R 140
2021 -- H 5953 SUBSTITUTE A
Enacted 03/25/2021

H O U S E   R E S O L U T I O N
CREATING A SPECIAL LEGISLATIVE COMMISSION TO STUDY THE LOW AND MODERATE INCOME HOUSING ACT

Introduced By: Representatives Speakman, Shekarchi, Kislak, Morales, Potter, Alzate, Williams, Knight, Donovan, and Henries

Date Introduced: February 26, 2021

     WHEREAS, Rhode Island’s Low and Moderate Income Housing Act requires that
housing in twenty-nine of Rhode Island’s communities be comprised of at least 10 percent
“affordable” housing. Ten communities are exempt due to their percentage of rental housing
and/or current affordable housing inventory; and
     WHEREAS, To date, out of those twenty-nine cities and towns, only New Shoreham has
met the target, and only five of the state's total 39 cities and towns: Central Falls, Newport, New
Shoreham, Providence and Woonsocket, have met the mandate threshold, with many of the state's
cities and towns seemingly disregarding the benchmark; and
     WHEREAS, There exists a high concentration of poverty in the cities of Central Falls,
Providence, Pawtucket, and Woonsocket; and
     WHEREAS, There is a paramount need for millennial housing for young professionals to
stabilize and grow cities such as Central Falls, yet there are very few affordable home ownership
opportunities, and the majority of housing consists of rental units in triple-deckers owned by
absentee landlords; and
     WHEREAS, According to the Housing Works Report, across the United States, 47.5
percent of Latino households own their own homes, but in Rhode Island, according to the 2018
State of Hispanic Homeownership Report, that number is drastically lower at 27.73 percent; and
     WHEREAS, Rhode Island also has one of the lowest non-white homeownership rates in
the United States and of the State’s overall total homeownership rate of 61.8 percent, only
approximately half that number is non-whites. Rhode Island was ranked as the 44th lowest state
in the nation for existing homeownership disparity by PROSPERITY NOW; and
     WHEREAS, Although redlining, the practice of limiting lending in certain
neighborhoods regardless of the individual's creditworthiness, is banned by federal law, it
continues to plague our state's minority neighborhoods; and
     WHEREAS, It is essential that these institutional practices, discriminatory actions, and
public policies be addressed and that solutions be found; now, therefore be it
     RESOLVED, That a special legislative commission be and the same is hereby created
consisting of seventeen (17) members: three (3) of whom shall be members of the Rhode Island
House of Representatives, not more than two (2) from the same political party, to be appointed by
the Speaker of the House; one of whom shall be the President of the RI Builders Association, or
designee; one of whom shall be the Executive Director of Rhode Island Housing, or designee; one
of whom shall be the President of the Housing Network of Rhode Island, or designee; one of
whom shall be the Executive Director of Grow Smart RI, or designee; one of whom shall be the
Chief Executive Officer of the Rhode Island Association of Realtors, or designee; one of whom
shall be the Executive Director of the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless, or designee; four
(4) of whom shall be members of the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns, two (2) of whom
shall be residents of a Rhode Island city or town with a population of 35,000 or more residents,
and two (2) of whom shall be residents of a Rhode Island city or town with a population of less
than 35,000 residents, all of whom shall be appointed by the Speaker of the House; one of whom
shall be the Executive Director of Pawtucket-Central Falls Development, or designee; one of
whom shall be the President and CEO of the Rhode Island Foundation, or designee; one of whom
shall be from One Neighborhood Builders, and one of whom shall be a member of the Rhode
Island Developmental Disabilities Council, to be appointed by the Speaker of the House.
     In lieu of any appointment of a member of the legislature to a permanent advisory
commission, a legislative study commission, or any commission created by a General Assembly
resolution, the appointing authority may appoint a member of the general public to serve in lieu
of a legislator, provided that the majority leader or the minority leader of the political party which
is entitled to the appointment consents to the member of the general public.
     The purpose of said commission shall be to make a comprehensive study of the Rhode
Island Low and Moderate Income Housing Act including, but not limited to a review of:
     1. State-wide data for low and moderate income housing by city and town;
     2. Cities' and towns' strategic economic and housing plans;
     3. The Brookings Institute reports and other relevant data referencing affordable housing;
and
     4. Cities' and towns' compliance, performance, and barriers to implementation; and
     The commission shall provide recommendations for aiding cities and towns to
successfully meet requirements of the Act.
     Forthwith upon passage of this resolution, the members of the commission shall meet at
the call of the Speaker of the House and organize and shall select a chairperson from among the
legislators.
     Vacancies in said commission shall be filled in like manner as the original appointment.
     The membership of said commission shall receive no compensation for their services.
     All departments and agencies of the state, shall furnish such advice and information,
documentary and otherwise, to said commission and its agents as is deemed necessary or
desirable by the commission to facilitate the purposes of this resolution.
     The Speaker of the House is hereby authorized and directed to provide suitable quarters
for said commission; and be it further
     RESOLVED, That the commission shall report its findings and recommendations to the
House of Representatives no later than December 16, 2021, and said commission shall expire on
April 17, 2022.
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LC002108/SUB A
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