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Robert Greenstein Iris J. Lav Board of Directors
David de Ferranti, Chair John R. Kramer, Vice Chair Henry J. Aaron Ken Apfel Barbara B. Blum Marian Wright Edelman James O. Gibson Beatrix Hamburg, M.D. Frank Mankiewicz Richard P. Nathan Marion Pines Sol Price Robert D. Reischauer Audrey Rowe Susan Sechler Juan Sepulveda, Jr. William Julius Wilson |
PRESIDENT’S BUDGET WOULD SLASH MAJOR
The President’s new budget proposes cutting the housing voucher program, the nation’s principal low-income housing assistance program, by 30 percent or 600,000 families in 2009, a new Center report explains. If approved, this would represent one of the deepest cuts made in any major program to help low-income families and elderly and disabled people in recent decades. “The President’s proposal would cause significant harm to hundreds of thousands of families across the nation by cutting off their housing assistance or dramatically raising their rents,” said CBPP Executive Director Robert Greenstein. “This would be the most severe cut in a low-income program since the early years of the Reagan Administration.” A critical element of the Administration’s plans for the voucher program — the substantial cut in voucher funding by 2009 — has received little public attention because it was not in the budget documents released by the White House on February 2. Instead, this cut is tucked away in a supplementary 1,000-page computer run released by the Office of Management and Budget and subsequently analyzed by the Center. (In all, the budget calls for some $45 billion in cuts in domestic discretionary programs in 2009.)
For 2005, the budget request for the housing voucher program, also known as the “Section 8” program, is more than $1.6 billion below the level needed to maintain current levels of assistance. HUD budget documents confirm that the proposed cut exceeds $1.6 billion. The Administration proposes larger cuts for later years. In 2009, the proposed cut is $4.6 billion. This would be the deepest cut to a major assistance program for the poor since the early years of the Reagan Administration. The proposal also would convert the program to a block grant to state and local housing agencies and abolish virtually all of the program’s basic standards, such as limits on how much tenants can be charged for rent and the targeting of vouchers primarily on poor rather than more middle-class households. Cuts Could Lead to Fewer Families Helped, Higher Rents, Less Focus on Poor To cope with the proposed cuts, the state and local housing agencies that run the voucher program would be forced to take one or more of the following steps:
Such steps would be necessary because the proposed funding cuts vastly exceed any savings that could be achieved through improved efficiency. “The Administration proposal would abandon three decades of progress in improving the voucher program,” according to Barbara Sard, director of housing policy at the Center and the report’s lead author, “and would undermine the program’s goal of providing access to affordable, decent housing for people who otherwise would be unable to secure it.” The housing voucher program was created by President Nixon in 1974 and has long enjoyed bipartisan support. It was recently cited by the congressionally chartered Millennial Housing Commission as “flexible, cost-effective, and successful in its mission.” The Center’s report, Administration Seeks Deep Cuts in Housing Vouchers and Conversion of Program to a Block Grant, is available at the Center’s website. # # # # The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities is a nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization and policy institute that conducts research and analysis on a range of government policies and programs. It is supported primarily by foundation grants. |