Sept. 5
In the past five years, housing prices in Fairfax County, Va., have grown 12 times as fast as household incomes. The county’s median family would have to spend 54 percent of its income to afford the median home; in 2000, the figure was 26 percent. The situation is so dire that Fairfax has begun offering housing subsidies to families earning $90,000 a year.
The scarcity of affordable housing is a deepening national crisis, and not just for inner-city families on welfare. The problem has moved to the suburbs, where service workers cram their families into overcrowded apartments, college graduates crash with their parents, and firefighters, police officers and teachers can’t afford to live in the communities they serve.
Homeownership is near an all-time high, but the gap is growing between the Owns and the Own-Nots — as well as the Owns and the Owns-80-Miles-From-Work. One-third of Americans spend at least 30 percent of their income on housing — the federal definition of an “unaffordable” burden. Half the working poor spend at least 50 percent of their income on rent, a “critical” burden.
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