Across the country, land-use officials are grappling with chronic housing shortages the result of longstanding legal and policy failures, including archaic zoning rules and ongoing labor and supply shortages. From Seattle to Key West, to Calabasas, there simply is not enough housing for the American people. Among the many potential solutions pro-housing advocates have proposed are so-called “build-to-rent” (BTR) developments indistinguishable from traditional single-family tracts, except that their occupants are tenants instead of owners. That’s it.
Bonterra Resources Inc. (CVE:BTR – Get Free Report) was down 15.2% during trading on Wednesday . The company traded as low as C$0.19 and last traded at C$0.20. Approximately 1,072,797 shares were traded during mid-day trading, an increase of 1,449% from the average daily volume of 69,253 shares. The stock had previously closed at C$0.23. […]
From elephant-proof trenches to railway barricades and from solar power tentacle fences to steel wire ropes, while the forest department has deployed many options to contain the jumbos and reduce human-elephant conflict cases, experts say not much has changed on-ground.
BTR development is starting to fill in between metropolitan areas, typically along one or more highways that connect them. Examples here are between Austin and San Antonio and between Tampa and Orlando.