South Florida cities aim to fight housing crisis with controversial free land deals
South Florida officials are increasingly turning to a controversial tool to combat the region’s housing crisis: giving away public land to private developers at no cost. Examples include former Miami City Commissioner Joe Carollo’s no-bid Little Havana deals last year and a recent move to add affordable housing to the up-and-coming luxury enclave West Palm Beach. Carollo orchestrated the no-bid deal just before resigning from office in December, ceding city-owned parcels worth over $8 million to developers Swerdlow Group, Nir Shoshani and Nuri Dorra, the Miami Herald reported. Carollo framed the move as a vital legacy for a district where […]This article originally appeared on The Real Deal. Click here to read the full story.
Recent Posts

Miami judge disqualified from Trump library case after courtroom hug

Billionaire Palantir CEO Alex Karp bought waterfront house next door for $29M

Cost overruns, delays: Atlantic Pacific seeks affordable housing loan from Miami-Dade

Inside the Meruelo family schism

PMG, Lndmrk score $126M construction loan for Wynwood condos

“Diabolical scheme”: Inside the guilty pleas in Hammocks fraud that topped $11M

Driveway Overlaps Neighbor’s Property: Now What?

Jobless Claims Down in Florida

Spring Housing Market Shows Resilience

U.S. Economy Grew 2% in Q1 But Outlook Cloudy

