Edina Neighbors for Affordable Housing (ENAH) is an all-volunteer organization of Edina residents who believe that Edina should be an equitable, welcoming, and sustainable community with senior and workforce housing available for people of all income levels at all stages of life.

News

Interview with Economist Enrico Moretti

Econ Focus · 2019

Enrico Moretti, an economist at UC Berkeley, has found that the sorting of highly educated Americans into certain communities has led to other communities falling behind.

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Watch 4 Decades of Inequality Drive American Cities Apart

The New York Times · December 2, 2019

The biggest metropolitan areas are now the most unequal.

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Mpls Council Wants to Give Tenants Chance to Purchase Rentals

MinnPost · November 25, 2019

A group of Minneapolis city council members are developing a proposal that would require landlords who want to sell rental homes to give tenants an opportunity to buy the property.

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It’s Time to End the Affordable Housing Crisis Once and For All

StarTribune · Nov 22, 2019

On a single night, more than 10,000 people in Minnesota were homeless last year — the highest number ever recorded.

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Latest Metropolitan Council Growth Forecast

Metropolitan Council · Nov 2019

Regional forecast: Household growth revised downward; population growth expected to slow.

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Researchers Assess Link Between Healthcare and Evictions

Next City · Nov. 2019

A new study suggests that expanding access to healthcare for low-income people is associated with a significant reduction in the rate of evictions.

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The Inflation Gap

The Atlantic · Nov 2019

A new analysis indicates that rising prices have been quietly taxing low-income families more heavily than rich ones.

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Secrets of the World’s Most Livable City

CityLab · Oct 29, 2019

Viennese lawmaker Maria Vassilakou explains why the Austrian capital ranks so high on quality-of-life rankings, despite its rapidly growing population.

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Secret Deal Helped Housing Industry Stop Tougher Rules on Climate Change

The New York Times · October 26, 2019

A secret agreement has allowed the nation’s homebuilders to make it much easier to block changes to building codes that would require new houses to better address climate change, according to documents reviewed by The New York Times.

The arrangement, in place for years, guarantees industry representatives a bloc of seats on two powerful committees that recommend building codes.

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When the Dream of Owning a Home Became a Nightmare

The New York Times · October 19, 2019

A federal program to encourage black homeownership in the 1970s ended in a flood of foreclosures.

“Racial discrimination persisted in the new market because it was good business, not simply because the industry was stuck in its old ways. Our failure to fully recognize this history has meant that housing policy continues to uncritically revolve around market-based solutions even as black homeownership rates fall to historic lows. It’s hard to uproot these predatory practices because race has been so important to the real estate industry’s bottom line.”

Prof. Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor is Asst. Professor of African American Studies at Princeton University. She is an expert on housing policy.

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Separated by Design: How Some of America’s Richest Towns Fight Affordable Housing

ProPublica · May 22, 2019

In southwest Connecticut, the gap between rich and poor is wider than anywhere else in the country. Invisible walls created by local zoning boards and the state government block affordable housing and, by extension, the people who need it.

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Financially insecure residents can cost cities millions

Urban.org · Jan 21, 2017

Beyond watching their bottom line, cities have a moral imperative to care about residents’ financial health. Can a city be great if only some residents are thriving? Can a city be successful if many residents are close to financial ruin because of a spell of unemployment or a broken down car? Empowering residents with the financial tools to prosper moves cities closer to being more equitable to all who call it home.

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Housing Costs, Zoning, and Access to High-Scoring Schools

Brookings · April 19, 2012

As the nation grapples with the growing gap between rich and poor and an economy increasingly reliant on formal education, public policies should address housing market regulations that prohibit all but the very affluent from enrolling their children in high-scoring public schools in order to promote individual social mobility and broader economic security.

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