So I just finished high school and now trying to figure out what I want to do in my life. I've been leaning towards real estate for a long time now and so I went online to try and find pre-licensing courses. But somehow, I ended up in rabbit hole of rampant deep hatred for realtors... People were saying horrible things like how useless, no value realtors are and how they are 'leeches' of society. Seeing all these posts honestly was just so crushing and I don't understand how you could have so much hate for someone just because of their job? It's so discouraging because it just means I'm working towards a career hated by so many.. Its a career I genuinely like and am interested so I can't help but be hurt seeing how it's perceived by everyone else. I really wish I didn't see all that submitted by /u/Antique_Carpenter726 [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1rf8lj2/discouraged_by_online_hate_towards_realto...
The property next door to mine is owned by a local housing authority that builds public housing. However, it's in a flood zone and they've owned it fire 35+ years. They'll almost certainly never build on it. There's also a TON of wildlife that uses that area and the creek corridor behind our house & through the neighborhood. Deer, raccoons, squirrels, rabbits, even foxes and coyotes. Have also seen TONS of songbirds, a Peregrin falcon, Hawks, even a bald eagle. The city (800k population) has a designation for Riparian Buffer zones for small water bodies/wildlife corridors like this. I'm thinking about petitioning the city to have it transferred from the housing authority to the parks department to be designated that way. Is that a good idea? Are there better options? What are the pros & cons? What impact would that have on my house and its resellability & resale value? Environmentally, it seems like kind of an important wildlife corridor, especially ...