3718 Results
1

Housing unaffordability leads to cascading effects for renters

September 5, 2023

Los Angeles residents who pay more than 30% of their income toward rent are forced to make trade-offs in other areas of their lives that can last for years and contribute to many social ills, a University of Cincinnati professor and his colleagues found.

2

Report: Rent has increased 175% faster than household income over past 20 years

March 25, 2021

Mike Eriksen, PhD, West Shell Associate Professor of Real Estate from the Carl H. Lindner College of Business, recently published a report entitled, “The Location of Affordable and Subsidized Rental Housing Across and Within the Largest Cities in the United States” with the Mortgage Bankers Association’s Research Institute for Housing America.

3

33rd annual UC Real Estate Center Dinner celebrates vibrant Cincinnati real estate community

June 27, 2024

Nearly 600 real estate professionals, students, alumni and supporters packed Cincinnati Music Hall on June 12 for the University of Cincinnati Real Estate Center’s 33rd annual Real Estate Dinner. Attendees showed out to celebrate Lindner’s real estate students and the night’s top honoree Gregg Fusaro, partner, CIG Communities, recipient of the Distinguished Service Award.

8

Lindner real estate professor weighs in on affordable housing

August 8, 2023

A recent opinion piece in the Los Angeles Times examined differing viewpoints and data around affordable housing in the publication’s namesake city. The author tapped Gary Painter, PhD, professor of real estate, and an expert and longtime researcher in social innovation, housing, urban economics and education policy, to offer insight.

10

Residents concerned about high concentration of low-income housing

May 16, 2024

Efforts to build more affordable housing in Cincinnati have created concerns for residents as low-income housing has been concentrated in some of the city’s poorest neighborhoods, WCPO reported. Gary Painter, PhD, the academic director of the University of Cincinnati’s Carl H. Lindner College of Business real estate program and a professor of real estate, said a complaint against the city could lead to positive outcomes.