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Mayor Brandon Bochenski joins me and we talk a new soybean crushing plant that's chosen Grand Forks as it's home! A woman from Meridian Idaho was forced to leave her tiny home a city-code-enforcment officer showed up.
--KNOX News Room --
A company looking to build a $400 million dollar soybean crushing plant has selected Grand Forks as the location for the facility.
Read the entire article at knoxradio.com
https://news.yahoo.com/woman-had-move-her-tiny-141946741.html
A woman who bought a tiny home is taking legal action against her city, which threatened to fine her $1,000 a day if she continued living in it, because the action left her unhoused.
Chasidy Decker of Meridian, Idaho, couldn't afford to buy a house, so she opted for the 252-square-foot tiny home and arranged to put it on Robert Calacal's property for $600 a month, according to the lawsuit.
A neighbor called the Meridian Police Department when the tiny home arrived on the property and asked whether living in it would be legal.
In May, a day after Decker moved in, a Meridian city-code-enforcement officer threatened both Decker and Calacal with criminal prosecution and fines of $1,000 a day unless she moved out
Listen Live Every weekday from 9-12 (CST).
Add your voice to the conversation! Call 701-775-5559 or text.
Contact Noah
live [at] knoxradio.com
-- Twitter --
Special Guest: Brandon Bochenski .
By Noah ChelliahMayor Brandon Bochenski joins me and we talk a new soybean crushing plant that's chosen Grand Forks as it's home! A woman from Meridian Idaho was forced to leave her tiny home a city-code-enforcment officer showed up.
--KNOX News Room --
A company looking to build a $400 million dollar soybean crushing plant has selected Grand Forks as the location for the facility.
Read the entire article at knoxradio.com
https://news.yahoo.com/woman-had-move-her-tiny-141946741.html
A woman who bought a tiny home is taking legal action against her city, which threatened to fine her $1,000 a day if she continued living in it, because the action left her unhoused.
Chasidy Decker of Meridian, Idaho, couldn't afford to buy a house, so she opted for the 252-square-foot tiny home and arranged to put it on Robert Calacal's property for $600 a month, according to the lawsuit.
A neighbor called the Meridian Police Department when the tiny home arrived on the property and asked whether living in it would be legal.
In May, a day after Decker moved in, a Meridian city-code-enforcement officer threatened both Decker and Calacal with criminal prosecution and fines of $1,000 a day unless she moved out
Listen Live Every weekday from 9-12 (CST).
Add your voice to the conversation! Call 701-775-5559 or text.
Contact Noah
live [at] knoxradio.com
-- Twitter --
Special Guest: Brandon Bochenski .