Planning for Homelessness: Land Use Policy, Housing Markets, and Cities’ Homelessness Responses

Many American cities are in the midst of a homelessness crisis. Through their control over zoning and land use policy, local governments can reduce homelessness by facilitating housing construction and improving housing affordability. Using administrative data and surveys of local public officials, this paper asks whether (and which) cities connect their homelessness and land use policies. We find that cities rarely link homelessness policies with zoning and land use. Cities in California and the Pacific region are generally more likely to make these connections, suggesting an important state role in guiding local homeless and planning policies. Cities with high and low levels of unsheltered homelessness show little difference in their propensity to connect land use and zoning policies with homelessness.

Publication Date: 
2024
Pages: 
1524–1557
Volume: 
57
Issue: 
6
Journal Name: 
Urban Affairs Review