Watching shows about the homes of the rich and famous, or browsing luxe listings outside our budgets has been a modern obsession for some time. So how does an obsession with housing excess reflect our circumstances, and is a backlash on the horizon?
Property managers are often the only contact point renters have for their landlords, and agents must act in the best interests of their client. As the rental crisis continues, we take a look at who's pulling the strings.
people who are in a mental crisis. many agencies have opted to have mental health professionals that actually are on scene, with officers to help mitigate or at least deescalate situations when we re dealing with people in crisis. because it is a daily occurrence, hundreds and thousands of times a day within this country, and we have to invest more in our mental health facilities and more in options for people who are struggling and in mental crisis. yes, there are more and more communities that are looking for ways to deescalate situations, having said that, how much car, carmen, has training changed, even if small departments because of how common mass shootings are? it changed significantly. it began back in columbine, the advice everyone must move in and move quickly, and isolated threat. certainly now, agencies large and small, officers are equipped
International students say they are being blamed for the rental crisis, but they're also facing housing stress and exploitation. Their horror stories are being shared back home and other students are now ditching plans to come to Australia.
The chief executive of the Real Estate Institute of Australia says a solution to the rental crisis is to make better use of existing houses and to build more.