Kim Bragg knows what more affordable housing in Cary would mean for people like her and her family.
“My son is 38. He has cerebral palsy,” she said. “With limited income, he still lives at home because there’s no affordable place for him. My other son is 35. He had to work two jobs to afford the rent of an apartment he barely saw because he was always at work. So he moved back home.”
Her 28-year-old daughter has to get a part-time job on top of her job as a bus driver to afford an apartment with her 2-year-old…