Local leaders say the $85 million development — which will be reserved for residents age 62 and older with incomes up to 60 percent of the area median income — will help alleviate the city’s housing shortage and provide an affordable, accessible option to some of Lynn’s most vulnerable residents.
seniors
Posted inOpinion
40,000 Mass. seniors badly need health care help
MASSACHUSETTS IS AT the vanguard of nearly every measure of health care excellence, from medical research to patient care. But the Commonwealth has turned its back on an important demographic […]
