| 
		Biden seeks to ease housing shortage with $5 billion 'carrot, no stick' 
		approach
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		 [April 08, 2021]  By 
		Andy Sullivan and Jarrett Renshaw 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden 
		is seeking to ease a national affordable housing shortage by pushing 
		local governments to allow apartment buildings in neighborhoods that are 
		currently restricted to single-family homes.
 
 The $5 billion plan could inject the White House into a debate pitting 
		older homeowners against younger workers seeking to gain a foothold in 
		the most expensive U.S. cities, where many families spend a third or 
		more of their income on housing.
 
 The proposal, which would provide financial incentives to local 
		governments that change zoning laws restricting many neighborhoods to 
		single-family homes, is an example of the sort of broad social policy 
		changes Democrats are including in Biden's $2 trillion infrastructure 
		bill.
 
		 
		
 Critics of the zoning laws say they drive up housing costs, contribute 
		to urban and suburban sprawl and perpetuate racial segregation.
 
 "It's an enormous step forward," said Richard Kahlenberg, a housing 
		expert at the Century Foundation, a left-leaning think tank. "Very few 
		politicians have taken the next step to propose something really 
		meaningful to change the system."
 
 The infrastructure bill would need to pass the narrowly 
		Democratic-controlled Congress, where Republicans are already attacking 
		it as not focused on roads and bridges.
 
 Zoning laws were rare in the United States until the Supreme Court in 
		1917 struck down laws that prevented Black people from buying property 
		in white neighborhoods, prompting local governments to adopt rules that 
		set minimum lot sizes and barred apartment buildings from many 
		neighborhoods.
 
 Under pressure from politically active homeowners, urban areas with the 
		tightest restrictions in place - coastal cities including New York and 
		San Francisco - have increased them further since 2006, according to a 
		University of Pennsylvania survey.
 
 Younger Americans, civil rights groups and employers have pushed some 
		cities in the opposite direction. In recent years, Minneapolis has 
		allowed small apartments to be built in residential areas across the 
		city, and Oregon made a similar change for all urban areas.
 
		 
		California last year allowed smaller living spaces to be built next to 
		single-family homes. But its Democratic-controlled legislature rejected 
		a bill that would have required cities to allow developers to build 
		high-density apartment buildings near transit lines and job centers, 
		even if they are located in single-family neighborhoods. 
		
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			U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris listens as President Joe Biden 
			speaks about jobs and the economy at the White House in Washington, 
			U.S., April 7, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo 
            
			 
With the U.S. economy near full employment in 2019, roughly one in three U.S. 
households still spent more than 30% of income on housing, near record highs, 
according to Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies.
 'NEW APPROACH'
 
 The Biden proposal would set up a $5 billion fund for local governments to 
compete for grants to pay for new schools, roads or bridges if they agreed to 
loosen zoning rules.
 
 "This is a new approach that is purely carrot, no stick," said a White House 
official on condition of anonymity.
 
 A similar effort by Democratic former President Barack Obama failed to gain 
traction. Republican former President Donald Trump's housing secretary, Ben 
Carson, voiced support for easing zoning rules but did not take action.
 
 Trump himself explicitly campaigned against the idea last year, warning 
"suburban housewives" that crime would spike and home values drop if zoning 
rules were relaxed.
 
 Housing experts praised Biden's proposal, but said it may do little to influence 
affluent communities that have the tightest zoning laws, which have little need 
for federal assistance.
 
 "This isn't going to change the world, but it could do some amount of good," 
said Jenny Schuetz, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution think tank.
 
 Biden may get more results if he conditions the hundreds of billions of dollars 
of transportation and housing spending in his proposal to zoning changes, but 
that could spur a backlash that could make it harder to pass into law, she said.
 
 
 The sheer scale of Biden's proposed spending - $2 trillion in infrastructure 
following $1.9 trillion in coronavirus aid - may also dilute the impact of the 
$5 billion fund.
 
 "We'll have to see how this plays out in a world in which there will be a lot of 
money sloshing around," said Michael Stegman at the Urban Institute, who is a 
former senior housing adviser to Obama.
 
 (Reporting by Andy Sullivan and Jarrett Reshaw; Additional reporting by Sharon 
Bernstein in Sacramento, California; Editing by Scott Malone and Peter Cooney)
 
				 
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