Central London exodus puts pressure on suburbs as families move out of the capital by BulkyAccident Tags:LondonUnited Kingdom 2 comments While I can imagine a level of surge, I am surprused by how much the surge is and how councils unable to cope. People cannot just move to a new area, there must be houses available first. Meaning someone must be living here before, or at least at some point. So all the people who moved out don’t have children? The current infrastructure in place is not made to cope with the amount of houses in the area? Every change is presented as a new problem isn’t it. It’s so tiring. Leave a ReplyYou must be logged in to post a comment.
While I can imagine a level of surge, I am surprused by how much the surge is and how councils unable to cope. People cannot just move to a new area, there must be houses available first. Meaning someone must be living here before, or at least at some point. So all the people who moved out don’t have children? The current infrastructure in place is not made to cope with the amount of houses in the area?
2 comments
While I can imagine a level of surge, I am surprused by how much the surge is and how councils unable to cope.
People cannot just move to a new area, there must be houses available first. Meaning someone must be living here before, or at least at some point.
So all the people who moved out don’t have children? The current infrastructure in place is not made to cope with the amount of houses in the area?
Every change is presented as a new problem isn’t it. It’s so tiring.