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My only point in this is that, to the extent it exists, the housing affordability problem in Chicagoland is not primarily driven by availability of land. If it was we’d just do what we did in the past and make more.

It’s driven far more by history and public policy and the ugly confluence of those 2 things.



I'm knee-jerk about this because "the availability of land" is really the kernel of the housing affordability problem in Oak Park.




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