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Public
Employee Press Mail and Media Ending
rent controls will end housing shortage Id like
to respond to the editorial The power of the people in the June 2008
issue.
While politicians are responsible for the mounting foreclosures
and the lack of affordable housing in New YorkCity, conservatives are hardly the
only culprit. During the Carter administration, a Democrat and Republican consensus
helped pass the Community Reinvestment Act to stem redlining practices. Banks
were threatened with prosecutions if they didnt comply, and many felt pressures
to lend to those with dubious credit histories.
New York City politicians
(overwhelmingly Democrats) are responsible for 65 years of rent controls. According
to the Cato Institute, in a survey of 75 of the worlds leading economists
done during the 1980s, J.R. Kearl and his colleagues concluded that A ceiling
on rents will reduce the quality and quantity of housing.
I would
much rather just have city taxpayer-funded subsidies for low-income individuals
or those too disabled to move. How fair is it to have some tenant pay far less
rent than his neighbor just because hes been there longer? I recommend that
rent control advocates visit other cities without controls, such as Chicago, and
note the greater availability of moderately priced housing.
Yes, ending
controls may force some people to move, but it sure beats a perennial housing
shortage. Steven Kalka Computer
Specialist, Local 2627 | |