Stories

Hurricane Maria destroyed Ramón Luis Morales's roof, but he hasn't been able to finish rebuilding because he's still waiting on supplies. In the meantime, he's helping another man in need fix his house. Photo by Ryan Caron King for Connecticut Public Radio

Waiting For Supplies For His Home, One Puerto Rican Rebuilds Another Man’s House Instead

July 23, 2018

You only have to ask Ramón Luis Morales once to know that the trauma of Hurricane Maria is still fresh.

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The porch of a cottage in the first row of houses along Roy Carpenter's Beach. This is one of the cottages that will be moved to the back in the next 2 years. Photo by Avory Brookins for RIPR

South County Beach Community In Rhode Island Continues To Retreat As Ocean Creeps Inland

June 19, 2018

The cottages in these rows are in a prime oceanfront location, but they won’t be here for long. Within the next two years, they will be moved about a quarter mile inland, because the ocean is creeping in closer and closer every year.

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Lisbeth Sandoval, (far right), her daughter, Sheylibeth, and her son, Stephen, inside a hotel room in Lowell. Photo by Jesse Costa for WBUR

‘We’re Just Hoping For A Miracle’: Hurricane Maria Evacuees Brace For End Of Housing Assistance

June 18, 2018

Nine months after Hurricane Maria devastated the island of Puerto Rico, there are an estimated 300 families still living in hotels in Massachusetts with FEMA and the state footing the bill. But that changes at the end of June when this assistance expires. Many of the evacuees staying in hotels don’t know where they will be living next month.

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Future housing at the Frank Jones Brew Yard in Portsmouth. Photo by Robert Garrova for NHPR

Housing in Converted Industrial Buildings Appeals to N.H. Millennials and Retirees Alike

June 4, 2018

In New Hampshire’s increasingly tight rental market, one area where there’s new development is conversion of industrial buildings. It’s a niche market, but one that’s attracting multiple generations of residents.

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Landlords in expensive Connecticut cheerfully (and illegally) avoid renting to families with children

June 1, 2018

OPINION In her search for a house to rent, Kristin Bradbury has called maybe a dozen property owners, and the excuses she’s heard fall into a few distinct categories. When she asks about renting a home in Madison, Conn., and mentions that she and husband Anderson (Andy) have three children, property owners are quick to…

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Are Millennials Reshaping The American Dream?

April 27, 2018

OPINION In the early ‘30s, James Truslow Adams, a banker turned Pulitzer-winning author, wrote a book-length paean to the U.S. titled, “The American Dream.” His publishers loved the manuscript, but the title had to go. No one, they said, would spend $3 for a book with “Dream” in the title during the Dirty Thirties, the…

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How Do We Keep College Graduates In New England?

April 4, 2018

New England is losing young millennials  in record numbers.

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Foreclosures Have A Long Reach In New England

March 7, 2018

In Connecticut, buying and keeping a home is challenging.

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Bad Policies Could Add To The Homeless Numbers In New England

January 29, 2018

OPINION The rooms at Red Roof Plus+ in Hartford don’t have kitchens, and the families who sought shelter there after Hurricane Maria’s destruction want home-cooked meals. Since they arrived, the families have managed to borrow kitchens around the city. This evening, Carmen Cotto, who retired from Hartford and returned to her family home in Cidra…

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The Impossible (And Necessary) Task of Counting Homeless Youths

January 8, 2018

  OPINION Not long ago, Robin P. McHaelen, founder and executive director of True Colors, Inc., launched into a training for police officers from around the state. Three minutes in to the class, a man stood up, said, “This is bullshit. I’m not listening to this,” and stormed out. He was soon followed by another…

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