"If we snapped our fingers and had 500 market-rate units, like you've heard me talk about before, all that does is open up the additional opportunity for affordability for someone else,” Maror Reeves said. “But we somehow fall into this trap of you're either doing one or the other. If you see if it goes across ARB (Architectural Review Board) or city council that a market rate building's coming up, you can rest assured that everyone on social media or Facebook comments will say, ‘Well, you don't care about people who don't make less money.”He added, “And it's that term I use with you all the time—we pat our head, rub our belly. We can do these both, and we have to.”