Out in the cold: New U.S.
budget priorities threaten housing aid programs
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[March 06, 2017]
By James Oliphant
(Reuters) -
When
Paul Ryan, speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, talks of social
mobility, about helping struggling Americans move out of impoverished
areas to give them greater opportunity, Shiva Daniels is the kind of
person he has in mind.
A federal housing voucher allowed Daniels to escape her crime-plagued
neighborhood in Dallas, Texas, and move her four children to the suburb
of Garland.
That move helped Daniels find a good job, working for a property
management company. Today, she cherishes the small, two-bedroom house
she rents, with a yard where her children can safely play, away from
drugs and gang violence in Dallas.
But if Daniels, 31, were to lose the $1,082 monthly stipend she
receives, she has no doubt what would happen. “I would have to move
back,” she said. “I wouldn’t be able to afford it.”
Pulling Americans out of poverty is a subject close to Ryan’s heart. And
President Donald Trump has frequently talked about aiding the inner
cities.
But the housing assistance provided by the U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development, or HUD, could fall victim to fiscal policies
under consideration by the White House and Congress, which include a
massive tax cut and increased military spending, according to a dozen
congressional aides who spoke to Reuters.
While the White House has not been specific about its plans for HUD —
the budget process remains in flux — it has called for a $54 billion cut
in non-military discretionary domestic programs in the next fiscal year,
which likely will dramatically impact safety-net programs that are not
entitlements such as Medicare and Social Security, budget experts said.
Altogether, housing advocates paint a bleak picture of the landscape for
low-income housing under the Trump administration. They warn that deep
cuts to housing funds would force some people out of their homes and
hollow out grant programs meant to revitalize urban neighborhoods.
There is also a ripple effect, they warn: Rental prices would likely
rise alongside declines in affordable housing projects and vouchers
available to renters. That would make it tougher for renters to save
enough to eventually buy homes.
“It’s a bad cycle,” said Carol Galante, a former top HUD official during
the Obama administration. “It puts pressure on the rental market. The
rents are higher and higher so people can save less and less.”
IMAGE PROBLEMS
HUD provides about 5 million Americans with some form of housing
assistance, either through vouchers to renters, subsidies to landlords
or public housing projects, which comprises about 85 percent of its
budget. It also sends about $8 billion annually directly to communities
through grants.
Even so, only about one-quarter of those eligible for assistance in the
country receive it.
Housing advocates say changes to its budget or mandate would be directly
felt in low-income communities. They point out that in 2013, when the
legislatively mandated budget cuts known as sequestration hit HUD, more
than 100,000 renters nationwide lost their housing support.
Douglas Rice, an expert at the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities,
a nonpartisan think tank in Washington, estimates that for every 1
percent cut in HUD’s budget, 20,000 renters would lose their assistance
But critics of the agency, including some Republican lawmakers, say its
anti-poverty and community-development programs are inefficient and
wasteful, and that it has failed to live up to its mission. Today, the
proportion of Americans who live below the poverty line — 14.5 percent —
is about the same as it was 35 years ago.
HUD has also at times had difficulty shaking the image of a bureaucratic
agency that is vulnerable to corruption. It was at the center of a
bid-rigging scandal during the Reagan Administration. And Alphonso
Jackson, the HUD secretary under President George W. Bush, resigned in
2008 amid allegations that he steered contracts to friends. Charges were
never brought against Jackson.
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Shiva Daniels poses for portrait at her work in Plano, Texas, U.S.,
March 2, 2017. REUTERS/Cooper Neill
“There
are some sports teams that never seem to gel. I think we’re a little like that
at HUD,” said Bud Albright, a Washington lobbyist who worked at the agency when
Republican Jack Kemp was secretary in the early 1990s.
Trump, who has not been specific on his plans for the agency, selected Ben
Carson to lead HUD. The former neurosurgeon and Republican presidential
candidate won Senate confirmation last week.
Although Carson's views hew closely to Republican orthodoxy on how too much
government can discourage people from working hard, his upbringing in inner-city
Detroit gives him a unique perspective: his mother received food stamps to
provide for her family and he was raised around housing assistance programs
similar to those he will now manage.
Carson, who declined requests for interviews by Reuters, has pledged to fight to
protect HUD’s housing-assistance budget and preserve the agency’s
community-development initiatives. He also said he would push to include funding
to rehabilitate public-housing facilities in Trump’s proposed $1 trillion
infrastructure plan.
But given the White House's determination to cut domestic spending, Carson will
have to fight for every dollar. A HUD spokesman declined to comment on which
programs could be hurt by any possible budget cuts. The White House's Office of
Management and Budget did not respond to a request for comment.
'A BIG DEAL'
Congress, too, is looking to narrow HUD’s reach.
Ryan has called for work requirements and time limits on those who receive
housing assistance, similar to how child support, food assistance and other
welfare benefits function.
Tax
reform spearheaded by Ryan and Kevin Brady, the House Ways and Means chairman,
could ultimately do away with a key tax credit used by developers to build
affordable housing, or could drastically curtail the credit’s use.
One vocal critic of HUD is Jeb Hensarling, Republican chair of the House
Financial Services Committee, which oversees the housing agency. Hensarling
plans to introduce legislation this year to narrow the $1 trillion portfolio of
the Federal Housing Administration, which helps low-income and first-time
homebuyers purchase homes, his office said.
Hensarling has said he fears that if home values drop the FHA would require
another federal bailout as it did in 2013, when it received a taxpayer-funded
infusion of $1.7 billion to cover its losses.
If the cuts to HUD’s budget are as severe as some expect, those who are on
waiting lists now for vouchers will be staying on them for a very long time, and
recipients such as Shiva Daniels, who has been receiving assistance for six
years, will be at risk of seeing that support end.
That would mean losing her small house, with the yard she sees as a safe haven
for her children. “It might not feel like it’s a big deal, but it is,” Daniels
said. “When you feel good, it allows you to do better, and do better for them.”
(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan; Editing by Jason Szep and Paul Thomasch)
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