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1998_0413_packet
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1998_0413_packet
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fire hazards. <br /> Before 1892, all government involvement in housing was at a local level. In 1892, <br /> however, the Federal Government passed a resolution authorizing investigation of slum <br /> conditions in cities containing 200,000 or more inhabitants. At that time these included the <br /> cities of Baltimore, Boston, Brooklyn, Buffalo, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, <br /> Milwaukee, New Orleans, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, San Francisco, <br /> and Washington. Much controversy surrounded the involvement of the Federal <br /> Government in housing. The Commissioner of Labor was forced to write an extensive <br /> legal opinion concerning the constitutionality of expenditures by the Federal Government <br /> in this area. The result was that Congress appropriated only $20,000 to cover the <br /> expenses of this project. The lack of funds limited actual investigations to Baltimore, <br /> Chicago* New York, and Philadelphia and did not cover housing conditions in toto within <br /> these cities. Facts obtained from the investigation were very broad, covering items such <br /> as the number of arrests, distribution of males and females, proportion of foreign-barn <br /> inhabitants, degree of illiteracy, kinds of occupations of the residents, conditions of their <br /> health, their earnings, and the number of voters. <br /> The loth century started off rather poorly in the area of housing. No significant housing <br /> legislation was passed until 1929 when the New York State legislature passed its Multiple <br /> Dwelling Lave. This lave continued the Tenement Act of New York City but replaced man <br /> provisions of the 1901 lave with less strict requirements. Other cities and states followed = <br /> New York State's example and permitted less strict requirements in their codes. This <br /> decreased what little emphasis there was in enforcement of building lags so that during <br /> the 190's the cities had worked themselves into a very poor state of housing. Conditions <br /> of America declined to such a state by the o's that President Franklin D. Roosevelt's = <br /> shocking report to the people was "that one-third of the nation is ill-fed, ill-housed, and ill- <br /> clothed." Vvith this the Federal Government launched itself extensively into the field of <br /> housing. The first Federal housing law was passed in 1934. One of the purposes of this <br /> act was to create a sounder mortgage system through the provision of a permanent system <br /> of government insurance for residential mortgages. The Federal Housing Administration <br /> was created to carry out the objectives of this act. <br /> Many other Federal lags followed: the Veterans Administration becoming involved in <br /> guaranteeing of loans, the Horne Loam Bank Board, Federal National Mortgage <br /> Association. Communities Facilities Administration, Public Housing Administration, and <br /> the Public Works Administration. With the U.S. Housing Act of 1937, the Federal <br /> Government entered the area of slum clearance and urban renewal, requiring one slum <br /> dwelling to be eliminated for every new unit built under the Housing Administration <br /> program. It was not until the passage of the Housing Act of 1949 that the Federal <br /> Government entered into slum clearance on a comprehensive basis. <br /> The many responsibilities in housing administered by various agencies w thin the Federal <br /> Government proved to be unwieldy. Hence, in 1966 the Department of Housing and Urban <br /> Development was created to have prime responsibilities for the Federal Governments <br /> 4 <br />
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