Senate panel advances bipartisan housing bill
Source: The Hill
07/29/25 10:12 PM ET
The Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee on Tuesday advanced a bipartisan bill aimed at boosting housing supply, improving housing affordability and increasing the efficiency of federal regulators and housing programs. The committee unanimously voted to advance the Renewing Opportunity in the American Dream (ROAD) to Housing Act of 2025 led by Chair Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and ranking member Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) in the committees first bipartisan housing markup in more than a decade.
Scott touted the bipartisan effort and noted that it comes as senators constituents, from all areas of the country, continue to point to housing access and affordability as a top economic concern of theirs. For far too long, Congress believed this problem was too big to solve. Today, were taking not a step but were taking a leap in the right direction in a bipartisan fashion, Scott said in remarks at the markup.
Many people around the country are frustrated with the way we do American politics wonder, is there any issue that brings this nation together and Im here to say, halleluiah! We have found one it is housing. And halleluiah is a southern term, but its a term of endearment.
The massive legislation contains proposals from every member of the committee. The bill includes incentives for states and cities to boost housing supply, and it rewards communities that do so while lowering building costs. The bill cuts much of the red tape around zoning and building standards and streamlines inspections across federal programs to improve efficiency. It also contains provisions to eliminate duplicate regulatory requirements.
Read more: https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/5426846-senate-panel-advances-bipartisan-housing-bill/

JT45242
(3,513 posts)If it could help poor people, especially poor brown people, the house will kill it.
Nigrum Cattus
(759 posts)This will not lower costs. It will put more money in the
builders pockets & allow developers to build where the
should not be allowed to build. Lower quality homes
in flood zones, nature preserves, etc.