In The New York Times, Enterprise CEO Shaun Donovan discusses our new research showing insurance costs have become the fastest growing expense in housing, threatening the stability of affordable properties nationwide.
Ayrianne Parks, Enterprise’s senior director for policy advocacy and co-author of a new report on the insurance crisis, says that escalating premiums, and efforts to restore balance and stability in the insurance market represent a moment of opportunity for the affordable, multifamily housing sector.
This research aims to assess and characterize the aging permanent supportive housing stock in Los Angeles, ensuring that policymakers and housing officials have a clear picture of risk profiles.
Programs like the Detroit Home Repair Fund stabilize families, neighborhoods, and cities cost-effectively, but scaling them requires sustained public investment, writes Enterprise Senior Director Evelyn Zwiebach in this Crain's Detroit Business op-ed.
Preserving existing housing that is affordable to low-income households today is one of the most cost-effective ways to address California's housing crisis. A new senate bill would establish the Community Anti-Displacement and Preservation Program (CAPP), a new statewide program to acquire and preserve at-risk, currently unsubsidized affordable housing.
A year later after wildfires ripped through LA Country, nearly 12,000 lots have been cleared, but the journey to recovery is far from over. Burn scars still stretch through the Pacific Palisades and Altadena, and while some survivors have begun rebuilding, many remain displaced, entangled in red tape, and waiting for insurance payments.
Following the devastating Los Angeles wildfires last year, the California State Legislature introduced and heard dozens of wildfire-related bills during its first year of the two-year legislative cycle.