Housing for All Act of 2025
The Housing for All Act of 2025 aims to end homelessness by funding affordable housing infrastructure, expanding rental assistance vouchers, and investing in community support serv
The Housing for All Act of 2025 aims to end homelessness by funding affordable housing infrastructure, expanding rental assistance vouchers, and investing in community support serv
The Housing for All Act of 2025 is a comprehensive legislative proposal designed to combat the national housing shortage and end homelessness in the United States. The bill addresses these issues through a three-pronged approach: increasing funding for affordable housing infrastructure, expanding rental assistance for low-income individuals, and investing in innovative, community-driven support services.
The bill authorizes significant financial investments to increase the supply of affordable housing:
* Housing Trust Fund: Authorizes $45 billion per year from 2025 through 2034.
* HOME Investment Partnerships Program: Authorizes $40 billion for fiscal year 2025.
* Supportive Housing: Provides billions in funding for the Section 202 program (elderly) and Section 811 program (people with disabilities).
* Racial Equity: Establishes the Commission on Racial Equity in Housing to research and address the impacts of structural racism on homelessness and housing instability.
The Act seeks to move people from shelters into permanent housing through expanded subsidies:
* Housing Choice Voucher Expansion: Allocates 500,000 incremental vouchers in 2025, increasing by 500,000 each year through 2028. Notably, it aims to make these vouchers an entitlement for all eligible households after five years.
* Project-Based Rental Assistance: Authorizes $14.5 billion to construct or rehabilitate multifamily housing, prioritizing "high opportunity" areas to prevent displacement.
* Grant Programs: Provides $15 billion for the Continuum of Care program and $5 billion for the Emergency Solutions Grant program.
* Eviction Data: Mandates a GAO report to analyze the impact of pandemic-era eviction moratoriums and identify barriers to collecting eviction data.
The bill introduces targeted grants for non-traditional housing and support strategies:
* Safe Parking Programs: Grants up to $5 million per entity to provide safe overnight parking and rehousing services for people living in vehicles.
* Adaptive Reuse: Allocates $500 million to convert hotels, motels, and commercial spaces (like malls) into permanent supportive housing.
* Legal & Crisis Support: Creates an $800 million eviction protection grant program for free legal counsel and provides funding for Mobile Crisis Intervention Teams as an alternative to police response for mental health crises.
* Holistic Integration: Provides grants for library consortiums to connect homeless individuals with resources and establishes a program to coordinate behavioral health care with housing services.
* Climate & Transit: Promotes "infill housing" (building on underused urban land) and transit-oriented development to reduce carbon emissions.
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