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Cityscape: Volume 21 Number 1 | The Fair Housing Act at 50 | Does Jobs Proximity Matter in the Housing Choice Voucher Program?

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The Fair Housing Act at 50

Volume 21 Number 1

Editors
Mark D. Shroder
Michelle P. Matuga

Does Jobs Proximity Matter in the Housing Choice Voucher Program?

Michael Lens
University of California Los Angeles

Kirk McClure
University of Kansas

Brent Mast
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Policy Development and Research


The Housing Choice Voucher Program is the centerpiece of a housing strategy that attempts to influence neighborhood opportunity while making housing more affordable for low-income families. A key neighborhood opportunity is proximity to jobs. This study uses a household-level, longitudinal dataset from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to examine whether households with people in the workforce are more likely to locate closer to jobs than are households without people in the workforce. We then look at whether being closer to jobs is associated with greater likelihood of employment or greater earned incomes. We find no evidence that households attached to the labor force are more likely to locate closer to jobs, and we find no associations between earned income and greater proximity to jobs. We take those findings as evidence that, although locational advantages may be achieved with help from housing vouchers, jobs proximity does not seem to be one of those advantages. Given that jobs proximity is not correlated to higher earned incomes, however, we question the importance of jobs proximity when weighed against other neighborhood opportunities.


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