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Reinventing Public Housing: Is the Atlanta Model Right
for Your City?
By Howard
Husock
Although public housing is commonly associated with big cities,
local authorities own and manage almost 1,200,000 housing
units in more than 3,000 municipalities throughout the United
States. An imaginative management approach to public housing
holds the potential to improve not just housing conditions
but also the finances and real-estate-development climates
in cities across America.
Local officialsincluding housing-authority board memberswho
are contemplating whether a new approach is worth trying ought
to consider the following questions:
- Are local public-housing properties increasingly difficult
and expensive to maintain?
- Is operating and capital assistance increasingly limited
or unreliable?
- Are local public-housing projects known for high crime
rates and other social dysfunction?
- Do local public housing properties inhibit new investment
in adjoining parts of the municipality?
- Is there reason to believe that private developers, whether
of subsidized housing or commercial or industrial property,
would be willing to build on public-housing sites?
If the answer to any of these questions is yes, authorities
in your city ought to consider the lessons developed by the
unusually innovative housing authority in Atlanta, Georgia.
In 1994, the Atlanta Housing Authority (AHA)[1]
owned and operated almost 14,300 apartments in forty-three
housing developments, including twenty-six large "family
projects." (The remainder were smaller buildings reserved
for the elderly.) By mid-2010, the AHA expects to have demolished
virtually all those "family development" units and
five of the elderly buidlings. (It will continue to ownbut
not to manage11 buildings for housing the elderly (a
total of 1,861 units) and two small family properties (a total
of 92 units).
At the same time, the total population served by the AHA
is larger (50,000) than before demolition beganlarger,
even, than it was in 1994. AHA-assisted tenants are now almost
exclusively housed in privately owned buildings, either apartments
paid for by housing-choice vouchers or public-housing units
set aside in new mixed-use, mixed-income communities in which
low-income households are a minority and whose development
and construction has sparked a revival in adjoining neighborhoods.
Notably, the terms of such housing assistance have also been
dramatically changed, thanks particularly to higher expectations
and standards, including a work requirement for AHA-assisted
tenants.
Rather than being an owner/manager of a fixed set of properties,
the AHA today is better characterized as "an integrated
real-estate developer and asset manager," says its Chief
Executive Officer, Renee Lewis Glover. The AHA has outsourced
many of its management functions to private companies and
reduced the number of people it employs from 1,500 to 300.
"Unfreezing" Public Housing
Until recently, it was widely expected that land used for
public housing would remain dedicated to subsidized apartments
in perpetuity. Housing authorities had this "fixed-use"
model in mind as conditions in public-housing projects began
to rapidly deteriorate in the 1970s and 1980s. Management
made marginal improvements to the quality of life by evicting
felons, seeking additional operating assistance, and seeking
state or federal monies for major capital improvements. In
Atlanta and elsewhere, public-housing projects became isolated
campuses of concentrated poverty, crime, family dysfunction,
and children failing at low performing schoolswith ill-effects
on surrounding parts of the city.
In the years since, however, ambitious public-housing authorities
like those in Atlanta, Chicago, Seattle, and Philadelphia
have developed techniques for significantly improving living
conditions and the future life prospects for public-housing
assisted households, jump-starting real-estate development,
and increasing the property-tax base in areas blighted by
dystopian projects. Atlanta, in partnerships with excellent
private sector developers, has used federal grants such as
the HOPE VI program, introduced during the first Bush administration
and initiated during the Clinton years, to demolish obsolete
and poorly maintained, high-crime, "distressed projects"environments
that Renee Glover does not hesitate to call "toxic."[2]
But the Atlanta model goes far beyond demolition and replacement
housing. Its new "asset management" approach has
led the AHA to new initiatives that range widely but are unified
by an overarching insight: that the land it owns can be
leased or even sold and, in the process, put to new uses that
support community building and economic development.
To date, the AHA has replaced thirteen distressed public-housing
projects with new mixed-use, mixed-income communities, with
the residential components featuring 7,148 total rental units,
of which 3,684 are for public housing-eligible tenants and
2,108 for sale as townhomes and detached single family homes,
of which 574 are affordable for purchase by low income persons.
These new communities are developed and owned by private/public
partnerships, funded with public and private funds using private
sector market principles and underwriting standards and requirements,
and are privately managed. These new communities, such as
Centennial Place and Villages of East Lake, have become nationally
known.[3]
Some of the tools used in Atlantasuch as major competitive
federal grants for relocation, demolition, long-term case
management, master planning and design of new housing, as
well as operating assistance to pay the operating costs (when
added to tenant rents) for units set aside (up to 40 percent)
for public-housing-eligible tenantsare not available
to all housing authorities. But a new generation of private
firms (including the Atlanta-based Integral Group and Columbia
Residential) as a result of the mixed-use, mixed-income community
revitalization has sprung up to help local authorities gain
access to private capital and put public-housing properties
to new purposes. Atlanta also received a "moving to work"
designation and entered into an agreement with HUD in 2003,
giving it discretion to merge various funding and revenues
into a single general fund and to pilot locally created initiatives
to address affordable housing needs in tune with the local
Atlanta market. And key elements of the Atlanta model can
be employed by any authority. These include:
1. Long-term lease of cleared land owned by the AHA.
Such a lease requires approval from the Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD) to change the "deed and trust"
that typically governs land owned by a public-housing authority.
To date, the AHA has used the resulting cleared land to reposition
these distressed projects into market rate quality mixed-use,
mixed-income communities. In cooperation, however, with the
city's economic development authority (the Atlanta Development
Authority), the AHA is considering whether (depending on market
and neighborhood conditions and other factors) it may allow
entirely distinct commercial uses, such as retail stores,
offices, or industrial parks, and put the sales proceeds that
it realizes to work in other parts of the city, in keeping
with the AHA's charter "to develop, acquire, lease and
operate affordable housing for low-income families."
Among the key advantages of this approach (in the view of
the Development Authority) is that developers will gain access
to large parcels of land that have already been assembled
and have but one owner. No need, in other words, for eminent-domain
procedures or other time-consuming legal changes related to
land use.
2. Housing vouchers and work requirements. Housing-choice
vouchers (commonly known as Section 8 housing vouchers) are
central to the Atlanta model, just as they have been key to
assisting public-housing tenants in other cities (such as
Chicago and Philadelphia) when old public-housing projects
were torn down. Some 60 percent of households formerly housed
in now-demolished Atlanta public housing have chosen to receive
vouchers rather than move into the new mixed-use, mixed-income
communities. (Ex-residents have the right to apply to return
but have no guarantee of doing so; the mixed-income rental
communities include significantly fewer apartments for those
of the lowest incomes.) But Atlantawith a focus not
merely on relocating public-housing tenants but encouraging
their economic upward mobilityhas introduced an important
twist to the voucher program, as a result of lessons learned
from its mixed-use, mixed-income revitalization program: those
who would continue to receive housing assistance must agree
to a work requirement. As discussed above, AHA signed a moving-to-work
agreement with HUD allowing AHA to, among other things, test
ways of promoting upward mobility for its residents. AHA's
policy requires at least one family member to "work
thirty hours a week or be enrolled in school full-time."
Labor-force participation among AHA clients has soared, as
has average annual income for non-elderly and non-disabled
households. In "traditional" Atlanta public housing,
less than 20 percent of household heads worked; in one well-known
project, the figure was just 13 percent. By 2009, nearly 70
percent were working (Atlanta allows enrollment in higher
education and short-term training courses to fulfill the work
requirement, as well). Of those receiving housing vouchers,
some 30 percent have moved to other (suburban) jurisdictions,
although an estimated 70 percent have remained in the Atlanta
area. The number of housing authorities eligible to participate
in the Moving to Work program is limited. Yet HUD allows any
housing authority to give preference in its distribution of
housing vouchers to heads-of-households who have a job or
promise to get and keep one. Doing so can be an important
signal.
3. Tax-increment financing. In areas around and including
the new mixed-use, mixed-income communities built on or near
former AHA real estate, tax-increment financing districts
(or, as they are known in Atlanta, "tax allocation districts")
ensure that a portion of the new property taxes generated
by what had been untaxed land will help build and maintain
new roads, sewers, and parks. In such arrangements, a portion
of property taxes is dedicated to the improvements in the
designated area; Atlanta could devote up to 10 percent. AHA
claims that the mixed-use, mixed-income revitalization program
has resulted in total investment on the various former public
housing sites and in surrounding neighborhoods of approximately
$2.456 billion. Significantly, in and around areas redeveloped
through the AHA, the assessed value of property has increased
since 1998 by some $1.1 billion, according to the Atlanta
Development Authority. [4]
4. Contracts with private owners. Many housing authorities
have experienced difficulty making use of their full appropriations
for housing vouchers (which are typically administered by
the same authorities that manage traditional public-housing
projects). This reflects the fact that tenants are not always
able to find property owners who will accept their vouchers
and that some property owners have had difficulty with voucher
tenants. Atlanta has addressed these issues through the rules
governing leasing of voucher-paid units. In addition to these
issues and as a strategic effort to facilitate additional
mixed-income housing opportunities throughout the City of
Atlanta, AHA used its moving to work agreement (discussed
above) to create its project-based rental assistance (PBRA)
programten-year renewable agreements (which are financeable),
competitively awarded to private owners, to set aside some
number of rental units for voucher holders.[5]
The AHA has reached agreements for more than 3,000 housing
units in privately-owned communities throughout the city.
Notably, the agreements give private property owners the right
to establish their own site-based waiting lists and screen
tenants both at the time of application and every year thereafter.
Owners have the right to review and enforce "lease compliance,
housekeeping performance based on a home visit, credit reports,
utility records and criminal background histories." An
"unsatisfactory screening report" can lead to "termination
or nonrenewal of the resident household's lease."
5. A mix of financing. In the thirteen mixed-use,
mixed-income communities built on the former sites of "obsolete"
public-housing projects, the AHA has worked with private owners/developers
using a variety of sources of public and private capital and
operating subsidies. The long-term ground lease is itself
an investment made by the Housing Authority which, in most
cases, can be made at minimal cost to the development partner.
New mixed-use, mixed-income developments are complex in their
financing structure. The cost of day-to-day management is
supported by a series of funding "streams": federal
public-housing operating-assistance or housing-choice vouchers,
along with rents collected from tenants for up to 40 percent
of units; the proceeds from the syndication of Federal Low
Income Housing Tax Credits (allocated by the federal government
to state governmental agencies which award tax credits on
a competitive basis to individual projects) in exchange for
performance guarantees from the private developers who are
required to provide below-market rents to moderate-income
renters; first mortgage debt from banks and other financial
institutions providing capital for the private developer;
and direct investment (in the form of subordinated debt) from
the housing authority for those apartments that the Authority
itself will control. The Authority's funds come primarily
from HOPE VI and other public housing development grants.
The city has paid for public improvements in and around the
new developments through funds from "specialty"
(dedicated use) bond issues. It is important for authorities
to keep in mind that approaching their mission in a new way
does not mean that they must undertake these sorts of mixed-income
projects, which clearly have a great many moving parts. It
may well be, however, that this approach is the most politically
acceptable, as a replacement for distressed projects.
6. Case management. The AHA does not take the view
that relocation coupled with a work requirement will lead
automatically to an easy transition for all tenants. Indeed,
it found that there were socialization and behavior problems
associated with former housing-project tenants who were able
to obtain units in replacement housing. That prompted what
the AHA calls a "midcourse correction"a decision
to retain private counseling and relocation services to provide
long-term (three to five years) individual human development
services to former project tenants. One firm providing such
services promises, for instance, that "each family member
is supported by a well-trained Family Support Coordinator"
who helps with such matters as "basic motivation and
life skills; education, training, and employment opportunities;
career development and increased employability."[6]
A key element of the AHA's course correction was a requirement
that such counseling occur not in a class setting but individually,
in a tenant's home.
Benefits and Risks of Reinvented Public Housing
What's going on in Atlanta must be understood as an exciting
experimentbut an experiment nonetheless. The mere fact
of the development of new, mixed-use, mixed-income communities
with a variety of amenitiesinfinitely more attractive
today than the projects they replaceddoes not guarantee
that these properties will retain their value and attractiveness.
Developers are candid in saying that successful long-term
upkeep will depend on attracting market-rate owners and tenants,
lest these new developments themselves become a locus of the
"concentrated poverty" that is the named enemy of
Atlanta's effort. To date, the mixed-use, mixed-income communities
remain attractive, although occasional complaints about the
behavior of some tenants in developments such as the nationally
known Centennial Place site can be found online. (Management
notes, not unfairly, that complaints are inevitable in major
housing complexes, for reasons that may be quite personal.)
There is a great deal of reassurance provided, however, by
the Atlanta work requirement. Indeed, Carol Naughton of Atlanta's
New Community Ventures, which is seeking to popularize the
Atlanta model, says:
The work requirement is absolutely essential for mixed-income
communities to work and for families to move up and out of
poverty. One of the reasons that market-rate residents move
into mixed-income communities which include public-housing-assisted
residents is that everyone plays by the same rules, including
that everyone works, everyone takes care of their home, and
everyone makes sure their kids go to school. Although the
housing provides homes for families within a very broad range
of incomes, people share the same values.
Still, the decision to set aside a significant percentage
of housing units in the new communities for the very poor
inevitably has consequences. Atlanta has found that, notwithstanding
economic integration, attractive grounds and good maintenance,
commercial retailers such as grocery stores have not gravitated
toward the new mixed-income developments. Management firms
report that major chains base such decisions on the median
income of residents, a median pulled lower by public-housing-eligible
tenants.
One would be naïve, however, to think that a demolition/relocation
approach to public housing would be uncontroversial. Although
tenant votes in Atlanta indicated an overwhelming preference
for relocation, there was nonetheless organized resistance,
some of which has continued. The Atlanta Progressive News
charged that the AHA was clearing the way for big business
at the expense of the poor.[7] In other
words, clearing and "repurposing" housing-authority
land will stir concern. So, too, will the dispersion of former
housing-project tenants to suburban areas, where they may
be associated with social problems or even bring with them
social and behavioral problems. In Atlanta, for instance,
a group dedicated to combating gang violence (through the
establishment of so-called Violence-Free Zones in schools)
reports that it is planning to bring its program to suburban
counties where, in its view, the voucher-choice program has
introduced incipient gang problems. In effect, the AHA is
betting that in a better neighborhood environmentand
in the context of a work requirementtenants who may
have posed problems in public-housing projects are less likely
to act similarly. It's a bold bet that may or may not pay
off.
As the AHA's Chief Executive Officer, Renee Glover, puts
it:
Rather than address the real issues, many would prefer to
debate whether the projects are really communities and whether
poor people (who the society, by and large has marginalized
and see as incapable because of their status as public housing
residents) would be better off in the projects because as
bad and destructive as they are, these are their "communities."
Therefore, the issues are intentionally debated around the
margins. For example: Where will the people go? Will the people
be capable of living in "mainstream" America? Will
they destroy the communities into which they move? Will they
choose to move to better communities? Will they move next
to me? Are they moving to places that they have not earned
or do not deserve? Will crime go up when they bring their
low morals and incapacity to my neighborhood? What is the
best "next" for public-housing residents?
No doubt, these questions are important, and they must be
answered. But as the starting point for decision making,
I think we can all agree that doing nothing or continuing
to do things that have failed in the past makes no sense.
There is simply too much at stake.
NOTES
- See http://www.atlantahousing.org/#.
- See Henry G. Cisneros and Lora Engdahl, eds., From
Despair to Hope: Hope VI and the New Promise of Public Housing
in America's Cities (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution
Press, 2009).
- See http://www.atlantahousing.org/portfolio/index.cfm?fuseaction=signature.
- See
www.atlantada.com.
- See http://www.atlantahousing.org/pdfs/AHA_FY_2007_Annual_Report.pdf.
- See http://www.iyfp.org/programs.htm.
- http://www.atlantaprogressivenews.com/news/0158.html
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| BOOKS |
· America's Trillion-Dollar Housing Mistake: The Failure of American Housing Policy
Howard Husock (Ivan R. Dee 2003)
· Scarcity by Design: The Legacy of New York's Housing Policies
Peter D. Salins and Gerard Mildner (Harvard University Press December 1992)
· New York Unbound: The City and the Politics of the Future
Peter D. Salins, (Basil Blackwell, November 1988)
MORE BOOKS ON PUBLIC HOUSING >>
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| RESEARCH |
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· Preserving Affordable Housing: The Los Angeles Systematic Code Enforcement Program
Civic Bulletin 47, November 2006
· This Works: Expanding Urban Housing
Michael Schill, Jerry J. Salama, and Richard T. Roberts, Civic Bulletin 35, March 2003
· Unleashing the Private Sector: How Government Policy Can Facilitate Private Solutions to New York City’s Housing Crisis
Richard T. Roberts, Civic Bulletin 30, February 2003
MORE RESEARCH ON PUBLIC HOUSING >>
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| ARTICLES/OP-EDS |
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· Puffing The Projects
Howard Husock, New York Post, 06-08-09
· Public-Housing Hope
Julia Vitullo-Martin, New York Post, 05-18-09
· Lessons In Public Housing
Julia Vitullo-Martin, Forbes.com, 05-06-09
· Gimme Shelter
Julia Vitullo-Martin, New York Post, 02-22-09
· Build Big, Mr. President
Howard Husock, City Journal, 1-23-09
· Slums of Hope
Howard Husock, City Journal, Winter 2009
· Housing Goals We Can't Afford
Howard Husock, The New York Times, 12-11-08
MORE ARTICLES ON PUBLIC HOUSING >>
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| PODCASTS |
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· Hope Cohen interviews economist Rosemary Scanlon about her report 'Raise the Roof, Lower the Costs'
Podcast: Interview, Part 1, 07-08-08
· Hope Cohen interviews economist Rosemary Scanlon about her report 'Raise the Roof, Lower the Costs'
Podcast: Interview, Part 2, 07-07-08
MORE PODCASTS ON PUBLIC HOUSING >>
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HOWARD HUSOCK
Howard Husock is the Vice President, Policy Research and the Director of
the Manhattan Institute's Social Entrepreneurship Initiative. He was formerly
the director of case studies in public policy and management at Harvard
University's Kennedy School of Government. Husock a prolific writer on housing
and urban policy issues.
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