by Barbara Sard Center on Budget and Policy Priorities |
In his paper, Chris Herbert reminds us that, typically, the housing stock in high-opportunity communities
is predominantly owner-occupied. So, as part of a comprehensive portfolio, it’s
important to consider strategies to make it possible for low-income (and other)
families of color to purchase homes in such neighborhoods, including those where
rents are starting to rise. However, even a robust set of tools to overcome
downpayment and credit barriers may not be sufficient to make for-sale homes in
neighborhoods with good schools and other amenities in many regions within
reach of low-income families.
Both Steve Norman and Margery Turner highlight the key role acquisition by committed owners of
multifamily rental properties can play, both in keeping rents affordable in
“emergent” (i.e., gentrifying) neighborhoods and in making more units available
to families with housing vouchers in those and already higher-rent communities.
Federal housing policy has neglected such acquisition strategies: grants are
rarely available to reduce the amount of debt such purchases will require, and
tax credits are restricted to new development or substantial rehabilitation. Like
the King County Housing Authority, some other mission-driven organizations,
such as the National Housing Trust, have patched together state or local assistance with private
market debt (and potentially project-based vouchers) to make such acquisitions
feasible. Facilitating loans and grants to purchase rental properties tied to
long-term affordability restrictions – including obligations not to
discriminate against voucher holders – should be a goal of federal housing
policy, including housing finance reform.
While it’s important to include for-sale and multifamily
acquisition strategies in a comprehensive strategy portfolio, tenant-based
vouchers will likely remain the primary tool for enabling more poor and
near-poor families to live in higher-opportunity communities. That’s true, given
vouchers’ current scale — more than 2.2 million Housing Choice Vouchers are now
in use —
and their flexibility to rent virtually any type of decent-quality
dwelling at a wide range of price points.
Yet vouchers can do much more to expand housing choice. The
implementation of HUD’s new Small Area Fair Market Rent (SAFMR) policy is a promising step, but other federal
policy changes are needed to create stronger incentives
for housing agencies to promote better locational outcomes. It’s also vital to make
more funding available, from public as well as philanthropic sources, to meet agencies’
additional administrative costs of promoting voucher mobility. And federal
policy should not only permit but encourage agencies to target vouchers
combined with mobility assistance to families with young children living in the most severely distressed neighborhoods.
Such efforts to foster inclusion may cost more, though
experience with SAFMRs shows
this isn’t always the case. But if we really care about outcomes for families
over the long term, we can’t wait until there are sufficient resources to make
housing affordable to all before we start paying attention to the types of
neighborhoods families live in. The
desperation and long-term harm of homelessness and housing insecurity create
understandable pressure to spread the limited subsidy resources to help as many families as possible. Yet mounting
evidence demonstrates the real long-term harm of growing up in a very poor,
violent neighborhood and attending low-performing schools. Affordable housing
alone doesn’t improve life chances; where
families are able to live must also be a first-order concern, not one that
we’ll pay attention to if and when we remedy the shortage of subsidies.
While housing practitioners work to do the best job possible
with the available resources, we must also build the political will to expand
investments in housing subsidies, so that more families have the chance to overcome
affordability barriers and live in communities of their choice. The Center for Budget and Policy
Priorities, along with the National Low Income Housing Coalition and others,
has just launched the Opportunity Starts at Home campaign, a long-term effort to achieve this goal.
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