mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-18 12:14:33 -05:00
199 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
199 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
***** Reformatted. Please distribute.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CLINTON/GORE
|
|
ON AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR ALL AMERICANS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Home ownership and decent housing are an essential
|
|
part of the American Dream. For too many
|
|
Americans, that dream is unobtainable.
|
|
|
|
Home prices have climbed out of the reach of
|
|
middle class Americans. Affordable housing is
|
|
often difficult to find for the working poor and
|
|
urban residents. During the Reagan-Bush years,
|
|
federal appropriations for low-income housing
|
|
assistance has dropped dramatically -- and a
|
|
massive housing shortage has been the result.
|
|
Millions of Americans have been left homeless on
|
|
our streets.
|
|
|
|
We can reverse the trend by renewing our commitment
|
|
to provide decent, safe and affordable homes to all
|
|
Americans, and by forging a new alliance between
|
|
federal officials, local community leaders,
|
|
residents, and housing professionals. Bill Clinton
|
|
and Al Gore have a plan to make home ownership more
|
|
than a dream for millions of hard-working
|
|
Americans. We can't afford to do without it.
|
|
|
|
Make home ownership a reality
|
|
|
|
* Raise the ceiling on FHA mortgage insurance to
|
|
95 percent of the price of a home in an
|
|
average metropolitan area. The increase will
|
|
enable half a million American families to buy
|
|
their first homes.
|
|
|
|
* Make home ownership possible for more
|
|
Americans through federal support for
|
|
low-income, long-term housing buyout programs,
|
|
like Tampa's innovative Resurrection of
|
|
Affordable Housing Program. Innovative
|
|
packages of long-term subsidized financing
|
|
encourage low-income buyers to purchase,
|
|
restore and sell condemned housing.
|
|
|
|
* Require HUD and the Department of Justice
|
|
Civil Rights Division to aggressively enforce
|
|
existing fair housing civil rights laws, to
|
|
open up housing opportunities currently closed
|
|
by discrimination.
|
|
|
|
* Maintain the mortgage revenue bond program to
|
|
make affordable housing a reality for
|
|
thousands of Americans.
|
|
|
|
Help America's renters
|
|
|
|
* Strengthen the HOME program by giving more
|
|
authority and flexibility to the state and
|
|
local officials who administer it. Congress
|
|
created HOME in 1990 to provide additional,
|
|
quality rental housing for low-income
|
|
Americans, but at the Administrations urging
|
|
it limited localities choices in the use of
|
|
HOME funds.
|
|
|
|
* Permanently extend the Low Income Housing Tax
|
|
Credit to spur private development of low- and
|
|
very low-income housing; the credit helps
|
|
produce more than 120,000 homes a year.
|
|
|
|
Revitalize America through community development
|
|
|
|
|
|
* Put neighborhoods at the center of our efforts
|
|
to revitalize America by coordinating existing
|
|
housing, education, employment training,
|
|
health care, drug treatment and crime
|
|
prevention programs. Target resources
|
|
community by community to make the most of
|
|
scarce federal housing funds.
|
|
|
|
* Create a nationwide network of community
|
|
development banks to provide small loans to
|
|
low-income businesses and entrepreneurs in the
|
|
inner cities. These banks will also invest in
|
|
affordable housing, and help mobilize private
|
|
lenders.
|
|
|
|
* Create urban enterprise zones in stagnant
|
|
inner cities, but only for companies willing
|
|
to take responsibility. Business taxes and
|
|
federal regulations will be minimized to
|
|
provide incentives to set up shop. In return,
|
|
companies will have to make jobs for local
|
|
residents a top priority.
|
|
|
|
* Ease the credit crunch in our inner cities by
|
|
passing a more progressive Community
|
|
Reinvestment Act to prevent redlining ;
|
|
require financial institutions to invest in
|
|
homes in their communities.
|
|
|
|
New hope for low-income housing and public housing
|
|
residents
|
|
|
|
* Empower low-income housing residents to expel
|
|
drug dealers and criminals from the buildings
|
|
in which they live: encourage programs like
|
|
the Chicago Housing Authorities Operation
|
|
Clean Sweep, which has helped housing
|
|
residents clean up buildings and kick out
|
|
criminals; give tenants a greater role in
|
|
building management to instill pride and
|
|
responsibility, and reduce bureaucracy.
|
|
* Preserve our nations multi-billion dollar
|
|
investment in public housing by ensuring that
|
|
adequate funding for maintenance and upkeep is
|
|
included in the HUD budget.
|
|
|
|
Fighting homelessness
|
|
|
|
* Transfer 10 percent of HUD and other
|
|
government-controlled housing to community
|
|
non-profit organizations and churches to house
|
|
the homeless.
|
|
|
|
* Use the housing available at closed military
|
|
bases to house the homeless, giving preference
|
|
to homeless military veterans.
|
|
|
|
* Develop targeted strategies to help different
|
|
homeless populations those who need
|
|
supported living environments, those who need
|
|
residential drug and alcohol treatment, and
|
|
those who need housing for their families
|
|
because they can't afford it.
|
|
|
|
* Hold a Housing and Homelessness Summit with
|
|
urban leaders and mayors to create a new
|
|
consensus for poverty programs, funding
|
|
levels, and federal assistance for innovative
|
|
housing crisis solutions.
|
|
|
|
The Record
|
|
|
|
* Governor Clinton created the Arkansas
|
|
Development Finance Authority in 1985. ADFA
|
|
has a national reputation for developing
|
|
innovative and result-oriented housing
|
|
programs which have made possible the purchase
|
|
of thousands of homes for low and moderate
|
|
income Arkansans. ADFA also initiated a
|
|
five-state, first-of-its-kind bond issue which
|
|
preserved 46,000 low-income housing units
|
|
across the nation.
|
|
|
|
* Founded the Arkansas Interagency Council for
|
|
the Homeless in order to prepare a plan to
|
|
address homelessness in Arkansas. As a
|
|
result, thirty state agencies have worked
|
|
together in efforts to help the homeless.
|
|
|
|
* Senator Gore was an active supporter and
|
|
cosponsor of the National Affordable Housing
|
|
Act, which provides more affordable housing
|
|
for all Americans. The legislation also
|
|
encourages more partnerships between the
|
|
federal government, the private sector, and
|
|
state and local governments.
|
|
|
|
* Cosponsored Fair Housing Amendments which add
|
|
families and handicapped individuals to the
|
|
list of protected groups and streamline the
|
|
procedures for enforcing fair housing
|
|
legislation.
|
|
|
|
* Coauthored the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless
|
|
Assistance Act which authorized health care,
|
|
emergency food and shelter, child care
|
|
services and training for the homeless.
|
|
Senator Gore was also an original cosponsor
|
|
of the Stewart McKinney Reauthorization Act.
|
|
As the number of Americans who are homeless
|
|
increases, Senator Gore continues the effort
|
|
to fully fund Stewart McKinney homeless
|
|
assistance programs.
|
|
|
|
* Cosponsored the Rural Homelessness Assistance
|
|
Act, which creates a grant program to treat
|
|
and prevent rural homelessness. The
|
|
legislation also makes FHA inventory housing
|
|
available for use as transitional permanent
|
|
housing.
|