About 140 apartments must be set aside for low-income tenants.
Ten percent of the condominiums would be set aside for low-income tenants.
And low-income tenants are not going to test, she said.
The illegal housing problem is not limited to low-income tenants.
Well, the project did provide some subsidized apartments for low-income tenants.
In exchange, they agree to make all of the units affordable to low-income tenants.
The aim, she said, is to turn the buildings into housing for low-income tenants.
Your article states that while the low-income tenant pays about $400 a month, others pay a market rate closer to $2,000 or more.
Thus it is not only low-income tenants who would be the beneficiairies of the law.
By promising to protect housing for low-income tenants, that's how.