Federal Policy | July 29, 2021
Once an obscure issue reserved for the few who decided to attend local planning and zoning board meetings, single-family zoning is now in the white-hot spotlight, both at the national level and in cities and states across the country. Earlier this month, an editorial in the San Francisco Chronicle decried the added costs of single-family-only zoning on […]
Federal Policy | May 5, 2021
In March, Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) with Senator Rob Portman (R-OH), and Congresswoman Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-DE) with Congresswoman Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-WA) in the House of Representatives, introduced the bipartisan and bicameral Housing Supply and Affordability Act (HSAA), introduced this Congress as S. 902 and H.R. 2126. The legislation creates a Local Housing Policy […]
Analysis | March 26, 2021
Housing should always be an opportunity, never an obstacle. Unfortunately, because of poor policy choices, low-income and minority people have been systematically zoned out from America’s high opportunity and job-rich neighborhoods. As I have written about in the past, the government has played a crucial, often intentional, role in creating a housing market that incentivizes […]
Federal Policy | January 29, 2021
Shortly after then-candidate Joe Biden named then-Senator Kamala Harris to his Presidential ticket, we examined what her selection would mean for housing. Senator Harris had an extensive track record on housing, including sponsoring the Up for Growth Action-backed Housing is Infrastructure Act. Her housing background complemented an already robust plan put forward by the Biden campaign. Her focus includes […]
Federal Policy | December 11, 2020
On Tuesday, news broke that the incoming Biden-Harris administration would nominate Representative Marcia Fudge (D-OH) as the next Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The choice was a surprise. The Congressional Black Caucus, and in particular House Majority Whip and close Biden confidant Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-SC), promoted Rep. Fudge for Secretary […]
Federal Policy | November 6, 2020
While the ballots are still being counted in Election 2020, the contours of the 117th Congress and who will occupy the White House are coming into focus. Vice President Biden is on the cusp of victory after overtaking President Trump’s initial lead in Pennsylvania and Georgia, while growing his advantage in Nevada. President Trump and […]
Analysis | October 23, 2020
Earlier this week, I gave a presentation on Housing Underproduction in Utah to the Utah Land Use Institute at their 2020 Fall Meeting. What follows is a lightly edited version of my remarks. Since the 1960s, cities and states across the country have produced about 1.1 new housing units for every household formed – young people moving […]
Federal Policy | October 9, 2020
Few matters of public policy have as broad of an impact as housing. As we’ve written in our previous insights reports, housing is central to combating climate change. Transportation policy and planning is inextricably linked to housing, and vice versa. As housing goes, so goes the economy and economic recovery. Racial justice and equity cannot be achieved without […]
Federal Policy | September 25, 2020
The housing crisis in America is not one unique to big cities on the coasts. As shown by Up for Growth’s Housing Underproduction in the U.S., nearly every corner of the country bears part of the burden for the national 7.3 million home shortage. This is true for heavily rural areas and smaller cities, too. Though […]
Federal Policy | September 11, 2020
The nation is in the midst of a major housing crisis, putting tremendous strain on families, individuals, and the economy. At the core of the crisis is a severe undersupply of homes, particularly in job and amenity-rich areas. Up for Growth research found that from 2000 – 2015, the U.S. fell 7.3 million homes short relative to housing […]
| August 21, 2020
In an opinion piece published by the Wall Street Journal, Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson and President Donald Trump claimed they will save America’s suburbs from Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden’s “dystopian vision of building low-income housing units next to your suburban house.” In many ways, the op-ed read as a full-fledged embrace […]