My Weird Prompts

Public Housing in America: A State-by-State Breakdown

30 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Public Housing in America: A State-by-State Breakdown

Descripción

What is public housing, really? It’s not the high-rise projects of decades past. Today, it’s a patchwork of 3,000 local housing authorities, each with its own rules, waitlists, and funding crises. With the midterms approaching and renters squeezed nationwide, state-level policy divergence has never mattered more. We break down how eligibility works, why New York has six times the units of Texas, and what it actually takes to get on a waitlist — from Washington’s streamlined portal to Illinois’s fragmented maze.

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episode Housing as Anchor vs. Safety Net artwork

Housing as Anchor vs. Safety Net

This episode unpacks a provocative proposal: strip the job guarantee from the state's safety net and instead guarantee just housing, food, and healthcare — unconditionally, without means-testing, and as a legal right. We explore how this differs structurally from existing programs like Section 8 and SNAP, why waitlists and welfare cliffs create chronic anxiety even when nothing's gone wrong, and what Israel's month-to-month rental market reveals about the psychological cost of insecurity. Drawing on cortisol studies, UBI meta-analyses, and international comparisons (Germany's indefinite leases, France's eviction moratorium, Denmark's social housing), we ask whether the real problem isn't the safety net's size but its design — and whether a universal anchor could actually be cheaper than our current patchwork of conditional assistance.

Ayer28 min