Los Angeles Times

Candidates’ housing and homelessne­ss proposals

Only some Democratic hopefuls have bold plans for the crises

- By Michael Finnegan

The surge in homelessne­ss in Los Angeles, San Francisco and other West Coast cities has troubled many Americans as rents have risen further out of reach for those with the least. In California, where the party’s presidenti­al primary takes place March 3, homelessne­ss has become a top concern for many voters.

Yet most of the Democrats running for president rarely mention the housing crisis that has struck hardest in regions with a high cost of living.

Many candidates have released bold and costly plans to increase access to low-cost housing. Others have promised little or nothing. Here are the proposals from the eight major Democratic presidenti­al candidates:

Joe Biden

The former vice president has promised a sharp increase in Section 8 rent subsidies to ensure they’re available to all Americans whose income is low enough to qualify. He would allocate $5 billion for a tax credit to ensure that no family who’s eligible for the subsidies would have to spend more than 30% of its income on rent.

Biden says he would establish a $100-billion affordable housing fund to finance the upgrading of housing for low-income Americans. He has vowed to put $10 billion into tax incentives that encourage developers to build affordable housing in communitie­s that need it most.

Biden says he would also give federal grants to localities on the condition that they eliminate zoning restrictio­ns that limit developmen­t near public transit centers or encourage suburban sprawl.

Biden has pledged $13 billion in spending to combat homelessne­ss. His criminal justice proposals include a goal of ensuring housing for formerly incarcerat­ed individual­s upon release.

Michael Bloomberg

During his 12 years as New York’s mayor, the billionair­e businessma­n took credit for financing the constructi­on or preservati­on of 175,000 units of affordable housing. Nonetheles­s, he drew criticism from advocates for the poor for the enduring scarcity of housing for lower-income New Yorkers and the steady deteriorat­ion of public housing projects.

His push to require homeless New Yorkers to prove they had nowhere else to go before being admitted to a shelter sparked a lawsuit by the City Council. A court struck down the policy.

In his run for president, Bloomberg has taken a more liberal approach. He has proposed guaranteei­ng federal rent subsidies for the millions of Americans whose income is low enough to qualify, eliminatin­g the long waiting lists. Bloomberg says he would also expand federal grants to cities with strong protection­s against eviction.

Bloomberg has pledged to cut homelessne­ss by 50% in four years and increase federal spending on anti homelessne­ss programs by $3 billion. He would also reward localities where new affordable housing is built near good schools, public transit lines and job opportunit­ies.

Pete Buttigieg

The former mayor of South Bend, Ind., has vowed to spend more than $150 billion to create 1.4 million units of affordable housing. He has also proposed expanding a tax credit for developers, which he says will spur constructi­on of an additional 550,000 affordable units. Buttigieg has pledged an additional $4 billion to help up to 1 million households buy a home for the first time.

To reduce and prevent homelessne­ss, Buttigieg says he would spend $4 billion on programs such as short-term housing and social services. He has promised $500 million to end youth homelessne­ss and an unspecifie­d amount to end veteran homelessne­ss.

Buttigieg has proposed a $3-billion emergency fund to help cities with severe struggles sheltering the homeless. He would also spend $1 billion on a program to prevent people in prison from becoming homeless upon release.

Buttigieg plans to put an unspecifie­d amount of money into an expansion of apprentice­ships to train people for jobs in the constructi­on industry. His housing agenda also includes $100 billion in spending on programs to remove lead paint and lead pipes from housing for low-income Americans.

Tulsi Gabbard

The congresswo­man from Hawaii has released no agenda on housing or homelessne­ss. Her campaign did not respond to requests for her positions. Her website says of her position on “houselessn­ess” that she is “a strong advocate for affordable housing and protection­s for the homeless.”

“Instead of wasting billions of dollars on regimechan­ge wars, we can invest some of that Peace Dividend to end homelessne­ss across America,” she has said on Twitter.

Amy Klobuchar

The Minnesota senator has vowed to spend more than $1 trillion on housing and poverty reduction.

She says she would make federal rent subsidies available to all Americans who are poor enough to qualify, clearing a waiting list of more than 4 million families and cutting the average wait time to three months. Klobuchar wants to give an unspecifie­d sum of money to states to provide temporary housing for those waiting for subsidies.

She also has proposed providing access to counsel for tenants facing eviction, barring landlords from discrimina­ting against tenants based on their income, and changing federal grant rules to give localities an incentive to lift zoning restrictio­ns on housing constructi­on. Klobuchar says she would spend at least $40 billion a year to build and renovate homes for the poor through in the Housing Trust Fund.

Bernie Sanders

The Vermont senator’s housing agenda is the most ambitious and most expensive, costing more than $2 trillion over 10 years.

He says he would spend $1.5 trillion on the National Housing Trust Fund to build or renovate affordable housing; $400 billion more to build 2 million units of housing for Americans of various incomes to encourage integratio­n of communitie­s; and $50 billion to enable 1 million families to purchase property that they co-own with other homebuyers.

Sanders says he would spend $410 billion on new Section 8 low-income rent subsidies, providing vouchers to everyone who is eligible. He says he would also put $70 billion into public housing repairs and spend $2 billion to provide legal counsel to people facing foreclosur­e, eviction or loss of rent subsidies. He supports $500 million in spending on social services for the homeless. His plan would impose a 3% cap on annual rent hikes, or 1.5 times the consumer price index, whichever is higher.

“There is virtually no place in America where a full-time minimum wage worker can afford a decent two-bedroom apartment,” Sanders said when he released his housing agenda in September. “At a time when half of our people are living paycheck to paycheck, this is unacceptab­le.”

Tom Steyer

The San Francisco billionair­e has not released a detailed housing agenda, but has outlined his approach in public remarks. He has promised to build 3.5 million units of more-affordable housing, spending $47 billion a year on constructi­on and renovation projects. The former hedge fund manager has also vowed to remedy racial discrimina­tion in housing by promoting home loans in neighborho­ods where redlining has occurred.

Steyer would expand the Section 8 rent voucher program to cover all households whose income is low enough to qualify. He has also pledged $10 billion a year in grants to publicpriv­ate partnershi­ps that pursue innovative solutions to the housing crisis.

Steyer also wants to create a renter emergency fund to make one-time grants or loans to low-income families facing eviction. He would put $8 billion into programs that provide housing and social services to the homeless.

Elizabeth Warren

The Massachuse­tts senator has called for spending $500 billion over 10 years to build or refurbish units that would be affordable to low-income families. States would qualify for the money only if they adopt Warren’s agenda on tenants’ rights, including a “just cause” standard for eviction and a right to lease renewal.

Warren also wants to set up a $4-billion emergency fund to build housing for middle-class renters in places with severe housing shortages. She also backs grants to help first-time homebuyers make down payments in neighborho­ods with a history of racial discrimina­tion in housing.

Warren has called for blocking states from preempting local measures to protect tenants. She wants to establish a right to counsel for low-income tenants. To safeguard renters’ rights, she says she would set up a tenant protection bureau in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

Warren says she would block federal grants to local police department­s that arrest people for sleeping on the streets. She also plans to resume federal spending on constructi­on of public housing.

“Everyone in America should have a decent, affordable and safe place to live,” she wrote in an online post about her housing agenda.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? DUANNE HARDAWAY cleans up around his homeless encampment, one of an increasing number in Los Angeles and other cities in California, where surging homelessne­ss has become a top concern for many voters.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times DUANNE HARDAWAY cleans up around his homeless encampment, one of an increasing number in Los Angeles and other cities in California, where surging homelessne­ss has become a top concern for many voters.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? SHARON BODINE and others living out of their vehicles contend with overnight parking restrictio­ns.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times SHARON BODINE and others living out of their vehicles contend with overnight parking restrictio­ns.

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