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Code · BILL · 118th Congress · S. 4460 (Introduced in Senate) — To reduce regulatory barriers to housing, and for other purposes. · Sec. 2

Sec. 2. Findings

284 words·~1 min read·/bill/118/s/4460/is/section-2·

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Congress finds the following: As of 2021 in the United States, there was an estimated housing shortage of 3,890,000 homes. This housing supply shortage has resulted in a record number of cost-burdened households across regions and spanning the large and small cities, towns, and coastal and rural communities of the United States. Several factors contribute to the undersupply of housing in the United States, particularly workforce housing, including rising costs of construction, a shortage of labor, supply chain disruptions, and a lack of reliable funding sources.
Regulatory barriers at the State and local levels, such as zoning and land use regulations, also inhibit the creation of new housing to meet local and regional housing needs. State and local governments are proactively exploring solutions for reforming regulatory barriers, but additional resources, data, and models are needed to adequately address these challenges. While land use regulation is the responsibility of State and local governments, Federal support for necessary reforms is not a preemption of existing authority, and there is a need for the Federal Government to provide support and assistance to State and local governments that wish to undertake necessary reforms in a manner that fits their communities’ needs.
It is the policy of the United States to provide for fair housing throughout the country, and it is in the regional and national interest to have a supply of housing that is fair, affordable, adequate, and near opportunity. Therefore, zoning ordinances or systems of land use regulation that have the intent or effect of restricting housing opportunities based on economic status or income without interests that are substantial, legitimate, nondiscriminatory and that outweigh the regional need for housing are contrary to the regional and national interest.
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