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Promise of Federal Funds Offers Hope to El Paso and Other Cities Amid Affordable Housing Crisis

Housing costs have soared in the Texas city in recent years, while the state cuts back on funding.

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The downtown skyline of El Paso, Texas. Photo: Vallarie E/Getty Images.

Editors note: This story was updated on August 6.


 

Paul Lopez didn’t realize there were options for him outside of El Paso’s homeless shelter for veterans. The disabled Gulf War veteran owned a home in Illinois before fleeing from a woman he says began to physically abuse him shortly after they married in 2022. With a terminal cancer diagnosis hanging over his head, he decided it was better to die helpless in Texas, where it is warm, than it would have been to freeze in Illinois.

With the help of a friend, Lopez recently found himself a single room, paying rent of $550 per month. He can cover the cost with disability money he is receiving through the VA, but it took months of living at the shelter or on the streets to reach this point, housed and independent. Yet he is one missed check away from losing it all again.
 


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Affordable housing in El Paso, with a population of around 677,000 residents and an 18.3% poverty rate, is at a dire point, according to Abraham Gutierrez, assistant director with the Department of Community and Human Development in El Paso. More than 81,000 El Paso County households were considered “asset limited, income constrained, employed” in 2021 — meaning they were working full time but living at 20% above the federal poverty level. 

Meanwhile, the average cost of a home in the city has also increased by 61% since 2014.  Housing is affordable when individuals have enough money left over after paying housing costs (rent, mortgage, utilities, etc.) to afford other necessary budget expenses (food, transportation, child care, health care, etc.), researchers with the University of Texas in Austin wrote in a brief submitted to the 88th Texas Legislature. 

The city and residents like Lopez could soon see some relief from its affordable housing crisis: El Paso is one of several cities across the state entitled to millions of federal dollars this year as part of President Joe Biden’s 2022 promise to increase the availability of affordable housing nationwide over the next five years. Among those efforts is the expansion of the Home Investment Partnerships program, which gives grants to states and localities to fund the “building, buying, or rehabilitating [of] affordable housing for rent or homeownership.” The plan was lauded by affordable housing advocates and groups like the National Housing Conference, whose president  called it “the most comprehensive national housing policy we have seen in a generation.”

Texas, as a whole, was promised $148.2 million via that program that was divided among dozens of cities and counties from Brownsville and McAllen to Houston and Plano. In East Dallas, the city helped Kiva East, a mixed-income development, break ground in December 2022 with $2.48 million in HOME funds.

Supported by funding from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, El Paso’s Housing Opportunity Management Enterprises (HOME), which boasts a $91 million annual budget, is the 14th largest public housing authority in the U.S. and the largest in the state, assisting more than 52,000 residents. The funding it has received has declined significantly in recent years, however.
 


The average cost of a home in El Paso has also increased by 61% since 2014.


 
The budget for HUD has been cut by each presidential administration for decades, according to Gutierrez. Funding for individual housing departments, such as El Paso’s, trickles down through the national HUD program. States are allocated a certain amount of grant funding each year and they, in turn, allocate those funds to cities and counties across their states. State and local spending on housing and community development in Texas equaled just 0.9% of total expenditures in 2020, according to a brief submitted to the legislature by professors at UT Austin. Texas ranked 49th in state spending on affordable housing nationwide, ahead of Nebraska, 33rd in local spending and 40th in combined state and local spending. 

“The HUD entitlements have been slashed and cut significantly,” Gutierrez said. “We used to get double the amount that we get now; so what we’re dealing with right now is a very dire situation.”

Because COVID-19 forced certain operations to pause in 2020, it delayed the city’s use of previous grants from the HOME Investment Partnership program. What money was given to El Paso over the last few years accrued to $15 million that the city plans to use on specific high-ticket projects to increase the availability of affordable housing within the city. The submission period for project proposals closed at the end of July. Organizers intentionally left few restrictions on what could be proposed, Gutierrez said.

Gutierrez hopes those who submit proposals can also show how they will leverage other sources of funding to complete the project.

Using those funds over the last decade, the city has directed HUD HOME funds to multiple affordable housing projects, such as the Artspace El Paso Lofts and the Blue Flame Apartments, which have benefited El Paso communities, Gutierrez said. 

Given current inflation and housing affordability issues, among  other indicators, Gutierrez said that generating as much affordable housing as possible and finding projects to benefit those who are low income greatly impacts the community.

Affordable Housing Has Been Shown to Improve Work Performance

Affordable housing has always been a concern in Texas for low-income residents, said Jake Wegmann, a professor in the School of Architecture at the University of Texas in Austin. 

“It’s not like you’ve ever had a lot of great options if you were a low-income household in Texas,” he said. “It’s always been the case, and there has always been a shortage of quality and secure, well-located housing in that situation. 

“But what’s different now is, even middle-income people are struggling to find housing that meets their needs in more and more places.” 

That crisis extends to states and communities across the nation, which could benefit from the expansion of HUD HOME funds. Studies have shown that the HOME program “can increase homeownership, long-term affordability, and neighborhood choice for participating households,” according to the University of Wisconsin’s Population Health Institute, which also found that it could create jobs rehabilitating homes. Current projects funded by the program include low-income senior housing in Oregon, a rental development for mixed-income residents in Alaska and the rehabilitation of apartments in Montpelier, Vermont.

Research shows that public housing can improve the lives of children and their families, said Wegmann. While it goes against the stereotypes, affordable housing helps children living there to perform better in school and their parents to avoid the devastating impacts of eviction. Work performance improves in adults, and there are better health outcomes, Wegmann said. 

“The reality is, for things like HOME funds, they’re extremely valuable and helpful, but the amount of money is just so tiny compared to the need,” he said.

Austin, which is home to nearly 1 million people, recently approved several hundred million dollars in bonds to be used for affordable housing. Wegmann does not expect it will fully address the problem, though it is a good start. 

He likened current state and federal spending on affordable housing to trying to fill a bathtub using a cup while the drain at the bottom is unstoppered. It would take buckets to see any progress, and there is still a hole at the bottom.
 


“We also need to create affordable housing where it makes sense for our community to live. To be close to schools, close to hospitals, close to employment centers.”

~ Abraham Gutierrez, El Paso Department of Community and Human Development

 

Wegmann was heartened by the conversation around affordable housing on the floor of the 88th Legislature, which is a big step for the state. 

“The political will of elected officials in Texas to generate Texas’ own energy for [affordable housing] is close to nonexistent,” Wegmann said. “Which is not to say that the state legislature may not do some important things to help with housing.” 

The legislature will need to focus on the regulations stymying housing production on a local and state level to begin making an impact. Zoning laws may prevent projects from construction exactly where they are needed, and the state could step in and change that, Wegmann said. 

Policy changes that make it easier for apartments to be constructed near city cores would be a good start, Wegmann said. Policies need to align economic development with affordable housing, so city planning makes sense, and so the city can stop the migration of people from inside the city to the smaller satellite communities. 

“That’s why, for us, it’s extremely important that we don’t just create affordable housing, and just increase the stock of affordable housing — that’s important, for sure — but we also need to create affordable housing where it makes sense for our community to live. To be close to schools, close to hospitals, close to employment centers,” Gutierrez said. 

The cost to assist residents on the outskirts of town is immense and creates more pull on local funding. To get ahead of this, the city needs to make a robust investment in not only building new affordable housing, but in rehabilitating the vacant, older homes in the city’s center using the funds from the HUD HOME program, Gutierrez said. 

He also would like to see a federal review of the first-time home buyer program that restricts the purchase of homes worth more than $160,000. “I mean, good luck finding a house that’s $160,000 for this program,” he said. “We can’t use it. So we basically have a program that is not well adjusted to the times that we live in.” 

El Paso leadership has to be specific and intentional in its use of funding because it is so limited, said Gutierrez. Federal allocations improved, temporarily, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“I would have loved to see the same investment from the state,” he said.

Paul Lopez, the formerly homeless veteran, says that if the city had millions to spend on affordable housing, it would alleviate the homelessness crisis in the city.

“The ones that just need a break, [the money] would help them. It would get them established, off the streets.”


 

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