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In 2022, Oregon approved the building permits for 20,404 housing units. The state needs an additional 554,691 homes over the next 20 years to meet demand, and 176,300 of them need to be affordable ...
Oregon's housing crisis has been years in the making, and with high interest rates, rising inflation and a litany of other barriers in the way, policymakers will need to make some changes — at ...
Whoville Homeless Camp in Eugene, Oregon, 2013. In 2016, a report from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) revealed that the U.S. state of Oregon had an estimated homeless population of 13,238 with about 60.5% of these people still unsheltered. [2]
Oregon's housing finance agency, Oregon Housing and Community Services (OHCS,) has released its annual report for 2023, touting the agency's surpassing of Governor Tina Kotek's housing production ...
It would be one of two HAP worker housing projects that would survive after the war as low-income public housing, when the units were converted to low-income housing for veterans at the end of the war. [6] The project maintained a positive public image through the 1960s, being praised for its beauty in a 1962 issue of The Oregonian. However, by ...
The Oregon Housing and Community Services Department (OHCS) is the housing finance agency of the government of the U.S. state of Oregon.It administers programs providing financing assistance for single family homes, new construction or rehabilitation of multi-family affordable housing developments, and grants and tax credits to promote affordable housing.
According to Kotek's office, preliminary Oregon Housing and Community Services data showed the goals of the initial executive orders were met over the past year: 1,032 low-barrier shelter beds ...
Oregon House Bill 2001 is an Oregon law which allows for alternative, more economical types of housing in an effort to preserve outer-city rural areas, such as farms. The law is especially aimed at reducing the pace of urban sprawl in densely populated cities such as Portland, Oregon, with non-traditional land use zoning.