gabe
Senior Member
Despite what you read around here and elsewhere from certain posters, it's pretty well-established that the rate of homelessness in a city is closely linked with rent prices. Unless you think that more expensive cities just happen to have much higher rates of mental health and addiction issues than cheaper cities.
When i lost my job about ten years ago, i got a crappy factory job for six months. That's what paid my rent. My boyfriend around the same time, worked as a bag boy at Metro, when he was in between jobs. Do that today with rent prices you still won't have enough money for rent. That's if you can find a job. So many low skilled/entry level jobs have been taken by international "students"