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Week of June 23, 2003

Front Page

President's Message

* Too Many Communities Make Building Housing a Struggle

Housing Forum

* New EPA Web Site Can Help You Understand Housing Regulations

Homeownership Month

* Roundtables Identify Concerns for Affordably Priced Housing

Housing Politics

* Association Health Plans Approved by the House
* Major Push Urged to Address Unmet Rural Housing Needs
* Builders Support Commerce Plan on Canadian Lumber
* Congress Votes for ‘No Taxation Without Respiration’
* Two Million Acres in Northeast Threatened With Federal Oversight

Labor

* Senate Considering Workforce Investment Act Reauthorization

Housing and Economics

* Housing Starts Rise in May Despite Rainy Weather
* Builders Confident as New Single-Family Home Sales Head for Another Record
* Spotlight on: Cincinnati
* Eye on the Economy

Construction Safety

* Training Is Key to Safety on the Job Site

Research

* Habitat Homes in Syracuse Are Energy-Efficient

Multifamily

* Pillars Award Winner Provides Tips on Leasing Centers
* Summit to Look at Assessments of Tax-Credit Housing

Business Management

* Automate Your Selection and Change Order Processes

Environment

* New Jersey Protects Habitat of Long-Gone Queen Snake

Member Dividends

* Workforce Development Is Another Great Member Benefit

Seniors Housing

* Active Adult Marketing Involves Five Key Elements

Sales and Marketing

* Ask a MIRM — About The Best Way to Train Your Sales Staff

Building Systems

* Registration Discounts Available for Building Systems Showcase

Building Products

* Exterior Composite Trim Outperforms Wood

Building News Coast To Coast

Association News & Events

* Catfish Tournament an Annual Charity Event in Florida

NBN Back Issues

 

Too Many Communities Make Building Housing a Struggle

 There's no doubt about it. These are good times for America's home building industry. With mortgage interest rates at their lowest levels in modern history, housing production and sales have been healthy and home building for some time has been the bright star in an otherwise lackluster national economy.

The news has been so good, in fact, that it may come as a surprise to many how much of a daily struggle it has become in too many parts of this country to build affordably priced housing for our growing population. When communities sit down to discuss such local concerns as the environment, economic growth and infrastructure needs, too many times housing is scorned. We're forced to come in through the back door, which is a crying shame because housing deserves a central role in addressing all of those concerns.


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Instead of making an honest assessment of housing needs, too many localities these days are turning their backs and embracing no-growth policies that are a quick fix but ultimately a ticket to nowhere. Unreasonable restrictions are placed on the use of land for housing. Zoning and development codes that are out of date and out of step with the housing wants and needs of families are locked into place. And new home buyers are saddled with inequitable impact fees and other exactions to finance facilities and services that politicians are afraid to ask the general population to pay for. 

This is National Homeownership Month, and that makes it an especially appropriate time to take a closer look at housing needs of the men and women who live and work in our communities. When we're doing a good job of meeting those needs, that's good for our neighborhoods, our businesses, our institutions, our entire way of life. But when we're struggling to provide affordably priced housing, there are enormous economic and social implications that sooner or later will start taking a heavy toll.

Something is wrong when our school teachers, our police officers, our fire fighters and the many, many workers who provide us with goods and services every day can't afford to live within a reasonable distance of their workplaces; when single-parent families — who constitute a growing portion of our households — can't stretch one income far enough to pay for decent housing in a decent neighborhood; or when family breadwinners have to choose between paying the rent and meeting other necessities.

These are among the telltale signs of housing in crisis. They are symptomatic of elected officials who are apathetic, at best, about adopting policies to alleviate constraints against providing for one of the most basic human needs. While the depth of today's housing crisis varies in different parts of the country, it is of epidemic proportions and should be a serious concern for everyone.

Over the coming decade, the U.S. population is projected to increase by 24 million people. During that period, an average of one million new households are expected to be formed each year. These are some of the solutions that will help ensure that there is a sufficient supply of new housing to meet demand:

  • Sensible land use and zoning policies that make land available for residential development to meet housing demand and, at the same time, protect and preserve environmentally sensitive areas
  • Removing barriers to permit higher density development, which will open the door to construction of more modestly priced housing tailored to households buying their first homes
  • More infill development (cities must reduce excessive or redundant regulatory and bureaucratic hurdles)
  • Adopting a fair and broad-based way to pay for roads, schools, water and sewer treatment systems and other infrastructure improvements that benefit the entire community 
  • More mixed-use development that puts people closer to jobs
  • Multifamily housing that provides a higher density alternative
  • Use of innovative land-use and community design techniques to create thriving communities that Foster a strong sense of place

Today’s enduring low mortgage rates provide a window of opportunity for increasing the ranks of the nation's home owners, especially among minority families whose rate of homeownership is far below the national average. But even in the very best of times, housing affordability will remain an elusive goal as long as local jurisdictions fail to recognize that their policies are a major part of the problem.
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