Can collective ownership solve housing affordability? These Black communities in N.S. are working on it

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Lynn Jones wanted to preserve the spirit of the Truro, N.S., neighbourhood known as “The Marsh” — once a thriving community of Black families, most of whom have moved away over the years.

She and her family members each owned a small plot of land in The Marsh and, over time, Jones began to purchase land from her relatives as people left. But she hadn’t figured out what to do afterward. 

“I was not selling to developers for them to reap the benefits of a traditional African Nova Scotian community and there be nothing left for the community,” she said in a

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