According to the Community Service Society’s annual Unheard Third survey, creating more affordable housing is a priority shared by both low-income and moderate- to high-income New Yorkers. Indeed, at least since the late Ed Koch launched his Ten-Year Plan in 1986, every mayor—Democrat or Republican—has built or preserved affordable housing. The difference for Mayor Bloomberg and whoever follows him is that the cheap land that underwrote the first phases of the city’s affordable housing effort has all but disappeared. Figuring out how to build and sustain housing that is actually affordable to people with low or moderate incomes is a challenge the city will face in the next four years.
So what can the mayoral candidates offer us by way of affordable housing? Here are the ideas candidates have floated:
Albanese says his plan will “build and preserve 210,000 units of affordable housing, creating 26,000 Living Wage jobs in the process”
De Blasio says he plans to build or preserve 190,000 units of affordable housing over 10 years
Quinn says her plan will produce 80,000 new units of affordable housing (half for the poor, half for the middle class) over 10 years
Thompson projects his plan will preserve or construct 120,000 units of affordable housing over eight years
Joe Lhota, George MacDonald and John Catsimatidis have all endorsed the Housing First! affordable housing plan, which calls for spending $8 billion to build or preserve 150,000 units of affordable housing over eight years.