|  | Home | Contact Us | A to Z | 
|  | 
|  | |||||||||
|  | HUD Archives: News Releases | ||||||||
|  | 
 HUD REPORT SAYS HOUSING NEEDS HAVE DROPPED EIGHT PERCENTWASHINGTON - The number of very-low-income U.S. renter households that pay more than 50 percent of their monthly gross income for rent or live in severely inadequate housing dropped about eight percent between 1997 and 1999, according to a U.S. Housing and Urban Development report released to Congress today. HUD Secretary Andrew Cuomo said that the drop by some 440,000 households is a "welcome reversal of a ten-year trend in which the number of worst case needs grew. The decrease is strong evidence of the effectiveness of this Administration's economic and housing policies in helping the very lowest income households." Though the picture has improved, Cuomo noted that nearly five million renter households still fall into the worse case housing category that most needs rental assistance. Renter households with worst case needs are defined as those that have very low incomes (below 50 percent of their area's median income), do not already receive rental assistance from federal or state programs, and either pay more than half their income for housing or live in severely substandard housing. "The recent progress can be undone by an economic downturn that would slow or reverse the income growth among very-low-income households," Cuomo warned. "We are also concerned that the progress may be thwarted by substantial shortages of affordable housing." The report, A Report on Worst Case Needs in 1999: New Opportunity Amid Continuing Challenges (www.huduser.org/publications/affhsg/wc99.html), said that despite the progress in reducing worst case needs, the shortage of affordable housing has worsened. The number of units affordable to extremely low-income renters (those with incomes below 30 percent of the area's median) dropped between 1997 and 1999 at an accelerated rate, and shortages of housing both affordable and available to those renters worsened. With rents continuing to rise faster than inflation, basic pressures for above-average rent increases at the bottom end of the rental stock are further eroding the supply of rental units that are affordable without government subsidies, the report noted. Cuomo said that the report's findings demonstrate that the private market is not producing enough affordable rental housing to meet existing demand. "Effective government housing policies are essential to any further progress in reducing worst case needs," Cuomo said. "And an effective housing strategy must continue expansion of the number of Section 8 vouchers, which are a cost-efficient means of reducing worst case needs." Cuomo said it is also vital to continue and expand policies to promote economic growth, to raise incomes among low-income households and the production of more affordable rental housing. Among the report's major findings were: 
 A Report on Worst Case Needs in 1999: New Opportunity Amid Continuing Challenges (www.huduser.org/publications/affhsg/wc99.html) 
 | ||||||||
|  | |||||||||
|  | Content Archived: March 26, 2010 | ||||||||
|  | |||||||||
|  | |||||||||