The U.S. is short 4 million homes. This is affecting large, small, urban, rural, and suburban communities alike.
Hi Friend,
For most of us, the start of a new month means paying the biggest chunk of our personal budgets: rent or mortgage payments. These costs are getting out of control, and there’s a simple reason why: America isn’t building enough homes to keep up with the number of people who need them.
It’s not just a townhouse here or a condo building there; the U.S. is short 4 million homes. This is affecting large, small, urban, rural, and suburban communities alike.
We’re especially missing the starter homes that have for generations offered a way for families to build wealth and get into (and stay in) the middle class. This is crushing the dreams of the one-third of Americans who tell pollsters they feel hopeless about ever owning a home, and contributing to the hundreds of thousands experiencing homelessness.
But not all hope is lost. The commonsense majority supports pro-housing solutions – which No Labels has laid out in our Common Sense policy booklet – that’ll make a dent in the problem. That includes tax credits and financing for new homes, particularly in distressed urban and rural areas.
You can find these solutions at CommonSenseMajority.org ([link removed] ) , and let me know what you think in the poll below.
Do you believe that the next president should prioritize housing affordability and availability?
YES ▸
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NO ▸
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Thanks,
Ryan Clancy
Chief Strategist
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