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Article
State Mandates, Housing Elements, and Low-income Housing Production
Journal of Planning Literature (2017)
  • Darrel Ramsey-Musolf
Abstract
In order to create low-income housing opportunities and mitigate exclusionary zoning, in 1968 Congress mandated that municipalities receiving comprehensive planning funds must create a housing element. In tandem, many states mandated that municipal housing elements must accommodate low-income housing needs. After examining empirical research for California, Florida, Illinois, and Minnesota, this review found aspirational success because those states rewarded the municipal planning process. In order to increase low-income housing, this review argues for state housing policy reform. Under US Department of Housing and Urban Development’s revised fair housing rule, which requires an assessment of local data, states can no longer ignore the exclusionary behavior of municipalities.
Keywords
  • low-income housing,
  • municipalities,
  • California,
  • Florida,
  • Illinois,
  • Minnesota,
  • housing elements,
  • state mandates,
  • fair housing
Publication Date
Winter February 17, 2017
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/0885412217693569
Citation Information
Darrel Ramsey-Musolf. "State Mandates, Housing Elements, and Low-income Housing Production" Journal of Planning Literature Vol. 32 Iss. 2 (2017) p. 117 - 140
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/darrel_ramsey-musolf/6/
Creative Commons license
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons CC_BY International License.