Affordable Housing Bills Inch Closer To Passage At Hawaii Legislature
The measures, which also target homelessness, await a full Senate floor vote before heading back to the House of Representatives for consideration.
Legislation backed by groups who want to reduce homelessness and create more affordable housing cleared the Senate Ways and Means Committee on Tuesday.
The four bills 鈥 plus a fifth that was absorbed into one of the other measures 鈥 now head to the Senate floor for a full vote.
If the House of Representatives then chooses to acccept the Senate鈥檚 changes (all the measures originated in the House), they would be sent to Gov. David Ige for his signature.听Given that several of the governor鈥檚 own departments approve of the bills, his final support is likely.
Or, if the House disagrees with Senate changes, the bills could be sent to a conference committee during the two-week period at the end of April when the two chambers work to hash out differences in legislation.
The measures include , which is the primary vehicle for funding various听housing programs.
It听appropriates money to the Rental Housing Trust Fund, to the Rental Housing Revolving Fund and for repair and maintenance of the ‘s existing public housing stock.
It also directs money to a rental assistance program known as 鈥渞apid re-housing,鈥 which is听coordinated听by the state鈥檚 to work with homeless people who are ready to rent permanently.
HB 2244 also appropriates money for continued implementation of the state’s Housing First program and its expansion to the neighbor islands.
Dollar figures continue to be left blank in that bill, however, as do figures for housing in homelessness programs in , the state budget bill (a measure that will be heard by Ways and Means on April 5).
But that鈥檚 typical and is done, as Ways and Means Chair Jill Tokuda explained Tuesday, so the bills can 鈥渃ontinue to move forward for consideration.鈥
HB 2244 received supporting testimony from Rachael Wong, DHS director; Scott Morishige, the governor鈥檚 coordinator on homelessness; the ; and the , private nonprofit research and trade association whose members include major Hawaii landowners and developers.
Tokuda鈥檚 committee amended the bill to fund a full-time position to support state housing programs and inserted duplicative language from , which was to fund DHS to administer the Housing First and Rapid Re-housing programs.
Groups supporting funding of the programs include , and .
Other bills getting WAM鈥檚 green light were , which expands the low income-household renters’ income tax credit based on adjusted gross income and filing status.
听supports the bill, but the 听testified that a better way to help people is to adjust state income tax rates 鈥渟o those taxpayers will not need to pay tax or file returns.鈥
HB 2166 was amended to include听Department of Taxation estimates of the revenue impact on the state 鈥 $11.2 million.
is also moving along. It鈥檚 intended to help the state鈥檚 Dwelling Unit Revolving Fund and the use of the fund, which provides loans and grants to finance infrastructure improvements in areas of planned growth.
The state Office of Planning likes the bill, mentioning the expectation of transit-oriented development around Honolulu rail stations.
听also got the committee’s approval. It is designed to 鈥渆nable鈥 the HHFDC to develop mixed-use developments in partnership with state and county departments and agencies. The agency supports the bill, as do two other organizations, the Chamber of Commerce of Hawaii and the Hawaii Association of Realtors.
鈥淗awaii is in dire need of housing,鈥 according to Realtors testimony that pointed to data from the state Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism indicating that Hawaii听will need nearly 66,000 housing units to meet long-term demand over the next 10 years.
Another housing-related measure, , will be heard by Ways and Means on Friday. It would authorize the Hawaii Public Housing Authority to impose (in most cases) maximum rental periods of five years for state low-income housing projects. The rates would havee to be fixed for the entire term of the lease.
There are other measures at听the Legislature still alive to address homelessness and affordable housing.
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About the Author
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Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on X at .