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As affordable housing crisis deepens, states begin to take action

In 2017, nearly half of all renters across the country were rent-burdened, according to the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. In response, states from California to Louisiana are beginning to pass legislation aimed at solving the problem. 

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Rich Pedroncelli/AP/File
Rent control supporters march past the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. Californians who rent apartments built after 1995, single-family homes, or condominiums have limited protections from rising costs under a state law passed in 1985 that restricts rent control.

As an affordable housing crisis continues to escalate in big cities and small towns alike, states are scrambling to find ways to聽combat it.

This year, there鈥檚 been a flurry of state legislation to tackle the problem 鈥 with radically different approaches that reflect the highly partisan national divide.

Although local zoning rules typically play out in city council and suburban board meetings, states from South Carolina to Hawaii are getting involved. Sometimes this means removing zoning barriers to building affordable housing. And sometimes state lawmakers take the opposite approach, seeking to prevent cities from requiring that builders include affordable housing units in their developments.

These days, it鈥檚 not just the poor who are having trouble finding affordable housing. The middle class is getting hit, too, housing analysts say.

The United States鈥 housing market is at its least affordable in a decade. An October report by the Urban Institute found that 1 in 4 rural renters spends more than 50 percent of their income on rent. And the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies found that in 2017, nearly half of all renters across the country were rent-burdened, spending about a third of their income on housing, thanks to high construction costs, restrictive zoning laws, and a shortage of private, low-cost housing.

As a result, more states are beginning to intervene in what was once a purely local matter.

鈥淲e鈥檙e really seeing things heat up this year,鈥 said Meghan McCann, senior policy specialist for the National Conference of State Legislatures.

鈥淢ost states do not have a housing strategy,鈥 said Elisha Harig-Blaine, program manager for housing at the National League of Cities. 鈥淎nd as states are figuring out what to do, you鈥檙e starting to see a bit of a response.鈥

鈥淵ou鈥檙e seeing the formation of these policies that could have unforeseen consequences and could make the housing crisis worse,鈥 Mr. Harig-Blaine said.

State action

Local control of housing is important 鈥 to an extent, said Carol Galante, a former Housing and Urban Development official who is now a professor of affordable housing and urban policy at the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at the University of California at Berkeley.

But聽community zoning often bans anything other than single family homes. In such cases, Ms. Galante said, it鈥檚 important for states to step in and set the ground rules, because local zoning laws can be used improperly to keep out people based on race or income.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got an emergency on our hands in lots of states,鈥 Galante said. 鈥淪ometimes you have to go to a higher authority. We had to do that in the civil rights movement.鈥

Last month, California Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown signed a passel of housing laws, most of which try to ease zoning restrictions around building affordable housing. Even so, some zoning bills, such as one that would have required cities to build apartments near transit hubs, failed.

Last year, the Golden State passed a batch of housing laws that imposed real estate transaction fees, streamlined the approval process for developers, and put a $4 billion bond on the 2018 ballot to help subsidize affordable housing.

In April, the Connecticut House passed an affordable housing bill introduced by Democratic Gov. Dannel Malloy. If it becomes law, it will require cities to end bans on multi-family housing units. It was aimed at roughly two dozen聽communities in the state with zoning laws that either restricted or outright banned affordable housing, according to the Connecticut Mirror.

鈥淐arrots鈥 in the form of state incentives had not worked, Mr. Malloy told reporters in February in promoting the legislation.

Lawmakers in other states 鈥 Massachusetts, New Jersey, and South Carolina 鈥 have introduced bills that would encourage cities to either ease up on zoning restrictions or would require them to add so-called inclusionary zoning policies, which require developers to set aside affordable housing units.

鈥淲e鈥檙e in a place now where affordable housing is a major issue, to the point where people who work for the city of Charleston 鈥 city employees, law enforcement, first responders, school teachers 鈥 cannot afford to live in the city of Charleston,鈥 said Democratic South Carolina state Rep. David Mack, who sponsored a bill there last year. The bill was sent to聽committee in May.

In Louisiana, after New Orleans officials suggested requiring affordable housing units in some new developments, the state Legislature this spring tried to repeal the state provision that allows such inclusionary zoning.

The bill, which would have instead added incentives to developers, was backed by the Louisiana Home Builders Association, according to news reports. But Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards vetoed it.

Lawmakers in Hawaii and Tennessee also introduced legislation this year that would ban locales from adopting inclusionary zoning. The Hawaii bill is still in聽committee, but the Tennessee law, which was aimed at blocking Nashville鈥檚 affordable housing efforts, passed in March. Tennessee joins Texas, the only other state that bans inclusionary zoning. Housing advocates in Texas say that law has thwarted efforts to build more affordable housing.

Hawaii state Rep. Tom Brower, a Democrat who sponsored the legislation, said requiring developers to set aside affordable housing units through inclusionary zoning ordinances, while well-intended, can actually make the housing problem there worse. Inclusionary zoning ultimately acts as a tax for developers, he said, which serves as a disincentive. The state recently passed legislation to provide incentives to local builders.

鈥淒evelopers say they want to build as long as the projects 鈥榩encil out,鈥 鈥 Representative Brower said in an interview. 鈥淭hey need a certain聽combination of higher income units to subsidize the lower income units.鈥

Policies that require builders to set aside affordable housing units miss the point, said Howard Husock, vice president for research and publications at the libertarian-leaning Manhattan Institute. Rather than focusing on building housing around income type, cities should open up zoning to allow for different types of housing, he said, such as less expensive houses on smaller lots.

That creates a 鈥渉ousing ladder鈥 of aspiration. As families move up the economic ladder, he said, they go from renting to buying.

But 鈥渋f we don't have a variety of housing types,鈥 Mr. Huscock said, 鈥渢hen we consign people to renting forever and wishing to move to a house with a white picket fence but never being able to get there.鈥

One size does not fit all

Not everyone is convinced that states should be intervening.

鈥淲e need state and federal help. But now is not the right time for the state and federal government to intercede and do the cities鈥 job,鈥 said Michael Wallace, program director for聽community and economic development at the National League of Cities. 鈥淭hese are fundamentally neighborhood issues.鈥

He said states should work closely with city officials to tailor policies that fit the needs of their聽communities.

State-mandated housing policy tends to take a one-size-fits-all approach that doesn鈥檛 work for local聽communities, said Geoff Beckwith, executive director and CEO of the Massachusetts Municipal Association, an advocacy group representing cities and towns in the state.

Mr. Beckwith isn鈥檛 opposed to state legislation on zoning, but it鈥檚 far better, he said, when state lawmakers collaborate with local governments to find a solution.

鈥淲ith zoning, one size misfits all,鈥 he said. For example, in the eastern part of Massachusetts, affordable housing is at crisis levels 鈥 even for the middle class, necessitating zoning changes to build more units. But in the more rural and suburban western Massachusetts, where finding housing isn鈥檛 so fraught, strict zoning laws wouldn鈥檛 make any sense, he said.

Earlier this year, Massachusetts Republican Gov. Charlie Baker announced a plan to build 135,000 new housing units over the next five or so years.

One way he aims to do this is through a bill he introduced that would make it easier to pass new zoning changes by lowering the number of lawmakers needed to approve them from two-thirds to more than 50 percent. The bill has not been put to a vote.

Another Massachusetts bill tackling affordable housing didn鈥檛 make it out of聽committee this legislative session. It would have banned cities and towns from passing zoning laws that effectively discriminate against apartment buildings that cater to families by limiting the size of apartments.

The legislation was crafted by the Citizens鈥 Housing and Planning Association, a local advocacy group. The group鈥檚 policy director, Eric Shupin, said it used as a template a 2011 North Carolina fair housing law that outlawed using zoning to discriminate against affordable housing units.

This story was reported by Stateline.

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