Rome News-Tribune

Two bills aimed at affordable housing draw industry backing, local criticism

- By Rebecca Grapevine

ATLANTA — Georgia Rep. Dale Washburn, R-Macon, introduced two bills this week aimed at solving the Peach State’s affordable housing shortfall.

The first, House Bill 517, or the Georgia Homeowner Opportunit­y Act, would prevent counties or municipali­ties from regulating a long list of building design elements, from the style of porches to the number and types of rooms. The bill would not affect certain historical buildings or the state’s minimum building standards.

A second bill, HB 514, the Housing Regulation Transparen­cy Act, would bar local government­s from indefinite­ly extending moratorium­s on new housing constructi­on.

“These bills are intended to lower housing costs, so that our Georgians who would like to buy a home will have a better opportunit­y on the path to financial freedom and financial stability and … to creating some generation­al wealth,” Washburn told Capitol Beat Thursday.

Washburn’s bills have drawn the support of a newly formed housing coalition.

“(The bills) will cut government red tape, encourage private sector innovation, and increase access to safe, affordable housing for every Georgian,” said Chris Clark, president and CEO of the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, one of the groups making up the new coalition. The other members are the Home Builders Associatio­n of Georgia, the Georgia Associatio­n of Realtors and Habitat for Humanity.

The measures have also garnered support from some Democrats. Rep. Debra Bazemore, R-South Fulton, and Rep. Marvin Lim, DNorcross, both signed on as co-sponsors, indicating that debates about affordable housing and local government control do not always break along party lines.

“I definitely believe in local control in general, but there are certainly issues and times where we as a state need to stand up ultimately for the people and not just for the government­al jurisdicti­on,” Lim told Capitol Beat.

“I hope anyone that opposes this does consider not just aesthetics and not just the ability of people in the highest income areas to be able to build the aesthetics they want ... but (also) what … these regulation­s do to impede the building of affordable housing.”

But local government advocates say the bills go too far.

HB 517 bars local government­s from regulating design elements and would stymie local control and the power of people’s votes, said Clint Mueller, director of government affairs at the Associatio­n County Commission­ers of Georgia.

Local government­s must consider a number of infrastruc­ture concerns — such as roads, sewage, and schools — when making decisions about housing and therefore have a direct interest in housing regulation, Mueller said.

“A local government’s job is to balance the wishes and needs of the community,” he said. “They are elected to provide that balance in the community … and they are able to respond to the needs of their community with the powers that they have.”

Mueller gave the example of local government­s that regulate architectu­ral features such as roofing materials or design to ensure local homes can adequately withstand local conditions, such as high winds in coastal areas.

The bill also provides no guarantee that cost savings from reduced regulation would be passed on to the consumer, Mueller said.

“Just because (builders) have less regulation­s, that doesn’t mean they’re going to sell the house for less,” Mueller said.

“They’re just going to continue to do what they’ve always done and maximize the profit.. They’re not altruistic.”

Mueller said targeted incentives might work better. He and local government advocates suggest that the incentive of relaxed design standards should be balanced by regulation­s requiring builders to actually reduce housing costs.

“If state resources, city resources, county resources are going to be put into some type of … housing developmen­t, there needs to be some assurance of affordabil­ity,” agreed Jim Thornton, director of government­al relations at the Georgia Municipal Associatio­n. “There is nothing in the current legislatio­n that does that.” Washburn pushed back on that argument. “I’m a former county commission­er,” he said. “But when you start going beyond land use and telling people how big a house they have to build, what they have to build it out of, how big a lot they have to put it on, that is government overreach and it intrudes upon personal choice.”

Both of Washburn’s bills have been assigned to the House Government­al Affairs Committee. Washburn said he hopes the bills get hearings next week.

 ?? File ?? Constructi­on crews work on one of the houses at the Crestwood Subdivisio­n.
File Constructi­on crews work on one of the houses at the Crestwood Subdivisio­n.
 ?? ?? Rep. Dale Washburn
Rep. Dale Washburn

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