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  6. Rebuilding our Neighborhoods: Improving New York State Housing Policy to Better Meet Upstate Needs

Rebuilding our Neighborhoods: Improving New York State Housing Policy to Better Meet Upstate Needs

File(s)
HousingNeighborhoods__Rebuilding_Our_Neighborhoods.pdf (1.15 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/73399
Collections
Buffalo Commons
Author
Armstrong, Anthony
Bartley, Aaron
Kelly, Daniel
Magavern, Sam
Abstract

New York faces a wide variety of housing challenges. While in the New York City region, where the population is growing, availability and affordability are the most pressing concerns, upstate regions have a different set of problems stemming from population loss, housing vacancy, abandonment, and deterioration. To address the full range of issues, state housing policy needs a variety of tools in its tool box. This policy brief discusses four ways that state housing policy can better address the needs of upstate regions such as Buffalo: Support holistic neighborhood revitalization, using Buffalo’s award-winning Green Development Zone as a model; Restore and enhance funding streams for small projects and housing repairs; Adjust New York’s Low Income Housing Tax Credit Qualified Allocation Plan to better address upstate needs; and Revise the DHCR Design Handbook to better facilitate rehabilitation projects.

Date Issued
2013-08-01
Keywords
Buffalo
•
Housing/Neighborhoods
•
Neighborhood Renewal
•
Policies and Programs
•
Report
•
Other
•
Poverty/Income Inequality
Type
article

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