Kevin Lattimore a Junior at North H.S. wrote (and Shawn Lewis posted):

According to Deb Landy of Common Bond, Minnesota's largest provider of
affordable housing, there are about 39,000 affordable housing units for the
80,000 Minnesota families who need them.

Bill Cullen responds:

Lets agree that if we ignore costs, housing is readily available.
Therefore, if the only issue is affordability, we don�t need to build MORE
housing, we need to make existing housing cost less or supplement low-income
families.

Think of it this way.  When low-income families cannot afford food, our
government supplies them with food stamps.  Our government does not start
subsidizing the purchase of farms, ranches, food processing plants and food
distribution centers solely to create a duplicate supply chain of
�affordable food.�

In housing however, our leaders propose just such a solution.  They want to
subsidize builders to create housing that operate in a different financial
realm than market rate housing.  The end result is a few developers and
non-profits control the affordable housing market.  Not only does this limit
the options of families with low incomes, it is expensive to taxpayers.  In
2001, the Minneapolis Community Development Agency reported that the average
subsidy for one affordable housing unit was $158,828!

Housing �vouchers provide affordable units at a much lower price than new
production programs by relying on older, already existing housing units (the
kind of housing that nearly all households live in).�  Claimed Ron Feldmen,
Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis in his August 2002
paper on affordable housing.  Mr. Feldman later stated that with an annual
subsidy of only $2000 per household we could move most low-income families
from unaffordable to affordable housing using market rate housing.

Remember this:  If we provide "rent stamps" instead of subsidizing a few
non-profits, then ALL HOUSING IS AFFORDABLE.  The beauty, as clearly
outlined by Mr. Feldman, is that it costs less too.

Bill Cullen.
Hopkins & Uptown.

TEMPORARY REMINDER:
1. Don't feed the troll! Ignore obvious flame-bait.
2. If you don't like what's being discussed here, don't complain - change the subject 
(Mpls-specific, of course.)

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