Auggie wrote: ↑Nov 24, 2025
SB in BH wrote: ↑Nov 24, 2025
Ebsy wrote: ↑Nov 22, 2025
People don't move out of the City because rents are too high.
Exactly. The City is already the Affordable Housing capital of the region. People move in/out of the city based on external factors like employment and internal factors like quality of life (perceived safety, schools, amenities), and usually its those factors specific to their City neighborhood, rather than "The City" writ large.
If only they could actually afford parts of the city with better safety and amenities. Maybe they'd stay and not leave.
The problem with claiming STL is the "affordable housing capital" is that the vast majority of our affordable housing are in neighborhoods that have lost half their population in the last 20-30 years. Neighborhoods people actually want to live in are not affordable unless they have units specifically designated for certain income levels.
Yes, expensive neighborhoods are by definition not affordable to low-income households. That's part of their attraction to the people that live in those places. If you build a bunch of subsidized low-income housing in medium/high-income neighborhoods, let's say Lafayette Square, some percentage of the latter households will leave, undermining the safety and tax base that makes that neighborhood desirable in the first place and starting the downward spiral into blight. Then Lafayette Square becomes LaSalle Park. Yes, this is sad, and my heart bleeds for the less fortunate who can't afford to live in the most desirable City neighborhoods, but doubling down on subsidized low-income housing will only accelerate this dynamic, which is as old as recorded civilization, .
Rather than subsidizing more of something we already have (affordable housing), the City is better off focusing on attracting and retaining middle/high-income households, who can actually pay the taxes that sustain all City services, will participate in civic institutions, e.g., neighborhood associations, that promote neighborhood cohesiveness and safety, while obeying the law and expecting their neighbors to do likewise. If the City wants to stop the out-migration of lower-income households and eventually grow that population, it should focus on (a) concentrating public safety efforts in those places (b) identifying and dispossessing slumlords of their slums (including the corporate variety of slumlord), and (c) consolidating and improving neighborhood schools (and/or charter schools where the NH school is already closed/otherwise unsalvageable).
TL/DR: Focusing public policy efforts and resources on increasing affordable housing supply misses the mark by ignoring or undermining other important considerations like public safety and education and long-term neighborhood stability that are necessary to retain and grow the population across the economic spectrum.