
Low Income Housing
232 Fleetwood St, Coatesville, PA, 19320
The Project Has 2 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
1st Time Homebuyers Has 15 Units Available
210 Fleetwood St Has 1 Units Available
230 Fleetwood St Has 1 Units Available
238 Fleetwood St Has 1 Units Available
244 Fleetwood St Has 1 Units Available
25 N Second Ave Has 6 Units Available
252 Fleetwood St Has 1 Units Available
Brandywine Health & Housing Has 24 Units Available
Elmwood Garden Apartments Has 60 Units Available
Oak Street Replacement Hsng Has 66 Units Available
Quarry St Project Has 1 Units Available
Quarry St Project 1 Has 1 Units Available
Quarry St Project 3 Has 1 Units Available
Quarry St Project 5 Has 1 Units Available
Roymar Hall Apartments Has 24 Units Available
Second Ave Has 5 Units Available
Second Avenue Revitalization Proj Has 62 Units Available
Third Avenue Apartments Has 12 Units Available
W C Atkinson Project Has 18 Units Available
West End Housing Dev Has 8 Units Available
Woodland Parkway Homes Rev Has 47 Units Available
Coatesville Towers Has 90 Units Available
Regency Park Has 125 Units Available
Freedom Village at Brandywine Has 1 Units Available
Have you ever wondered why some people always find good housing quickly, while others always get turned away? Discrimination is not uncommon when it comes to housing. Luckily, HUD (the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development) is committed to ensuring that everyone has equal access to housing through its fair housing and anti-discrimination policies. Today, let's talk about how HUD does this.
You saved for the down payment. You budgeted for closing costs. You checked mortgage rates until your eyes hurt. Then someone tells you the new real estate rules mean you may also have to pay your buyer agent’s commission out of pocket. That sounds terrifying. On a 500,000 dollar home, even a 2.5 percent buyer agent fee could mean 12,500 dollars. For many first-time buyers, that is not a small detail. That is the difference between buying now and staying stuck renting for another year. But here is the truth: the new rules changed how buyer agent compensation is disclosed, negotiated, and documented. They did not create one universal rule that every buyer must always pay cash out of pocket.
You paid your half of the rent. You cleaned your room. You followed the lease. Then your roommate suddenly stops paying, disappears, loses their job, blocks your texts, or announces they are moving out next week. You think the problem belongs to them. The landlord may think differently. If your lease contains a joint and several liability clause, your roommate’s missed rent can become your problem fast. This is one of the most misunderstood clauses in shared housing, and it can turn a bad roommate situation into a serious financial risk.
Did someone mention “public tax”? At first glance, it might seem like it’s not worth the trouble—just another antique or masterpiece, like a game tied to a famous painting. But have you ever thought about diving into your own small arithmetic calculations? Suddenly, the stakes are raised, just like the pressure of an upcoming school entrance exam! Could there actually be untapped opportunities in public taxation? This is a question worth exploring.