The journey from there to here

As the debate goes on about how to deal with poverty, I am inclined to think that the US government bears a major share of the blame for its continuance.

The most I have ever earned in a single year, as of December 2006 was $42,000. That was part of a three year stretch where I made over $100K. But I worked long hours for that (In the $42,000 year, for instance, I figured I put in about 350 working days), and I paid the price. The majority of my working career has been in the $20-30k range, usually hovering towards the low end. We've raised our family, always had food to eat, always had a roof over our heads. Not once have we had to apply for utility assistance, twice we have had to apply for food stamps, once we had to apply for TANF (until my unemployment came through), and twice for Medical Assistance. Other than that, always and exclusively any assistance we have received has come from private charities. I have waited in line for my number to be called for day labor employment. Over the years, I've been a plumber, a miner, a factory worker, a dishwasher, a prep cook, a busboy, a group home manager, a printer, a tech support person, a cashier, a stockboy, a campaign staffer and a lobbyist. I've seen a wide variety of people in my dealings.

I give you the resume simply to establish that I know something about what it's like to be working poor. That I speak with experience. I have worked with housing advocates in Chicago, homeless advocates in Wisconsin, Illinois, Oklahoma, Washington, Nevada, and Texas. One thing that my experiences have convinced me of, though, is that the major hurdle to eliminating poverty is the government itself.

See, in most markets where I have lived, the most substantial portion of my budget is dedicated to housing. And housing is one part of the budget that's pretty much nonnegotiable. And one of the most significant driving forces in the cost of housing is the government itself. Four factors I can identify that drive up the cost of housing are permitting, zoning, environmental regulations, and property taxes.

Now, understand I realize all of these laws have a well intentioned purpose. Rather than take them all on with one sweeping statement, I'm going to hit on what I view as the pros and cons of each. There are also common denominators of all of these, which I will bring up at the end:

Permitting, at least in theory, guarantees a minimum standard of livability for housing. I don't think it does what it is intended to do, however, as in my personal experience many of the working poor live in substandard housing that should be condemned but isn't because, well, who's going to report the landlord if it means you get kicked out on the streets? These houses usually rent for well under market value, but they are also often disease ridden vermin infested deathtraps. In one home where I lived, it was discovered that, rather than fix faulty plumbing in the house, the landlord, or, according to his allegations, the previous tenant, simply cut the sewer pipe in the basemant and allowed the sewage to dump out. I paid $350 a month for that rathole, and didn't notice the problem because we lived on the second floor (ironically, when we were living there, Habitat for Humanity refused to process our application because our dwelling wasn't certified as substandard housing).

Because of the cost of permits, and of contractors, many landlords simply forego these costs and rent to tenants who won't squeal. They buy and sell these properties  so fast that it's hard for housing inspectors to keep up. Tenants don't squeal because security deposits cost money, and it is not uncommon for it to cost two to three months' salary to move.

Zoning is a similar issue. Again, I know exactly why it's there. Businesses would be adversely affected if their storefronts were intermingled with dwellings for people who are desperately poor, and who, by their very presence, could bring crime into the neighborhood. The problem is, there are too many areas where mixed zoning would be more appropriate.

At one point we seriously gave consideration to renting 2400 square feet of floor space with three separate rooms, a full bathroom, and an open area for $400 a month. It would have been a workable arrangement, but if caught, would have meant a large fine. As with the permitting issue, this leads to slumlords renting upper floors of their commercially zoned properties to people who see getting evicted every once in awhile as part of the proper turn of events, and who won't squeal on the landlord if things are not kept up to snuff.

Environmental regulations can hamper a building project quicker than anything. And they can and have in some instances, harmed species rather than helping them, as it is not uncommon for someone, upon finding a rare species to kill it and destroy the evidence rather than have it declared as habitat for an endangered species. This adds to the cost of the property they CAN develop, as it is passed on to the tenant as a cost.

Property taxes hurt the poor worst of all because they are the first cost passed onto a tenant. A landlord can't rent at a loss, so the tenant pays the taxes first, then the landlord's profit.

There is no easy answer to any of these. While doing away with these factors may seem appealing, the truth is, they would hurt more than help. Do away with permitting entirely and it's a virtual certainty that poorly constructed slums will pop up without any regulation in place to prevent them. Do away with zoning, and you'll have a flophouse next to the high end department store, killing business because of the hassle of dealing with panhandlers, and increasing crime because of the number of pickpockets, car thieves, etc. Do away with environmental regulations entirely and it will put us back to square one. As a member of a generation that has lived most of my life with unleaded fuel and certain checks on pollutants, I'm quite happy living with rivers that don't catch fire, thank you. And do away with property taxes and you lose a major source of revenue for local and county governments.

What we need are comprehensive solutions from ALL players. Not just bipartisan, but tripartisan, quadripartisan, whatever it takes. We need our politicians to talk not just to those involved in ministry and outreach to the poor, but to those involved in the daily PROCESS of poverty. Those who live their lives on sparse budget, particularly those who do so successfully.

On another blog I was challenged when I stated that I spend under $300/month on the food budget for my family of seven. I do it because, simply, I've learned HOW to do it. And I have skills that have resulted from learning how to do it that I can and should be using to teach others. And, truth be told, I could save even more if I could get other members of the community to join with me in a concerted effort to do so.

As housing is usually the single most crippling factor, it's one where we should concentrate our efforts. I propose we do so with a series of tax exemptions for low income landlords who keep their rentals up to a certain standard of livability. I propose we implement an urban homesteading act, allowing a tax credit for landowners to surrender their properties, and allowing families to move in with a filing fee, and matching them with contractors and suppliers who will provide them with goods and services for free or reduced cost. I propose we do a better job of networking people with ideas to help provide viable, long term solutions that are more than just window dressing.

I'll be the first to admit my ideas are just one perspective. But as someone who has managed to live successfully on a budget many people would consider unhrealistic, I think my perspective needs to be on the table. As someone who's lived it, I would take my advice quicker than I would take that of some silver spoon fed politician.

 


Comments (Page 1)
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on Jan 10, 2007
damn good article!

i'm not an "expert" either, but i have been in positions with all the money i wanted to spend, and i've lived in my truck...so i've seen both sides as well. and try to maintain a budget every month in our family as well. i believe these ideas are well thought out. i could support such a direction.
on Jan 10, 2007


(I am inclined to think that the US government bears a major share of the blame for its continuance).

Now you talking. Very well put.

That was and still is my point all along. And unless we, the tax payers, force the governmenet to do that, and do it while recognizing that it is not a favor from them but it is our rights and we are paying for it. BUT, we have to elect the right i.e. qualified and honest people not the people we like "to have a beer with". and it is not only housing the main problem specially for the poor. Health care is another major hurdle. in every other western country, these two items (health care and housing) are regulated in a way that protects the poor and the middle class. that is for obvious reason: the rich and the well-to-do will manage on their own and they manage very well too. but look at us here, the two items are regulated to protect the interests of the rich and famous. Shame on us if we allow that to continue. Dont get me wrong, the rich and the famous should be allowed to be as rich and as famous as they like and we will love them for it, just be fair and dont tilt the scale more in their favor. they have more than enough, balance the scale so the poor and the middle class have a chance to live in a decent way without begging. or homelessness.

on Jan 10, 2007

Gideon -

Solid article and some fine points. The problem also has to do with something that you brougth up near the end :

I could save even more if I could get other members of the community to join with me in a concerted effort to do so.

Therein lies the rub. Some (possibly even many) low-income families fight this sort of thing with the ferocity of a conered wolverine. the last thing many want is ways to spend their money more effiently. Instead the call simply goes out for more money payouts and not smart money use. Private organizations are the only way money gets spent efficiently.

Any more government programs will simply be more of the same tax more, spend mre, accomplish nothing approach.

TA-

just be fair and dont tilt the scale more in their favor

I completely agree with you on this. The rich should be taxed at the same rate as the poor.

on Jan 10, 2007
The rich should be taxed at the same rate as the poor


You really think the same "rate" is fair?

let me see:

if someone makes $1000/month and is taxed at say 10% (all taxes), then he takes home $900/month.

If someone else makes $7,000/month and taxed at the same rate, then he takes home $ 6300/month

Are you saying this is fair? the $100 will affect the first man as the $700 will affect the second? that is what is important the effect of the tax not its amount.

$950 and $900 are very different for the first man. It is a $50 that more he really needs. (that is 5% tax rate)
$6020 and $6300 are not much different for the second man (that is 14% tax rate), he will never feel its loss.

to be fair, the effect should be similar.

In that example i would say that the effect of a $50 on the first man will be very similar to the effect of $980 on the second. that is what Progressive tax rates should do. not Flat tax rate.
on Jan 10, 2007

if someone makes $1000/month and is taxed at say 10% (all taxes), then he takes home $900/month.

If someone else makes $7,000/month and taxed at the same rate, then he takes home $ 6300/month

Are you saying this is fair?

yes.  One is paying 7 times as much tax as the other.

on Jan 10, 2007
The difference is that TA is making a value judgement about the worth of the two people's income. Obviously (to him) the person making more doesn't deserve to keep the same percentage of his income as others. It should be taken from them forceably and given out as transfer payments to the guy making less money who somehow deserves a greater portion of the other one's income.
on Jan 10, 2007
Obviously (to him) the person making more doesn't deserve to keep the same percentage of his income as others.


please dont put words in my mouth (ok my comment - ), If it was up to me, i think no one should take a penny from any one specially ME. And i think everyone DESERVES to keep all his money specially ME and YOU and YOU too.

Sadly, that is not the world as it was created and it is OUR responsibility to SHARE the load according to every one's ABILITY. That is where the VALUE factor comes in. It is not about DESERVING, it is about ABILITY TO CARRY the responsibilities we all share.

you may think that my personal status in life is more toward the first guy, on the contrary, it is the other way around. and i hate it every time i see how much I and the other memebers of my small family pay in taxes. BUT i never regreted it, i just curse the Governmnet and the IRS -. But i say i know why they doing it and I understand. it is my share of the load.

However, when i find out that I alone paid in taxes more than many many billionairs, i get sooooo mad.

I dont think any one would disagree with the saying: "To whom much is given, much is expected".

That is what fairness is all about. It is not that the second guy doesnt deserve to keep ALL his money, it is just fair that he carries a load similar in "effect on him " to the first guy. not proportional to what they make but proportional to what each can carry.

Let me give you a very obvious example: I am 180 Lbs and can carry a 54 Lbs bag (that is 30% load). according to Flat rate, a child weighing 30 Lbs should carry a 9 Lbs bag. According to Progressive rate, he should carry no more than 3 Lbs.

Which is fair and more reasonable? if you say the Flat rate, and you have a wife, she will kill you for that -.
on Jan 11, 2007
That is what fairness is all about. It is not that the second guy doesnt deserve to keep ALL his money, it is just fair that he carries a load similar in "effect on him " to the first guy. not proportional to what they make but proportional to what each can carry.

Let me give you a very obvious example: I am 180 Lbs and can carry a 54 Lbs bag (that is 30% load). according to Flat rate, a child weighing 30 Lbs should carry a 9 Lbs bag. According to Progressive rate, he should carry no more than 3 Lbs.

Which is fair and more reasonable? if you say the Flat rate, and you have a wife, she will kill you for that -.


good example...although i'm sure everyone can come up with some analogy to somehow "prove" their righteousness, this one holds some water in the real world. having kids (and a wife) , i can see that...

i believe taxes should be as low and simple as possible (not exactly goin out on a limb there, lol) but the "flat tax", while sounding nice and fair on paper, doesn't really work for me in the real world. at least, i haven't been sold on it...but i'm still willin to listen.
on Jan 12, 2007

Property taxes hurt the poor worst of all because they are the first cost passed onto a tenant. A landlord can't rent at a loss, so the tenant pays the taxes first, then the landlord's profit.


A landlord can only demand as much rent as possible tenants are willing to pay. Let's call that amount "X".

It doesn't matter how much of that rent is taken by the government. X is going to stay the same, because demand for housing is the only thing that makes X go up and a tax on the property does not influence demand.

What a tax on rents can do, however, is lower rents.

If such a tax is applied on the value of the land, and not on the income from it, land lords of unused lots/houses will try to find tenants to avoid having to pay the tax without an income from a rent.

(If you can find me a tenant who would pay more rent because the land lord has to pay more taxes, I will show you a tenant who will also pay more rent if the land lord can simply keep that money!)

In fact, a tax on rents will increase supply of houses because keeping a house off the market will be a financial burden, if the tax has to be paid with or without rent income. Hence property taxes can reduce rent but not make it go up (again, you need to increase demand or limit supply to make prices go up, the tax does the opposite, hence will not increase rents).

My rent was increased by 20% last year. If that same amount of money would have been tax, the following would have happened:

1. The government would have made more money and could reduce income taxes or other taxes on production.

2. The land lord would not have increased the rent further because the 20% increase was the amount the market had determined for the flat (if the land lord had demanded more, people would have moved out, hence he didn't demand more; people's motivation to move out is MONEY, not what the money is on after the fact).

3. The land lord would have known that IF people move out, and the tax would have to be paid anyway, he would have to lower the rent to get replacement tenants quickly, before losing money.


Hence the idea that property taxes hurt the poor is wrong. They do hurt land lords, they help people with an income from work, and they pretty much leave alone anybody else.

What hurts the poor are regressive taxes (like VAT). Income taxes hurt the productive. Property taxes hurt owners of property. (Property taxes on buildings hurt those who produce nice buildings; property taxes on land values hurt those who own the land.)
on Jan 13, 2007

Any more government programs will simply be more of the same tax more, spend mre, accomplish nothing approach

Since when was a food coop a government program, greywar?

You can involve the community without involving the government!

on Jan 13, 2007

A landlord can only demand as much rent as possible tenants are willing to pay. Let's call that amount "X".

Yes and no, Andrew. Landlords do a pretty good job of price fixing. This has been a historical truism in America. There are tax advantages to business losses, as you and I well know and landlords can and do take advantage of this. The number of vacant homes in blighted areas bears witness to this fact.

But the area where I DO agree with you is where it reinforces my point. When the landlors knows they're getting a fat check from the government to pay for housing, they will up the price of the housing so that someone trying to rent WITHOUT government assistance cannot afford it.

on Jan 21, 2007
Your points about government making it tough for the poor to live are good, but you're placing the blame wrong. It's not "the US government" that makes zoning laws and undesirable ordinances. It's local government. They're very different, because they're run by different people. The federal government is run by the owners and managers of corporations, banks, and agribusiness. Local government is run by real estate owners and land developers. This is unique to the US, because of our federalized government and history of private land ownership.

So don't blame "the US government," which would really like to solve its social problems (and create new markets for corporations) by getting poor people into better housing. Blame local governments, which strongly resist any attempt to stick them with the poor people and screw up their plans for land development. And secondly, don't blame "government," but rather the people who own and control it. Local government does basically nothing on its own.
on Jan 21, 2007
So don't blame "the US government," which would really like to solve its social problems (and create new markets for corporations) by getting poor people into better housing. Blame local governments, which strongly resist any attempt to stick them with the poor people and screw up their plans for land development. And secondly, don't blame "government," but rather the people who own and control it. Local government does basically nothing on its own.


The US government allows these things, noum. Eminent domain being a prime example. The Supreme Court allows the practices to continue.

Same with property taxes. Court challenges HAVE been lodged, and the fed has always backed up the local governments.

Ditto zoning laws.

As for environmental regulations, they emanate from the top downward, and only rarely is the municipality the primary source of these inane regulations.

The problem is, the politicians we elect to represent us aren't doing a very damn good job of it. We need to dump the lot of them. The first step in doing this is educating the public.

That's where articles like this come in. Yes, I'm suggesting a problem, but I'm also suggesting a solution. Put 'em all out of work.
on Jan 21, 2007
The US government allows these things, noum. Eminent domain being a prime example. The Supreme Court allows the practices to continue.


I am going to have to agree with Noumenon, kind of. The 10th Amendment. I know it has been butchered by both the feds and the SCOTUS, but you are advocating that it should be repealed totally. I dont.
on Jan 21, 2007
No, I'm not arguing for its repeal, Dr. You of all people should know how I value the Bill of Rights. But when local ordinances violate individuals' Constitutional rights under the US Constitution, the fed SHOULD step in. And many of these ordinances DO violate Constitutional rights, and it is proper and even necessary for the fed to act in those cases.
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