become a multimillion-dollar asset.

We re looking for a place at the table : People with disabilities, chronic conditions feel forgotten by NC COVID vaccine plan

DURHAM, N.C. (WTVD) Millions of North Carolinians feel left behind in the state s new COVID-19 vaccine priority list. It s just awful to be in this kind of position where you have to honestly argue your worthiness to be in a higher priority. That s an awful way to put it but I m not sure how else to put it exactly, explained Jackie Holcombe. Holcombe s daughter. Lindsay, has Down syndrome which places her at a higher-risk for death from COVID-19. Lindsay is one of the estimated 3.8 million North Carolinans under 65 years old that have at least one chronic condition. When North Carolina first released its vaccination plan people with chronic conditions fell in phase 2. Now, state leaders have made changes that cause Lindsay and others with chronic conditions to wait until group 4, instead prioritizing people 65 years and older and frontline essential workers.

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