[quote=The-Shoveler][quote=poorgradstudent]When did this board become Pro-Temecula?
I remember the good old days during the bubble when Temecula was the poster child for everything wrong with the housing bubble.
Has SD county just sprawled so far that Temecula no longer seems crazy?
I actually drove through Temecula over the holiday weekend. I was actually surprised how it feels like a bustling suburb full of Big Box stores now instead of nothing.[/quote]
I am not sure I saw anything in this thread that was pro TV, but that said Temecula is following the path of many many bedroom communities before it, Woodland-hills, WestLake, Newbury park, Valencia etc…
Its starting to have its own Jobs and former exurbs like Carlsbad are not too far and are becoming job centers in their own right.
Its not all down south.
The whole I-15 corridor is getting primed for growth in the next cycle.
SoCal is growing at about 1500 people PER-DAY.
Growth, its got to go somewhere.
IMO The current building cycle has been very slow getting started so this housing cycle is really just getting started and may last another 4 or 5 years, anyway IMO.[/quote]
Again, shoveler, whoever moves in must buy/rent whatever is available, which may or may not be in their preferred location or their choice of housing. SoCal cities and counties don’t owe newcomers anything. If all of them can’t find suitable housing for themselves, they ones that can’t (or refuse what’s on offer to them) won’t move here in the first place. It’s all as it should be. This is the way it is in the SF bay area and those cities/counties aren’t suffering in any way, shape or form due to housing shortages or affordability factors. If the rent is raised causing a tenant to move out, there are plenty of qualified tenants ready to pounce with their applications.
I don’t see all the new construction projects that you do going forward in SoCal … especially residential and even moreso, single family homes.