A Georgia House legislative committee will hear three housing-related bills today at 3 p.m. that focus on reining in institutional investors’ outsize influence on Georgia’s rental housing markets.  

The state House’s Governmental Affairs Committee will consider the following:

The hearing will take place at the Coverdell Legislative Office Building, located next to the Capitol at 18 Capitol Square SW.

đź“·: Claire Becknell

Congress only has until March 14 to pass a final FY 2025 spending bill, and the House’s proposed budget would cut U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funding by $2.3 billion, or 3%, at a time when housing costs nationally are skyrocketing. HUD is the primary source of rental assistance to low-income Americans, disbursed through grants to local housing authorities to administer.

The House’s proposed cuts to HUD funding would place nearly 750,000 Americans at risk of losing critical rent voucher assistance, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a progressive national think tank. Families with children would be hit especially hard. 

“This is going to force them to divert resources from other basic needs, like food or medicine,” he told Atlanta Civic Circle. “Some people will have to take on debt in order to cover that, in addition to other expenses.”

“A lot of these folks could end up becoming homeless,” Fischer added. “If we lose this [HUD voucher] assistance, these people are going to be paying 50, 60, or even 70% or more [of their monthly incomes] on rent. That’s something that is just too much for most households with low incomes to be able to afford,” he said.


When state lawmakers passed the Safe at Home Act last year, it made Georgia one of the last states in the country to require rental housing to be “fit for human habitation.” But House Bill 404 didn’t define habitability.

While Cummings’ bid to amend HB 404 could provide much-needed clarity on how landlords must maintain their properties, Michael Waller, who heads the Georgia Appleseed Center for Law and Justice, said that first, it’s important to fully understand how judges are interpreting HB 404, which took effect on July 1.

“We think having a well-crafted definition of habitability would benefit renting families and landlords,” he said. “But right now, it’s too early to know how the Safe at Home Act is playing out in the courts.”


Today’s newsletter was written by Sean Keenan and edited by Meredith Hobbs.

Copyright (C) 2024 Atlanta Civic Circle. All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website.

Our mailing address is:
Atlanta Civic Circle
191 Peachtree Street, NE
#450, C/O Saba Long
Atlanta, GA30303

Add us to your address book