Orange County, FL – (FNN NEWS) – Several groups representing Puerto Ricans attended the Orange County Board of County Commissioners (BCC) meeting Tuesday morning spoke on Affordable Housing Funding.
“I know all too well the struggles families face in Orange County when it comes to finding affordable housing,” Orange County District 5 Commissioner Emily Bonilla stated in a release. “Elderly constituents tell me they need to move because their landlord is increasing their rent and they can’t afford it,” Commissioner Bonilla added.
“They have difficulty finding an affordable and ADA accessible apartment and still have money left over for food. I also have constituents living in trailer parks because it is cheaper and who are also priced out because their landlords are also raising fees. The problem has existed even before the recent Puerto Rican diaspora and has only been exacerbated.”
As a response to the difficulties the Commissioner’s constituents are facing to find affordable housing, since entering office on December 2017, she has been meeting with those in the building industry to see what can be done to encourage more affordable housing development. She has also met with investors who are looking to renovate rundown hotels into economy affordable rental apartment units to bring faster solutions.
More recently on February 7, 2018, she participated in a press conference with other Florida County Commissioners to address funding of the Sadowski Housing Coalition. She also met individually with State Legislators to discuss other solutions to the Affordable Housing crisis.
“The Affordable Housing crisis is an issue that has been creeping up slowly. However, with the increase in development of expensive single-family homes and little movement in wage increases, many of us saw it coming. We need to be proactive and innovative if we are going to find solutions that address the housing needs and the causes that put us in this predicament,” says Commissioner Emily Bonilla.
Orange County Commissioner Emily Bonilla was elected in November 2017 to represent District 5 on the platform of smart growth and economic development, protecting the environment and listening to the people.