As the Metroplex grows, preliminary survey results show D-FW residents are worried about prices but happy with their communities.
The survey sampled five geographic areas within D-FW. Their initial sample is largely an online opt-in participant pool of about 1,200 respondents from Denton, Collin, Tarrant and Dallas Counties. The institute expects to get up to 2,000 to release more detailed findings by the fall.but for many months outpaced a country that was already enduring the highest price increases in decades on food, housing, fuel, insurance and other necessities.
“Support for affordable housing actually went down when people saw the presence of homelessness outside of the shops and on the streets,” Bram said. “This belief that affordable housing is something we should do, that can actually break down if city leaders do not address homelessness and highly trafficked areas.”, said he was pleasantly surprised that immigration was not as high of a concern in North Texas as in the country as a whole, according to the initial survey results.