âWe want to make it more flexible and easier for developers to build affordable workforce attainable housing across our country,â Scott Turner said.
Former NFL player Scott Turner described easing housing development âregulatory burdensâ as his top priority if he were to lead the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), during testimony before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs in Washington on Jan. 16.
Turner also fielded questions on President-elect Donald Trumpâs proposed import tariffs and a vow that Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) co-leader Vivek Ramaswamy made to lay off 75 percent of the federal workforce during his presidential campaign.
The former pro-football athlete, who also served as the executive director of the White House Opportunity and Revitalization Council during Trumpâs first term, highlighted that the United States saw an all-time record high of homelessness in 2024.
âThatâs a national embarrassment and something that cannot continue,â Turner said. âWe have a housing crisis in our country, where American people and families are struggling every day.
âHUD is failing at its most basic mission.â
These zones are economically distressed communities that state governors can nominate for certification by the Treasury secretary and may receive preferential tax treatment for new investments.
Turner worked with Opportunity Zones during the first Trump administration.
Easing âRegulatory Burdensâ
Critically, if confirmed, Turnerâs top priority at HUD will be to ease the âregulatory burdenâ in the housing market, lowering development costs and increasing construction speeds.
âWe want to make it more flexible and easier for developers to build affordable workforce attainable housing across our country,â he said. âBecause right now, weâre not meeting that demand.â
Turner, a developer himself, gave several examples of âregulatory burdensâ that make home construction costly.
âPermitting fees, inspection fees, zoning difficulties on a local levelâevery locality is unique in their needsâbut these are some of the things that we see as developers and builders that are hindering developers from building affordable and workforce housing and regulatory reform,â Turner said.
Maximizing Record-High HUD Budget
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) asked Turner if he would pursue additional federal investments for programs seeking to lower the cost of building affordable housing.
Turner said HUDâs outsized budget, which is now more than $70 billion, needs to maximize its investments before pursuing more.
Warren said Turnerâs response gave her âreal pause,â as she feels additional funding is needed to close the âterrible gap of affordable housing,â including for projects such as the HOME Investment Partnerships Program.
Turner said he would consider the HOME program at HUD but that the agencyâs massive budget is not âmeeting the need that [it] was supposed to be meeting.â
Illegal Immigration, Homelessness
Returning to HUDâs report of record homelessness last year, Turner said that illegal immigration is a factor.
âWhen you have 12 million to 20 million people coming across illegally … [it] is going to be a great burden on [the] economy, on housing, on homelessness, on health in our country,â he said.
Turner said the government has to prioritize taking care of American citizens and families.
âItâs not only the right thing to do, itâs not just what weâre called to do, but itâs the law,â Turner said. âEven right now, we are not serving the amount of American people, American families that weâve been called to serve.â
Sen. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) asked if that also meant evicting mixed-status familiesâthose with a U.S. citizen child and an illegal immigrant parentâfrom federal housing.
âOftentimes, we have to make hard decisions because we do not like to tear up families, but we have an obligation to serve the American people and uphold the laws on the books,â Turner replied.
Tariffs, Potential Workforce Layoffs
Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) raised the topic of Trumpâs proposed import tariff increases while asking Turner about his commitment to lower the cost of homebuilding materials. The senator mentioned how Trump increased tariffs on lumber in his first term, before President Joe Biden raised them even further.
Van Hollen said he supports targeted tariffs but worries about Trumpâs promises to increase tariffs on all imports, which would impact home development costs.
âWould you agree that if you increase the tariffs on lumber, which is a major input to the cost of housing, that increases the cost of housing?â he asked.
Turner said he believes many factors contribute to housing cost increases but didnât directly answer the question.
âI donât want to get into tariff conversation because, obviously, that is not my job. Thatâs the presidentâs,â he said.
âWhat I want to do is combat anything that raises the cost of housing, be it like the cost of construction, be it fees, be it regulatory burdens, thatâs what Iâm focused on.â
Sen. Angela Alsobrooks (D-Md.) asked Turner about Ramaswamyâs 2024 presidential campaign proposal to lay off upward of 75 percent of government workers to lower the budget. She asked if Turner would support firing 75 percent of HUDâs employees if DOGE pursues that effort.
âWhat I do support is encouraging people to do the job that theyâve been called to do,â Turner replied. âBut also, I donât want to encourage people to do something Iâm not willing to do. I will take the lead in that.
âHaving the best people at the right time to do the job is my goal.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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