New York Post

House-ing crisis fix (onlt for Congress)

Old DC dorm eyed as digs for ‘poor’ pols

- By MARISA SCHULTZ and BRUCE GOLDING marisa.schultz@nypost.com

A Democratic congressma­n wants to create affordable housing in Washington, DC — for members of the House.

As the nation’s capital struggles with a homeless crisis, Mississipp­i Rep. Bennie Thompson plans to introduce legislatio­n as soon as this week calling for a study into converting a vacant residence hall blocks from the Capitol into cheap housing for the well-paid politician­s.

“I think that building should be available to members of Congress who have found housing costs to be prohibitiv­e,” Thompson told The Post, referring to House members who rake in at least $174,000 a year.

“It can be the affordable-housing-availabili­ty option,” he said.

The move follows a recent Post exposé about the scores of House members — including Reps. Gregory Meeks (DQueens) and Dan Donovan (R-SI) — who bunk overnight in their offices, claiming they can’t afford DC apartments in addition to their homes.

The average monthly rent on a studio apartment in Washington is $1,591, down 3 percent over the past year, according to a report this month from Rentcafe.com.

Meanwhile, DC — which has an estimated homeless population of 6,904 people — is spending $80,000 a night to house 600 families in hotels.

But Thompson has his eye on a two-story brick building for House members. It was built in the 1940s as a dormitory for nurses and sits in what’s now a posh neighborho­od of pricey townhouses.

The government-owned property was most recently occupied by high-school students who were working as House pages. But it has been empty since that program was shut down in 2011 following the scandal that forced Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) to resign for sending lewd online messages to several former male pages.

Mandy Mills, a Washington real-estate agent with the Compass company, favored Thompson’s plan, saying, “Vacant property is never a good thing.”

But the proposal isn’t sitting well with some congressio­nal colleagues, who said it raises the specter of a congressio­nal version of “Animal House.”

“I don’t know it would be a good idea to have people in a big place like that,” said Rep. Mike Bishop (R-Mich.). “The more I think about it, the less likely I would be to support it. It might be a breeding house for something bad.”

And Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.) noted that members of Congress can easily afford market-rate rents on their hefty salaries.

“Give me a break,” she said. “If we are going to use that facility for anyone’s more-affordable housing options, it should be for interns, for young people, to introduce them to the process.’’

Even Donovan — who recently complained that “Washington is too expensive” — said he would rather keep camping out in an alcove of his office on a cot he covers with a gray-and-whitestrip­ed quilt.

“Our national debt is over $20 trillion, so I don’t think it’s a great use of taxpayer funds to build Congress a dorm,” he said.

“Sleeping in my office isn’t very comfortabl­e, but it’s my choice to save for my daughter’s college instead of spending money on a DC apartment. I’m here to work, not relive my college days in a taxpayer-funded dorm.”

A spokeswoma­n for outgoing House Speaker Paul Ryan (RWis.) — a proud member of the congressio­nal “cot club” — said of the empty residence hall, “The House Office Buildings Commission­s has no plans at this time for repurposin­g the space.”

 ??  ?? GIVE IT A ‘REST’: Rep. Dan Donovan says he’d rather keep sleeping in his DC office than move into a proposed congressio­nal dorm (above).
GIVE IT A ‘REST’: Rep. Dan Donovan says he’d rather keep sleeping in his DC office than move into a proposed congressio­nal dorm (above).

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