House GOP Threatens To Kill 'Baby YIMBY Grant' Program After First Year
The Democrat-controlled Senate meanwhile is proposing to expand the program.

The federal government's "baby YIMBY" grant program hasn't even made it to its first birthday, and it's already being threatened with early retirement.
Back in December 2022, Congress gave the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) $85 million to kickstart the Pathways to Removing Obstacles to Housing (PRO Housing) program—which was supposed to reward cities and states for removing regulatory barriers to housing construction.
"We need to legalize housing, and abandon the exclusionary zoning that originated during Jim Crow and continues today. Government needs to change its mentality from intentionally constraining the supply of housing to incentivizing it," said Sen. Brian Schatz (D–Hawaii), who secured funding for the program, at the time.
Applications have been pouring in ever since. The housing and transportation appropriations bill that the U.S. Senate passed yesterday includes $100 million for another round of these YIMBY ("yes in my backyard") grants come the next fiscal year.
Potentially bringing the program to a screeching halt is the GOP-controlled House's competing housing and transportation funding bill. The legislation would zero out the program completely before it's even made its first awards.
The Biden administration—which has long endorsed the idea of using federal dollars to incentivize zoning reform—has threatened to veto the House Republicans' spending bill partially on the grounds that it would kill the PRO Housing program.
Whether the program will survive past its first round of awards will now depend on inter-chamber, inter-branch budget wranglings.
Whether it deserves to survive is also a bit of an open question.
Libertarians can convincingly argue that the federal government should spend zero dollars on housing, and therefore any proposal to ax a HUD program (even one intended to incentivize deregulation) should be supported.
Nevertheless, the total abolition of HUD is not on the table right now. House Republicans' more modest budget bill would still give the department $70 billion.
Free marketers in good standing can (and have) argued that since it exists, HUD's budget should include money for YIMBY grants that will see the repeal of harmful, restrictive zoning regulations driving down housing production and driving up housing costs. Better to spend money rewarding deregulation than on subsidizing demand for a supply-constrained good, after all.
With all that said, the actual design of the PRO Housing program suggests it won't actually incentivize much deregulation.
Both the legislation creating the program and the HUD regulations implementing it make it likely that much of the first round of YIMBY grants will pay for plans and studies that do nothing to actually eliminate barriers to housing production.
Hopeful grantees' applications for PRO Housing funding are more cause for pessimism still.
Some cities are asking for money to pay for the implementation of reforms that haven't passed yet (and might never be passed). Others are asking for money to study whether very basic zoning reforms will improve housing affordability when the entire premise of the PRO Housing program is that zoning reform will improve housing affordability.
Even worse, the Senate bill is prematurely trying to expand funding for the program before the first grant awards go out. Before that happens, we can't know how well the program is performing.
At a minimum, Congress should be considering ways to reform the PRO Housing program so that we're getting a lot of zoning reform bang for the bucks spent. That would involve rewarding jurisdictions for actual housing production, not just plans to do studies about possible reforms that might boost housing production.
If it can't have good YIMBY grants, we might as well save the money and have no YIMBY grants.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Government shouldn't be determining what gets built or not in anyone's backyard. No NIMBY, no YIMBY.
Piddly little cuts like this are annoying and frustrating (we need to be talking 100s of billions not millions), but it's something, I guess.
Why the fuck don't the useless asshole republicans actually at least try to do what's needed and cut the entire HUD budget and that of most other federal agencies? Probably because they are useless assholes just as invested in the present system as anyone.
We should use them (the government, courts) when there's a dispute or injury but that's about it.
If your neighbor's use of their own property is not harming you in some way or infringing on your own rights and ability to use your property as you see fit, it's none of your damned business.
If your neighbor’s use of their own property is not harming you in some way or infringing on your own rights
Wonders if large groups of people living in a confined geographical area might have to agree to disagree on what constitutes "harm" or "infringement".
HUD like every "great society" agency should be axed for good and the folks grifting off the funding shipped to the Falkland Islands or Central Europe. Seriously HUD is just a corrupt grifting agency..as are the majority of federal programs and agencies. Get rid of it.
Please post your home address so that I can buy the property next door and build the toxic waste dump that local governments won't let me build anywhere else.
They need to put the replacement population somewhere.
Thirty million soon-to-be Democratic voters need adequate housing as well as transportation to the polls to cast their votes for Democrats.
It’s the libertarian thing to do.
If the federal or state government needs to mandate or subsidize it, then it clearly isn't "YIMBY", it's "YIYBY" (Yes In Your BackYard).
^^^ EXACTLY ^^^... Well Said.
Back in December 2022, Congress gave the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) $85 million to kickstart the Pathways to Removing Obstacles to Housing (PRO Housing) program
Why is it costing me one fucking red cent to have a city remove some zoning restrictions?
Because NIMBYs gain multiple orders of magnitude more than $85 million by restricting development. Most of them are Republicans. Donald Trump demagogues in their favor.
YES!!! This was my thought when I read this. And, as I think quite often, why is this a federal government thing. But we are in a place where it seems like everything has to be that. And we just end up with more programs that will never ever go away, moving more control to Washington DC and further bloating the mess there.
You don't expect to give up graft without getting other graft do you?
Just grifters all the way down.
Others are asking for money to study whether very basic zoning reforms will improve housing affordability when the entire premise of the PRO Housing program is that zoning reform will improve housing affordability.
It won't, because as I have argued here without any meaningful refutation, the blanket concept of housing affordability is a political non-starter. There is a desire for affordable houses but there is literally no desire for affordable housing.
Not true, there is lots of demand for "affordable" housing just nobody willing, able or allowed to fulfill that in a manner that ensures ongoing operation with the quality demanded.
Mainly they want protestors readily available in all districts, without having to bus them in.
My experience is that people who most loudly demand affordable housing refuse to live where housing is affordable. They want to have their cake and eat it too.
Reason for more central planning!
said Sen. Brian Schatz (D–Hawaii), who secured funding for the program, at the time.
Huh, so what’s the view of “housing affordability” in Hawaii? Ah:
Once again, a LOT of interest in affordable houses with little to no interest in affordable housing.
Reasom seems to be supporting federal funding of coercion of localities in this article...
They don’t want the IRS to be defunded either.
Welcome to Reason - - - - - -
But commission reports frequently eventually lead to action. Commissions inaugurated by the Nixon administration bore fruit over the next decade and a half with deregulation of various industries and abolition of Selective Service. Unfortunately one favorable report didn’t get favorable action: marijuana deregulation. But overall, a really great record that I didn’t realize until it was all over and Reason published a book of essays about it.
Wouldn't it be nice if the writers at this libertarian publication would mention that nowhere in Article I Section 8's list of enumerated powers is zoning or housing mentioned at all, making all this unconstitutional?
If they were writers, and if this was a libertarian publication - - - - - - - - - -
Under the usual framework, Congress offers federal funds in exchange for a recipient agreeing to honor conditions that accompany the funds. This offer and acceptance, the Supreme Court has said, is what lends Spending Clause legislation its legitimacy.
Be specific. Which power authorizes this spending? The spending clause is not a catch all. If it was then the rest of the constitution is not needed.
Exactly.
That's the logic that makes a very questionable ruling on the Commerce clause suddenly allow Federal intrusion into all kinds of ridiculous shit. It's bad enough you're not allowed to feed a horse from what you grew on your own land, but the same claims are made for... fuck, man. Every goddamned thing the Feds want to do.
If it isn't explicitly delimited, it's not for the Federal government.
I know that fucking ship has sailed, but I don't have to like it.
Precisely the sort of Supreme Court gobbledygook that Libertarians should rail against.
While there's a ruling declaring it constitutional, it's still basically extortion, holding money taken from your state's citizens unless you do as you're told. What's legal isn't always what's right.
This is local and state government, silly. Article I deals with the powers of the federal government.
Meanwhile this largely unnoticed aspect of Bidenomics is creating unprecedented wealth nationwide.
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/10/25/biden-ukraine-aid-messaging-00123466
The White House has been quietly urging lawmakers in both parties to sell the war efforts abroad as a potential economic boom at home.
Aides have been distributing talking points to Democrats and Republicans who have been supportive of continued efforts to fund Ukraine’s resistance to make the case that doing so is good for American jobs, according to five White House aides and lawmakers familiar with the effort and granted anonymity to speak freely.
“As we replenish our stocks of weapons, we are partnering with the U.S. defense industry to increase our capacity and meet the needs of the U.S. and our allies both now and in the future,” according to a copy of the talking points obtained by POLITICO.
“This supplemental request invests over $50 billion in the American defense industrial base — ensuring our military continues to be the most ready, capable, and best equipped fighting force the world has ever seen — and expanding production lines, strengthening the American economy and creating new American jobs,” the document states.
The White House’s pitch is an echo of one made by an influential figure on the other side of the aisle: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
In a March 2022 Senate floor speech, McConnell (R-Ky.) warned that the defense industrial base had been caught “napping” as the Russian invasion entered its second month. In the early days, he repeatedly pushed Biden to use the Defense Production Act to ramp up weapons production.
“No Americans are getting killed in Ukraine. We’re rebuilding our industrial base. The Ukrainians are destroying the army of one of our biggest rivals. I have a hard time finding anything wrong with that. I think it’s wonderful that they’re defending themselves,” he said on CBS’s Face the Nation.
War as economic windfall? Too bad they don't have a viable hurricane machine, to break all those windows.
I heard of a man in the Indies, who had a hurricane business.
He raised them from babies, all by himself.
If only we had kept building Sherman Tanks at the end of 1945 the 1950's depression wouldn't have occurred. Yep got it.
McConnel is a crony govt progressive. He obviously has zero understanding of economics if he thinks this. Very glad the senior senator from Kentucky will be Rand Paul. Someone who isn't about how to enrich the govt elites and step and fetch to Netanyahu.
Like it or not, Netanyahu and Zelenskyy are today the leaders of the opposition to the Moscow-Beijing-Tehran axis. Neither wanted to play that role. We can be like Winston Churchill and support them or we can be link Neville Chamberlain and pretend that this isn't a threat. Many Republicans and Libertarians are thinking more like Oswald Mosley today.
First of all, there’s no Russian blitzkrieg. We found that out within a few weeks of the invasion.
And there would be no Russian/Chinese axis if the current administration weren’t a bunch of retards. It was their one job, foreign policy wise. To keep them apart. And they blew it because of a “Russian collusion” narrative they had to appear to validate.
Nor would we be funding Hamas, nor would our corrupt presidents interests in the Ukraine have bankrupted our country. And maybe we wouldn’t have lost a gabillion dollars worth of equipment running for our lives in Afghanistan.
No, this doesn’t hold water at all.
Threatens? We should be celebrating every time the House offers to end any government grant. The federal government is 33.7 trillion dollars in debt.
Just saw Sam Bankman Fried was convicted. Jury took just over 4 hours, which seems on a 2 week trial to be about enough time to get instructions, review the charges, and vote.
Interestingly, I didn't see a single bit about how much of his embezzled money he pumped into political activism. Will we see that brought up tomorrow?
Government shouldn't be collecting this money much less using it to 'extort' concessions from State and local governments. But try and tell that to a libertarian and they tilt their head and get that funny look.....
Libertarians for central planning!!!
The YIMBY stuff he keeps arguing in favor of is basically a gift to Blackrock, developers, and government while restricting freedom and choice from home owners. It's all about forcing people to live in small boxes in cities. The government funding isn't the only libertarian issue with these proposals.
So you prefer to have government force us to live in suburban sprawl. Some libertarian you are.
Biden pushes forward for [Na]tional Zoning regulation.
...because that's what [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] do....
Sure; Local commie-zoning regulation will make a local debate but it really takes a full blown Nazi to Nationalize that debate across the entire nation. F'En Nazi's.
Biden supporting Israel against Hamas and you call him a Nazi? No wonder nobody takes libertarians seriously.
“Oh… Hey LOOK over there!! Way, way, way over there. A Unicorn!” Isn’t that what you just said?
How exactly does simply supporting Israel cleanse ones hands of being a [Na]tional So[zi]alist?? That’s dumber than pretending because the socialists were against the communists in Germany Hitler was cleansed of being a socialist dictator.
Incentivizing something usually evolves either a carrot or a stick. Neither is popular. That said I have no problem with the grants if they actually accomplish something. If they are for studies, then I have no problem with dumping them.
I suspect this is easy for Republicans as I have noticed that zoning reform has little support almost across the political spectrum. What do you call a liberal after their city announces plans to build low-cost apartments in their neighborhood, Answer, a conservative.
Restrictive zoning is probably the best (worst) example of government coercion to protect the well off. No wonder Republicans oppose it. This also outs Libertarians as really being about protecting the interests of the well off rather then (correctly) promoting the common interests of all by reducing government coercion.
Or maybe Republicans just don't believe in National STEALING / SUBSIDIZING / making illegal bribes with other people's earnings while bankrupting the entire nation on a [Na]tional So[zi]alist power-mad trip.