The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
new committee will focus on housting, jobs
Proposals include subsidized lessors accepting vouchers.
The new chairman of the Atlanta City Council com- mittee charged with overseeing development and job growth established a set of goals for 2020 on Tuesday that are aimed at addressing the city’s two most pressing issues: a lack of affordable housing and economic mobility.
This year, City Council President Felicia Moore named first-term Council- man Matt Westmoreland to be the chair of the council’s Community Development and Human Services Committee.
Despite metro Atlanta hav
ing the nation’s fourth high- est population growth from 2017 to 2018, the city itself consistently ranks among the worst in terms of eco- nomic equality and mobility.
And according to the most recent figures from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, nearly half of low-income renters in metro Atlanta with the “worst case needs” receive no government assistance. That figure is the sixth high- est percentage in the nation.
“Worst case needs” renters are those who pay more than half of their income for rent, live in severely inadequate conditions, or both, according to HUD.
Among Westmoreland’s pr o posals would be to require landlords receiving city subsidies, including tax abatements, to accept vouchers from the city’s housing authority.
Landlords often decline to accept government vouchers for fear it will hurt the reputation and value of their properties.
Westmoreland is also calling for Invest Atlanta to adopt a metrics-driven economic development strategy “that urgently addresses community-focused development, the attraction and creation of middle-wage jobs in underserved areas.”
Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms has also made affordable housing a key emphasis of her administration.