Case File
dc-7217095Dept. of JusticeSafe and Decent Affordable Housing
Florida International University’s Metropolitan Center has published a brief showing how many households are at risk of being left homeless if a major hurricane made a direct hit on Miami-Dade County.
Date
September 24, 2020
Source
Dept. of Justice
Reference
dc-7217095
Pages
11
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available
Extracted Text (OCR)
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
I
Policy Brief
What About Safe and Decent
Housing That Is Affordable?
Jorge M. P?rez
Metropolitan Center
August 2020
The connection between health and the dwelling of the population is one of
the most important that exists.
--Florence Nightingale
What About Safe and Decent Housing that is Affordable?
Ned Murray, Ph.D., AICP and Nika Zyryanova, MSIRE
Overview
It has long been established that safe, decent, and affordable
housing is a basic human necessity. Access to quality,
affordable housing helps create a stable environment for
families and children to grow and prosper. Without a durable
home to withstand the elements, families are also vulnerable to
natural disasters such as hurricanes, flooding, fires, and
earthquakes. All indications are that the effects of natural and
man-made disasters will worsen in coming years as hurricanes
intensify and sea levels continue to rise. With hurricanes
becoming more frequent and damaging, the health and safety
of large populations living in older, unsafe housing structures has
become an urgent policy issue.
A healthy and sustainable community ensures the availability of
safe, decent, and affordable housing for its residents. This is
especially important for lower income owners, including the
elderly, who do not have the financial means to make the
necessary structural improvements and renters who cannot
afford safe and decent housing. Hurricane Andrew in 1992
highlighted the vulnerability of Florida’s building standards at
that time. The Category 5 hurricane damaged or destroyed
more than 125,000 homes and left an estimated 250,000 people
homeless in South Miami-Dade County. The destruction was
born from a mix of 165 mph winds, outdated building codes,
shoddy construction, and poor inspection practices.
While the Florida Building Code (FBC) has corrected past
deficiencies and significantly strengthened new housing
construction standards to meet the wind velocities of major
hurricanes, many older housing structures in Miami-Dade
County and South Florida remain highly vulnerable. Current
research by the Jorge M. Pérez Metropolitan Center found an
estimated 258,124 residential structures in Miami-Dade County
built pre-FBC highly vulnerable to the potential damages of a
major hurricane. These structures contain an estimated 815,721
residents. Significantly, the concentrations of older, unsafe
housing structures in Miami-Dade County are found in less
affluent communities that are already experiencing the health
and economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Due to the scope and scale of Miami-Dade County’s unsafe
housing issue, the research recommends a proportional policy
response. The County and municipalities will need to determine
the location of unsafe structures and identify potential sources
for long-term funding assistance. A proposed vulnerability and
capacity assessment (VCA) should be the first step. Other policy
recommendations include categorizing residential structures
according to wind and flood vulnerability; determining whether
the existing housing inventory is adequate to house the
displaced; planning for temporary housing needs, local policies
for assisting residents with post-disaster repairs and rebuilding,
local policies for the replenishment of a more resilient and
sustainable affordable housing supply; and establishing a local
“dedicated housing assistance fund” to help prevent and
mitigate the impacts of major hurricanes.
Cordially,
Dr. Ned Murray, AICP, Associate Director
The affordable housing issue in Miami-Dade
and South Florida has been well
documented in several recent studies
authored by the Jorge M. Pérez Florida
International University (FIU) Metropolitan
Center. The pre-COVID Affordable Housing
Needs Assessments for the Tri-counties
documented excessive housing distress,
especially for low- and very low-income
renters. Lower-income renters comprise the
vast majority of service workers in the
industry sectors most impacted by the
pandemic, including Accommodation and
Food Services, Retail and Healthcare and
Social Assistance. There is now a growing
realization it will remain a COVID economy
well into the future, and a high percentage
of the jobs that have been lost may have
disappeared for good. A recent University
of Chicago study estimated 42 percent of
COVID-19 induced layoffs will result in
permanent job loss. In another study, the St.
Louis Federal Reserve Bank identified "high
risk" occupations for job loss, including
Accommodation and Food Services and
Retail. According to the study, high-risk
occupations comprise 48 percent of
occupations or 1.3 million jobs in the Miami
MSA economy. It is difficult to envision South
Florida recovering a significant percentage
of these jobs over the next several years.
The provision of “safe, decent, and
affordable housing” is an important
responsibility of local governments. While
the definition of “affordable housing has
been generally defined as households
paying no more than 30 percent of monthly
1
income on housing costs, there are broader metrics with respect to what is “safe and
decent” housing. To a large degree, the measure of housing quality and building
performance is left up to the state, individual jurisdictions, and building owners. There is
also some tension between housing quality and housing affordability. An exclusive focus
on reducing costs will not address longer-term housing needs and can exacerbate other
deficiencies such as a safe and healthy living environment and a housing unit that is
resilient and cost-effective. “One key principle of affordable housing is we do not
achieve short-term affordability by building low-quality homes (Shelterforce, 2015).”
When we think of affordable housing standards, the discussion typically defers to the
definition of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), whose mission
is to provide quality, affordable homes for all. The affordable housing HUD insures and
funds must be decent, safe, sanitary, and in good repair. In addition to inspections, a
housing agency or local government may conduct, HUD’s Real Estate Assessment Center
(REAC) assesses the physical condition of many HUD-insured and subsidized properties
through contracted inspections. When inspections identify conditions that could cause
a risk to the health and safety of residents, HUD requires property owners and public
housing authorities to fix deficiencies that caused the risks. However, there are reported
instances where HUD was either not aware of the risks to the health or safety of residents
or failed to take timely action to mitigate risks.
Generally, the term, “decent, safe, and sanitary dwellings” applied by HUD and state
and local governments means a dwelling which:
(1) Meets applicable federal state and local housing and occupancy codes; including
but not limited to the Uniform Building Code, National Electrical Code, ICBO Plumbing
Code, the Uniform Mechanical Code, HUD Minimum Property Standards, and HUD
Mobile Home Construction and Safety Standards (24 CFR part 4080;
(2) Is structurally sound, clean, weathertight and in good repair and has adequate
living space and number of rooms;
(3) Has an adequate and safe electrical wiring system for lighting and other electrical
services economically feasible;
(4) Meets the requirements of the HUD lead-based paint regulations (24 CFR part 42)
the Lead-Based Paint Poisoning Prevention Act (42 USC 4831 et seq.);
(5) In the case of a physically handicapped person, is free of any architectural barriers.
To the extent that standards prescribed by the American National Standards Institute,
Inc., in publication ANSI A117.1-1961 (R 1971), are pertinent, this provision will be
considered met if it meets those standards;
(6) Has heating as required by climatic conditions;
(7) Has habitable sleeping area that is adequately ventilated and sufficient to
accommodate the occupants;
(8) Has a separate well-lighted and ventilated bathroom, affording privacy to the user,
that contains a sink and bathtub or shower stall, properly connected to hot and cold
2
water, and a flush toilet, all in good working order and properly connected to a
sewage drainage system; and
(9) In the case of new construction or modular housing, complies with the energy
performance standards for new buildings set forth by the US Department of Energy.
State Building Codes
State building codes set the standards for the design and construction of buildings. The
main purpose of building codes is to protect the public from the health and safety risks
posed by improperly constructed buildings. Building codes provide minimal standards for
building features such as structural integrity (the supporting structure), mechanical
integrity (including sanitation, water supply, light, and ventilation), means of egress, fire
prevention, and control, and energy conservation. Housing codes set minimum
standards for housing conditions that all rental housing, new or existing, must meet to
protect the health of residents. Some jurisdictions refer to them as property maintenance
or sanitation codes, but their functions are the same.
Hurricane Andrew in 1992 highlighted the vulnerability of Florida’s building standards at
that time. The Category 5 hurricane damaged or destroyed more than 125,000 homes
and left an estimated 250,000 people homeless in South Miami-Dade County. The
destruction was born from a mix of 165 mph winds, outdated building codes, shoddy
construction, and poor inspection practices. By the time it was over, the City of
Homestead had been nearly wiped off the map; neighborhoods vanished, and shopping
malls and condominiums were sheared to their foundations. Homestead Air Force Base,
which employed more than 8,000 people and the core of the local middle class, was
torn apart. The blow to the tax base was a major hindrance to the rebuilding effort.
Hurricane Andrew also broke all records at that time for insurance losses and was the
direct cause of Florida’s worst insurance crisis in history.
Before Hurricane Andrew slammed into South Miami-Dade, resulting in the costliest
natural disaster for insured losses in global history at that time, Miami-Dade and Broward
Counties had outdated building codes that lacked enforcement. Thousands of the
homes hit by the hurricane and other structures simply did not stand up to the storm as
well as they should have, and the effects quickly rippled out from South Florida to the rest
of the state. The South Florida Building Code (Miami-Dade and Broward Counties) was
the toughest in the state and among the toughest in the nation. As evidence, a 2005
University of Florida study found differences in damage between older and newer homes,
comparing 200 randomly selected homes that were in the path of the highest wind zones
generated by the hurricanes. The study concluded that homes built prior to 1994 fared
worse than those built after that year.
The economic impacts of Hurricane Andrew mandated a single, statewide building code
that featured tougher standards to ensure structures would withstand major hurricanelevel winds. The Florida Building Code (FBC) was enacted by the Florida Legislature in
1998 and became effective on March 1, 2002. The FBC applies to “…the construction,
erection, alteration, modification, repair, equipment, use and occupancy, location,
3
maintenance, removal and demolition of every public and private building, structure,”
[101.4.2 FBC]. The FBC has since been amended over the years. The latest version is the
2014 Florida Building Code (5th Edition), which went into effect on June 15, 2015.
However, after nearly three decades, Andrew’s legacy is still the measuring standard.
The Florida Building Code enacted in 2002 was first tested during the 2004 and 2005
hurricanes and is still being adjusted and researched today. The code's purpose is to
protect lives, help reduce property losses in a storm, and provide a guide for insurance
companies to determine rates. However, after the devastating impacts of Hurricanes
Irma in 2017 and Michael in 2018, the FBC still comes under scrutiny.
As a result of Hurricane Andrew, one of the first standards Florida adopted was the wind
provisions from the American Society of Civil Engineers' standards, which encompasses
the national standard for wind requirements. The ASCE-7 code, which the International
Code Council relies on for minimum design loads for buildings and structures, is used by
all states prone to hurricanes to evaluate and design buildings in the insurance industry.
One of the most important additions to the code was the requirement of missile-impact
resisting glass, which can withstand high-velocity impact from wind-borne debris during
a hurricane. Another immediate change to building codes after Hurricane Andrew was
the elimination of construction of “stick” frame houses in South Florida. Most of the houses
built in South Florida since Andrew are cinder block masonry construction reinforced with
concrete pillars, hurricane-strapped roof tresses, and codes requirements for adhesives
and types of roofing.
Miami-Dade County’s Structural Vulnerability
The Florida Building Code applies to all new construction and major repairs, such as walls
and roofs. All pre-existing housing structures are essentially grandfathered from
enforcement other than for “substantial damage or “substantial improvement.”
According to the Florida Building Code, Existing Buildings Section 202 Definitions –
“substantial improvement” includes “any repair, reconstruction, rehabilitation, addition
or improvement of a building or structure, the cost of which equals or exceeds 50 percent
of the market value of the structure before the improvement or repair is started.”
Bringing a pre-code housing structure up to the current Florida Building Code Standards
is both essential and costly. According to research conducted by the Jorge M. Pérez FIU
Metropolitan Center, the estimated cost of upgrading a pre-FBC housing structure to
adhere to FBC Standards (hurricane-strapped roof tresses, impact windows and doors,
etc.) would be $50,000-$60,000. This does not include other structural and sanitary code
repairs and violations such as systems (electrical, plumbing, HVAC) replacements, lead
paint removal, and infestation treatment, which combined would cost an estimated
$40,000-$50,000. And, here lies the problem for Miami-Dade County and South Florida.
The research found most of these pre-FBC structures are concentrated in the less affluent
communities of Miami-Dade County, where few financial resources are available to
homeowners and renters have no recourse. These are also Miami-Dade communities
experiencing the highest levels of COVID-19 related distress, including infections from the
coronavirus, job loss, and threat of eviction and foreclosure.
4
Research and Methodology
The research topic and methodology are part of the Jorge M. Pérez FIU Metropolitan
Center’s on-going research on the economic and community impacts of the COVID19pandemic. The current research provides the application of the Center’s Community
Distress Index (CDI), which determines populations at risk at the block group and
neighborhood levels. The CDI ranks each sub-geography on 18 data indicators, grouping
them into four related status determinations – socioeconomics, household composition
and disabilities, race and language, and housing and transportation.
In preparing the research, the study authors used both the Miami-Dade County Property
Appraiser records and the 2018 US American Community Survey. The most
comprehensive source of detailed structural information is the County’s Property
Appraiser database. Each county gathers residential and commercial property data for
tax purposes. This research utilized three main components of the assessor’s database:
land-use, property values (land, building, market, and assessed), age of a structure, and
property improvements.
The first step in the research was to delineate Miami-Dade County’s housing supply by
approximate age and value. The US Census, American Community Survey provides data
on the age and median value of residential structures. In Miami-Dade County, there are
an estimated 714,144 housing units (70.2 percent) built prior to 1990. All these units were
constructed prior to Hurricane Andrew, the South Florida Building Code, and Florida
Building Code (FBC). The median value of Miami-Dade County’s residential structures
decreases by age. The median values of structures built prior to 1990 show a lesser value
than the current median housing value of $268,200. The decrease bottoms out (86
percent of current median value) in the decade 1970-1979.
Table 1.1: Miami-Dade County Median Value by Year Structure Built, 2018
Year Built
Built 2014 or later
Built 2010 to 2013
Built 2000 to 2009
Built 1990 to 1999
Built 1980 to 1989
Built 1970 to 1979
Built 1960 to 1969
Built 1950 to 1959
Built 1940 to 1949
Built 1939 or earlier
Total
Housing
1,016,653
Units
16,896
2%
18,250
2%
139,427
14%
127,936
13%
149,652
15%
190,474
19%
138,071
14%
142,155
14%
55,474
5%
38,318
4%
5
Median
Housing
$268,200
Value
$379,400
141%
$349,000
130%
$325,400
121%
$291,900
109%
$246,700
92%
$230,700
86%
$253,400
94%
$251,600
94%
$279,600
104%
$380,900
142%
Median Value by Year Structure Built
$400,000
$350,000
$300,000
$250,000
$200,000
$150,000
$100,000
$50,000
$0
Built
2014
or
later
Built
2010
to
2013
Built
2000
to
2009
Built
1990
to
1999
Built
1980
to
1989
Built
1970
to
1979
Built
1960
to
1969
Built
1950
to
1959
Built Built
1940 1939
to
or
1949 earlier
The next step in the research process was to examine Miami-Dade County's Property
Appraiser data to determine the age of the structure and median values by location.
From the Miami-Dade County Property Appraiser’s 920,849 unique property folio
numbers, all residential land-used properties were extracted and differentiated into four
housing types: single-family, condos and townhouses, multi-family, and mobile homes.
For each housing type, the median market and assessed value per property and building
were calculated. To differ multi-family housing types, calculations of median values for
multi-family housing were performed on a per-unit basis since the values for properties
with more units would be higher than properties with a smaller number of units. The
analysis focused on all housing units built prior to 1990. A pre-1990 timeframe was used as
the South Florida Building Code in which Miami-Dade and Broward Counties adopted
“High Velocity Hurricane Zone” building code standards immediately after Hurricane
Andrew predated the 2002 Florida Building Code.
To examine the extent of potential vulnerability, residential properties were differentiated
and summarized in three categories:
1. Develop an inventory and determine the location of all housing structures and
units built prior to the South Florida Building Code, noting a historical record of
improvements;
2. Identify and locate properties and number of units built prior to 1990 that are less
than 100% of the County's median values (building, market, and assessed);
3. Identify and locate properties and number of units built prior to 1990 that are less
than 80% of the County's median values (building, market, and assessed); and
4. Identify and locate properties and number of units built prior to 1990 that are less
than 50% of the County's median values (building, market, and assessed).
After inventorying and locating the total number of pre-1990 built properties and units by
value, the total population contained in these housing structures was estimated utilizing
6
average household size by tenure. Average household size ratios in Miami-Dade County
are provided by the US Census American Community Survey.
Based on this assessment, the research found an estimated 86,519 residential structures
built pre-1990 and valued less than 50 percent of the median value of structures by
submarket. These properties are considered the most vulnerable to the potential
damages of a major hurricane. These structures contain an estimated population of
270,365 residents. A second calculation was made for pre-1990 built residential structures
valued less than 80 percent of the median value of structures by submarket. This larger
capture percentage rate found a total of 258,824 structures vulnerable to a major
hurricane with a potentially impacted population of 815,721 Miami-Dade County
residents.
Table 1.2: Pre-1990 Housing Structures w/ Building Values
less than 50% of Median Market Value
Housing Type
Single-Family
Condos
&Townhomes
Multi-Family
Mobile
Homes
Total Units
Number of Units Less than
50% Median Value
Building Market Assessed
24,251 14,417
44,344
32,984
17,673
32,984
29,218
28,010
26,160
66
24
10
86,519
60,124
103,498
Housing Type
Single-Family
Condos
&Townhomes
Multi-Family
Population
Estimates
Building
79,058
107,528
83,563
Mobile Homes
Total Population
215
270,365
Metropolitan Center.
Table 1.3: Pre-1990 Housing Structures w/ Building Values
less than 80% of Median Market Value
Housing Type
Single-Family
Condos
&Townhomes
Multi-Family
Mobile
Homes
Total Units
Number of Units Less than
80% Median Value
Building Market Assessed
113,071
90,356
117,214
75,641
73,404
75,641
70,007
98,685
82,672
105
71
85
258,824 262,516
275,612
Housing Type
Single-Family
Condos
&Townhomes
Multi-Family
Population
Estimates
Building
368,611
246,590
200,220
Mobile Homes
Total Population
300
815,721
Metropolitan Center.
7
Policy Implications
The affordable housing crisis in Miami-Dade and South Florida has been well
documented through a series of landmark studies and plans authored by the Jorge M.
Pérez FIU Metropolitan Center over the past 15 years. The high levels of housing distress,
especially for renters, have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has
left nearly 200,000 South Florida workers without a steady income to pay their monthly
rent.
The age and unsafe conditions of a vast number of housing units have insidiously
compounded affordable housing distress. Hurricanes, tropical storms, and other climaterelated threats have had devastating impacts on communities. All indications are that
the effects of natural and man-made disasters will worsen in the coming years as
hurricanes intensify, and sea levels continue to rise. With hurricanes becoming more
frequent and damaging, the health and safety of the older, existing housing supply has
become an urgent policy issue.
A healthy and sustainable community ensures the availability of safe, decent, and
affordable housing. Safe and decent housing supports the health of its occupants and
provides shelter from the elements, especially during and after disasters. This is especially
important for lower-income populations who do not have the financial wherewithal to
control for these necessities. The potential loss of thousands of relatively affordable, yet
unsafe housing units, coupled with the existing unmet demand for affordable housing,
would create a major capacity problem. After a major hurricane, families, and individuals
frequently require short- and sometimes long-term temporary housing. Following
Hurricane Katrina, more than 400,000 individuals were displaced from their homes in New
Orleans. The dearth of housing options for lower-income residents following Hurricane
Katrina resulted in many residents not returning to New Orleans. This is an untenable
situation as most families and individuals prefer to stay in their original communities, next
to their schools, jobs, and neighbors. If adequate housing is not made available, residents
will leave the community, temporarily or permanently, further disrupting social networks
and degrade the community and its economy. Communities with a limited housing
supply of safe, decent, and affordable housing are at particular risk.
While there is a compelling argument that the only feasible long-term strategy to make
coastal cities resilient is to rethink them entirely, the emergency nature of Miami-Dade
and South Florida’s existing unsafe housing conditions requires an immediate response.
Given the scope and scale of Miami-Dade County’s unsafe housing challenge, there is
an urgent need to create forward-looking prevention and mitigation policies and
strategies to address the issue head-on.
Where to begin?
The scope and scale of Miami-Dade County’s unsafe housing issue will require a
proportional policy response. To begin, the County and municipalities will need to
determine the location of unsafe structures and identify potential sources for long-term
funding assistance. Policy deliberations should include the following items:
8
A vulnerability and capacity assessment (VCA) to determine the extent to
which the existing housing inventory can withstand the damaging effects of a
major hurricane. A VCA would identify the location, age, and condition of
potentially vulnerable housing structures;
Categorize residential structures according to wind and flood vulnerability;
Determine whether the existing housing inventory is adequate to house the
displaced, if new temporary units needed, and where displaced populations
would be relocated nearby with an adequate housing supply;
Plan for temporary housing needs, assisting residents with post-disaster repairs
and rebuilding, and policies that could result in the replenishment of a more
resilient and sustainable affordable housing supply;
Establish a “dedicated housing assistance fund” to help prevent and mitigate
the impacts of a major hurricane;
Consider a range of grants and low-cost loans for the renovation and potential
replacement of highly vulnerable owner-occupied and absentee-owned
properties; and
Make changes to the permitting process and housing rehabilitation codes to
remove any regulatory obstacles to these upgrades.
Significantly, the concentrations of older, unsafe housing structures in Miami-Dade
County are found in less affluent communities that are already experiencing the health
and economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic (see map). The highest
concentrations of unsafe housing were found in Model City, Homestead, Little Haiti, and
Liberty City. The concentrations follow the “spine of distress” which was first delineated in
the 2016 Miami-Dade County Prosperity Initiatives Study. The study found concentrations
of economic and housing distress along a spine that extended south from Miami Gardens
to Florida City along the I-95 and US 1 Corridors. Policies and programs designed to
address unsafe housing conditions should focus on these communities while being
sensitive to the existing COVID plight of families and households.
9
Miami-Dade County Housing Structure Vulnerability
Legend
Pre?l990 Housing Structures
w/ Buldling Values less than
50% of Median Market Value
Single?Fa mily
- Multi?Fomily
- Condos Townhomes
Mobile Homes
little HOW
I .
Homestead
0 1.25 2.5
Forum Discussions
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.