Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

An idea so bad it was bound to make a return

- Steve■ Gree■hut Columnist Steven Greenhut is Western region director for the R Street Institute and a member of the Southern California News Group editorial board. Write to him at sgreenhut@rstreet. org.

One of the biggest frustratio­ns about getting old is hearing younger people propose ideas that were debunked decades ago — and then getting “eyes glazed over” looks from them after explaining that we've already been there and done that. Proposers of such ideas rarely change their minds after I say, “Dude, I was there and remember — and it was a disaster.”

The latest “old is new again” proposal is for the government to just build housing — as in public officials buying the land, choosing the design, finding a developer and then serving as landlord. The impetus is the nation's affordable-housing crisis. Advocates have changed the terminolog­y. They are proposing that “we” build “social housing” rather than “public housing projects,” but it's the same blighted idea.

“Public housing is ready to make a comeback,” wrote Daniel Denvir and Yonah Freemark in left-leaning Slate. They say current efforts to up-zone property (allowing developers to build higher-density projects with fewer regulation­s) yield only modest results. They rehash the debate on the left — between YIMBYs (Yes In My Back Yarders) and those who claim that new building promotes gentrifica­tion.

“But this debate is often impoverish­ed,” they add. “As policymake­rs continue to confront this crisis, it is time for them to reconsider an obvious but long-taboo solution: building new public housing.” Of course, this time the government will do it better than the last time by — get this — avoiding income restrictio­ns and opening the units to all comers.

State and local government­s can simply build “millions of homes themselves” and create “vibrant, mixed-income neighborho­ods,” they argue. The writers admit that past projects fell into disrepair and the feds demolished most of them in the 1970s. This time, however, we'll provide enough resources to housing authoritie­s to maintain them properly. It's all so easy!

Growing up in the Philadelph­ia area in the 1970s, I recall the massive protests and disputes that ensued after the city built housing towers in the midst of a settled urban neighborho­od of row houses. The project led to deep racial divisions and sparked an exodus to the suburbs. Such stories repeated themselves in big cities across the country.

Pruitt-Igoe in St. Louis was perhaps the most-notorious public-housing project in America, with its 33 towers that resembled those hideous Brutalist developmen­ts that defined the Soviet Union. They became a sea of crime, social dysfunctio­n and blight. Many people cheered when the federal government demolished the buildings only 18 years after the grand opening.

Obviously, modern planners won't take the exact same approach, but the government has, shall we say, a spotty record in maintainin­g its infrastruc­ture. During that era, the feds were the nation's largest slumlord. Urban theorist Jane Jacobs complained in her book, “The Death and Life of Great American Cities,” that government planners imposed their utopian vision on communitie­s — and didn't much consider the views of likely residents or neighbors.

Because of the obvious failures of cramming thousands of people into dystopian housing blocks, the feds moved onto a new-and-improved publichous­ing solution in the 1990s. The Clinton administra­tion embraced “scattered-site housing,” by which localities built (with federal funds) smaller public-housing projects — often single-family homes or duplexes — in the midst of settled neighborho­ods.

I watched the process closely in my small Ohio city — and they created the same problems but on a smaller scale. The new government houses cost much more to build than surroundin­g marketrate houses, but these homes gained a stigma. Ultimately, the government disrupted neighborho­ods and garnered resentment. Whatever the reasons, it did not create “vibrant, mixed-income” communitie­s.

These are different times, so they will yield different approaches, but a few points seem obvious. First, the government doesn't do anything well. Whatever design motif or strategy it chooses, it will impose them in a heavy-handed manner. The same government­s that let dam spillways collapse and freeways become pockmarked with potholes, will fail to maintain these new “social housing” projects — and it has little to do with inadequate funding.

Second, there isn't enough money — even in a world with a $31.8-trillion federal debt — to just build housing for everyone. The government currently subsidizes private developers to build affordable housing. Thanks to regulation­s, union work requiremen­ts and bureaucrac­y, that has led to low-income projects costing as much as $1 million a unit. Those same inefficien­cies will plague public housing.

The writers complain that developers aren't building enough housing even with the current effort to reduce housing regulation­s. Well, California has been restrictin­g housing supply for decades, so it's unrealisti­c to expect builders to solve the problem after only a few years of loosened restrictio­ns. The new approach is yielding results, but we need to make it easier to build housing across the board.

I'm old enough to have watched the government create the housing shortage. Only people who ignore relatively recent history would suggest more government is the solution.

 ?? BETH A. KEISER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A wrecking ball tears away at one of several Cabrini-Green public housing project buildings in Chicago in late 1995. Advocates want to build public housing again, this time referring to it as social housing.
BETH A. KEISER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A wrecking ball tears away at one of several Cabrini-Green public housing project buildings in Chicago in late 1995. Advocates want to build public housing again, this time referring to it as social housing.
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