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Yesterday โ€” 28 December 2024Main stream

A winning ticket for the $1.22 billion Mega Millions jackpot was sold in California. Here's what we know.

28 December 2024 at 03:29
A California Mega Millions entrant won a $1.22 billion jackpot.
A California Mega Millions entrant won a $1.22 billion jackpot.

Frederic J. BROWN / AFP

  • A winning ticket for the $1.22 billion Mega Millions jackpot was sold in California.
  • The ticket was sold at Sunshine Food and Gas in Cottonwood, CA, the California State Lottery said.
  • The jackpot was the fifth-largest in Mega Millions history.

One lucky Mega Millions player won an estimated $1.22 billion on Friday night, one of the largest jackpots in US history.

The winning ticket was sold at Sunshine Food and Gas in Cottonwood, northern California, the California State lottery said.

The winning numbers were 3, 7, 37, 49, and 55, and the gold Mega Ball number was 6. The winner's identity is unclear as of yet.

The winner will have the option of taking a roughly $549.7 million cash lump sum or the full jackpot paid out over 30 years.

It was the fifth-largest prize in Mega Millions history and the seventh Mega Millions jackpot to cross the $1 billion threshold.

"Congratulations to our $1.22 billion jackpot winner from California," Joshua Johnston, lead director for the Mega Millions Consortium, said in a press release. "What an amazing present this holiday season! At an incredibly special time of year, this is both an incredibly special moment for our winner, and for all the great organizations and causes that benefit from lottery ticket sales around the country."

The jackpot was claimed after a 31-drawing run that began on September 10, when the last jackpot was won.

The largest-ever US lottery jackpot was won in November 2022, when a man in California won the $2.04 billion Powerball. He was later named as Edwin castro.

Last year, another ticket sold in California won a $1.765 billion Powerball prize. The California Lottery said that a man called Theodorus Struyck had come forward as the representative of a group that would split the winnings.

The Mega Millions jackpot has now reset to $20 million ahead of the New Year's Eve draw.

The odds of winning the Mega Millions jackpot are about one in 302,575,350, according to the official website.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Before yesterdayMain stream

The New York City affordable-housing lottery receives 3.5 million applications each year. These are 6 of the people who won.

26 December 2024 at 16:27
A red toy shaped like a house lying on top of a pile of lottery balls.
Competition for the New York City affordable-housing lottery is stiff: On average, there are 450 applications received for each rental unit.

urfinguss/Getty Images/iStockphoto

  • For some New Yorkers, winning the NYC housing lottery is the only way they can afford to stay in the city.
  • But competition is tough: There are about 3.5 million applications each year.
  • Those who have won say it often took multiple applications and months of waiting before they heard back.

Louis Ciprian, 29, moved around New York City a lot when he was younger.

His father died when he was 11, and Ciprian and his mother fell on hard times. At 15, he entered the foster care system. For the next couple of years, he bounced from place to place and even graduated from high school while living in a homeless shelter.

After college, he started couch surfing, living with different roommates while looking for a more permanent place to call home.

In 2022, he started applying for the New York City affordable housing lottery, which is run by the Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) and the Housing Development Corporation (HDC).

A man leaning against his kitchen counter.
Louis Ciprian won the NYC housing lottery for an apartment in the Bronx earlier this year.

Louis Ciprian.

Two years later, in July, Ciprian finally received the call that he'd been waiting for: He won the lottery for a one-bedroom apartment in the Bronx, where rent is $1,481 a month.

He was thankful and relieved.

"To be able to get an opportunity like that where I'm paying rent that is affordable and not going to hit more than 30% of my income, it's an amazing feeling," Ciprian, a customer success manager at a real estate technology company, told Business Insider.

After years of grappling with homelessness, he now has a place of his own.

1 in 450 chance of winning

NYC is experiencing a severe housing affordability crisis.

From 2022 to 2023, rents in NYC increased seven times as fast as wages, a Zillow and StreetEasy analysis found. Even tech workers โ€” who make an average of $135,000 annually โ€” can only afford 35% of rentals in the city.

It's not surprising that many lower-earning New Yorkers are choosing to leave the city or even the country entirely in order to enjoy a lower cost of living.

For those still in NYC, the outlook is far from rosy. Over the past decade, the city grew by nearly 800,000 people, but only added 200,000 new homes, mayor Eric Adams said in a speech in December 2022.

Not only that, the city has also lost some 100,000 apartments โ€” many in wealthy neighborhoods โ€” because New Yorkers keep consolidating multi-family buildings and turning them into one- or two-family homes.

A 2023 city housing and vacancy survey found that only 1.4% of NYC apartments were available to rent last year, and over 40% of all renters spend 30% or more of their income on rent.

For many New Yorkers like Ciprian, winning the housing lottery is their only hope of securing an affordable apartment in an increasingly expensive city.

While the application is free, each household must meet specific income requirements to qualify for an apartment. But winning the affordable housing lottery is a feat in itself.

The HPD receives about 3.5 million applications a year, Natasha Kersey, an HPD representative, told BI.

On average, there are 450 applications received per rental unit.

With competition so stiff, it is not uncommon for people to apply for multiple apartments offered in the lottery.

Nkenge Clarke, 30, told BI previously that she had sent out over 130 applications before she finally succeeded in her bid.

A woman dressed in a denim outfit
Nkenge Clarke won the NYC affordable housing lottery. Now, she pays about $1,000 in rent for her Chelsea apartment.

Nkenge Clarke.

"It took me maybe over a year before I started hearing back from different properties that I applied to," Clarke said. "Some of them I ended up not qualifying for, some of them I didn't provide enough documentation for."

Now, she pays about $1,000 in rent every month for a one-bedroom apartment in Chelsea, a neighborhood on the west side of Manhattan. The timing was impeccable; her previous landlord was looking to raise her rent had she renewed her lease.

"This place literally came just in time, like a few months before my second-year lease ended," Clarke said.

A living room with a yellow sofa and lots of house plants.
Clarke says she had sent out over 130 applications for the affordable housing lotteries.

Nkenge Clarke

While the process took a lot of paperwork and patience, it was well worth the effort, she added. After all, living in an affordable apartment in the heart of the city was like a dream come true.

Stabilized rent in an ever-expensive market

Interested parties can apply for the affordable housing lottery online via the Housing Connect portal or by mail. Once the deadline passes, all applications are combined to create a pool from which the lottery is conducted, Aileen Reynolds, the assistant commissioner of housing opportunity at HPD, told BI.

A man sitting on a couch, posing for a photo.
Josh Ayala won the NYC housing lottery in 2023.

Josh Ayala.

A computer algorithm randomizes all the applications and assigns everyone a number, known as a lottery log number. That number, she added, dictates the order in which the developers have to contact the applicants.

While it helps applicants get a sense of where they stand, it's not a perfect science since there might be people who applied but do not qualify for the apartments.

It can take any time between weeks to months for an applicant to hear back, Reynolds said.

In Josh Ayala's case, it took him eight months to receive a call back after he had applied for his apartment.

The living area and entryway.
Ayala says his rent costs $2,345 a month.

Josh Ayala.

"I was like, wait, what? I totally forgot I applied to this," Ayala, 26, told BI in August.

Thankfully, it all worked out for him; He signed the lease for the apartment within a month of the viewing. Now he pays $2,345 in monthly rent, which is stabilized.

"Around COVID-19 time, people were moving into apartments, and for one year, it was a great price. But the next year, the landlord would just increase their rent exorbitantly," Ayala said. "I didn't want that to happen to me, so I wanted something that was more secure, too."

The sleeping area in the apartment.
Knowing that his rent is stabilized gives him peace of mind, Ayala said.

Josh Ayala.

Likewise, rent stabilization was the main reason Brynne McManimie and Peter Romano started applying for the housing lottery.

In 2021, they lived in a $2,600-a-month apartment in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. They had gotten a good deal on their lease due to the pandemic, but it didn't last long.

A couple standing in front of a wall.
Peter Romano and Brynne McManimie applied for the affordable housing lottery after their landlord raised the rent.

Matthew Dunivan Photography

"After a year, our landlord raised our rent by like 25% and it made us very nervous about staying in that apartment," McManimie told BI in June. Their new rent was going to be $3,300 a month, and they decided it was too expensive for them to afford.

But luck was on their side: Within a month of applying for the housing lottery, they were contacted about a one-bedroom unit in Brooklyn.

The living room.
McManimie and Romano now live in a $2,800-a-month apartment in Brooklyn,

Brynne McManimie and Peter Romano

The couple ended up signing a two-year lease. Now, they pay $2,800 in monthly rent.

"Since it's rent-stabilized, they can't raise it like a ton," Romano told BI. "Which is honestly really attractive to us, given what happened with our last landlord."

The income and household eligibility criteria for the lottery apartments only apply at the initial stage.

The bedroom.
The couple says that they were lucky to have won the lottery so soon after they started applying.

Brynne McManimie and Peter Romano

"Folks only need to qualify based on house size and income at the time they move in," Reynolds said.

'Native New Yorkers deserve to stay here'

But the housing lottery isn't without its criticism.

For years, the city's "community preference" policy dictated that half of new affordable apartments must first be offered to those already living in the area.

However, in 2015, three women filed a lawsuit against the city, saying that the policy reinforced segregation.

After almost a decade, the city finally agreed to settle the lawsuit in January. Under the terms of the settlement, the city will reduce the percentage of affordable houses set aside for those already living in the same community to 20%, down from the original 50%, per court documents. In May 2029, it will drop to 15%.

"Although the preference has been reduced, the outcome allows us to preserve it and continue to do our work by advocating for New Yorkers that need more housing at deeply affordable levels," Kersey said.

The author, Ceronne Mitchell, sitting with her dog on a couch.
Ceronne Mitchell won the NYC housing lottery in 2023.

Molly Stromoski for NYC Department of Housing Preservation and Development

Still, NYC residents do get priority in the affordable housing lottery โ€” although applicants don't need to be US citizens, Reynolds said.

In the meantime, the housing lottery will still be one of the best ways for New Yorkers to stay in affordable apartments in the city.

An overview of the author's apartment in Queens, featuring a rug with an abstract pattern, a dog, and a TV hung on the wall.
Rent for Mitchell's one-bedroom apartment in Queens is $1,600 each month.

Molly Stromoski for NYC Department of Housing Preservation and Development

"As much as I'm for the housing lottery, I think that it does suck that as a native, sometimes the only hope and dream of staying in the city affordably is this route," Ceronne Mitchell, who pays $1,600 a month for her one-bedroom lottery housing apartment in Queens, told BI previously.

"Native New Yorkers deserve to stay here, and I'm always proud when one can," she added.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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