How to create more housing
Michigan leaders complain about the high cost of housing, but city planners in Muskegon are doing something about it.
Regulations on housing providers lead to higher costs and worse outcomes. Permitting prolongs the time it takes to build more housing, leaving towns stuck with older properties for longer periods of time. Building codes and environmental rules are too strict while also failing, on net, to provide safety and environmental benefits. Parking mandates, along with minimum home and lot sizes, drive up costs for no reason.
Those and other zoning rules make it illegal or impossible to build units affordably in many parts of Michigan.
Costs and services are not the only reasons people leave the state of Michigan or decline to move into communities within Michigan, but they are among the areas lawmakers can influence.
People want lower costs and quality services.
Delivering that means governments should focus on spending money efficiently and not going beyond its limits.
Lower taxes and fewer regulations reduce costs. Regulation adds costs. If regulations actually lead to better outcomes, they may be worth it. But lawmakers rarely seem interested in measuring the actual outcomes of their regulations.
Instead, state lawmakers push only one solution — subsidizing demand.
Michigan taxpayers are currently paying out $150,000 to $300,000 per apartment unit in subsidies to select nonprofits and developers to build or rehab apartment buildings. Those organizations build only a tiny fraction of what the market wants.
Michigan leaders would have better luck increasing supply if they focused on chopping down the enormous number of unnecessary regulations.
The Muskegon Planning Commission hopes to do just that.
Specifically, commission recommends that the city:
∫ reduce the number of zoning categories from three to one,
∫ allow duplexes, triplexes, and accessory dwellings on what are now single-home lots,
∫ relax design requirements to make it easier for owners to convert single-family homes into multi-unit properties,
∫ and require only one parking space per residential unit.
City officials and planners across Michigan say they want more housing to attract more workers, especially younger workers who can only afford smaller homes and units.
They need to put their words into action by freeing up builders to build and individuals to buy the types of housing they want.
Jarrett Skorup is the vice president for marketing and communications at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy.