HAC’s full length research reports provide detailed information and analysis on a wide array of social, economic, and housing issues that impact affordable housing needs and provision in rural America.

Demographic Analysis

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Housing in Rural America (information sheet, 2010)

Poverty in Rural America (information sheet, 2011)

Rural Housing Issues and Recommendations (information sheet, 2007)

Race & Ethnicity in Rural America (Rural Research Note, 2012)

Poverty in Rural America (Rural Research Note, 2012)

Poverty in the United States – Map (Poster Map, 2012)

State of the Nation’s Housing 2007, The (report, 2007)

Taking Stock: Rural People, Poverty and Housing in the 21st Century (report, 2012)

Why Housing Matters: HAC’s 2000 Report on the State of the Nation’s Rural Housing (report, 2000)

Why Housing Matters (Winter 2001 issue of Rural Voices magazine)

Maps

Colorful poster-sized maps (2 feet by 3 feet), showing poverty rates or housing characteristics for every county in the United States.

Rural Populations & Regional Analyses

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Appalachia

Border Colonias

Farmworker

Native American

Homeless

Mississippi Delta

Midwest

Elderly & Disabled

General

Veterans

General
Appalachia
Border Colonias
Farmworker
Native American
Homeless
Mississippi Delta
Midwest
     Elderly & Disabled
      Veterans

Organizational Development

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Financial Management

Organizational Management

Fundraising

Public Relations & Communications

Financial Management
Organizational Management
Fundraising
Public Relations and Communications

Rural CHDOs: Building Capacity, Building Homes (Fall 2010 issue of Rural Voices)

Primer for Beginning Rural Housing Developers, A (manual, 1999)

Rural Rental Housing Preservation and Nonprofit Capacity to Purchase and Preserve Section 515 Projects (report, 2002) (Appendix A. Maps)

Strengthening Community-Based Housing in the Mid-South Delta: A Policy Development Paper (report, 2001)

Connecting The Dots

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Connecting the Dots: A Location Analysis of USDA’s Section 515 Rental Housing and Other Federally Subsidized Rental Properties in Rural Areas

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Section 515 program provides more than 400,000 decent, affordable rental homes for rural Americans with low incomes, but many of these rentals are now at risk. Connecting the Dots seeks to inform the debate on preservation of these units. This Housing Assistance Council report examines where Section 515 developments are located with respect to other federally subsidized rentals and reviews their role in their rural communities’ rental housing networks. It discusses the policy implications of HAC’s research findings and makes recommendations.

Full Report (Click to access large file at www.scribd.com)
Sections of the Report (each section includes the title page and complete table of contents)
Research Highlights
  • PDF file (Click to access large file at www.scribd.com)

Order a print copy of the report for $10 (includes shipping and handling)

If you have trouble downloading any of the information on this page contact Leslie Strauss or Janice Clark, 202-842-8600.

If you have questions about the contents of the report, contact Leslie Strauss or Lance George, 202-842-8600.


All Files are in PDF format and require Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Questions? Contact Janice Clark at HAC, janice@ruralhome.org, 202-842-8600.

Publications List

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coverimage

Taking Stock 2000

Taking Stock: Rural People, Poverty, and Housing at the turn of the 21st Century

This unique report reviews rural America’s residents, their economic conditions, and their homes, using new data from the 2000 Census and other sources.

 

The full Taking Stock report in pdf format:

Introductory materials (cover letters, table of contents, acknowledgements, executive summary, introduction)

National analysis, part 1

National analysis, part 2

National analysis, part 3

High need areas analysis, introduction

Border colonias

Overview

Case Study

Central Appalachia

Overview

Case Study

Farmworkers

Overview

Case Study

Lower Mississippi Delta

Overview

Case Study

Native American Lands

Overview

Case Study

Endnotes

Appendices

 

 

 

TS Executive Summary

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Taking Stock of Rural People, Poverty, and Housing for the 21st Century

© Housing Assistance Council, 2002

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Taking Stock: Rural People, Poverty, and Housing at the Turn of the 21st Century provides an overview of rural America’s residents, their economic condition, and their homes. This publication is third in a series of decennial reports by the Housing Assistance Council (HAC) that use data from the Census and other sources along with case studies describing some of the poorest parts of the rural United States.1

As the 21st century begins, rural America’s population is growing and is becoming more diverse than ever before. Rural residents are aging, and both single-parent and single-person households are increasingly common. Rural education levels – and thus the acquisition of some skills needed for employment in the 21st century economy – still lag behind those of metropolitan areas. The U.S. rural economy has diversified but economic stagnation remains a problem in many rural communities. Overall, poverty persists as a greater problem in nonmetro places than in the U.S. as a whole, and housing affordability problems, often associated with urban areas, are increasing in rural places and now affect one rural household in four.

Characteristics of rural America – such as concentrations of persistent poverty, lingering housing quality problems, and relatively high homeownership rates – are evident in the national population, economic, and housing data described in this report. Much of the rural U.S. reflects these common characteristics, but rural America is also made up of diverse communities. Some match national average levels of poverty and homeownership, but many more have distinct social and economic characteristics. The regional analyses and case studies in this report depict five persistently poor areas and populations in rural America and provide examples of counties with some of the worst housing conditions in the U.S.

The Face of Rural America

According to the 2000 Census approximately 55.4 million people, or 20 percent of the U.S. population, reside in nonmetropolitan areas. From 1990 to 2000 the nonmetro population grew by 10 percent while the overall population grew by 13 percent. The Western U.S. experienced the greatest rural population growth, due in large part to the in-migration of people moving in search of amenities such as recreation.

Along with its growth, the nonmetro population is becoming increasingly diverse. One of the most significant trends since the 1990 Census is the explosive growth in the nonmetro Hispanic population, which rose by 70 percent in the 1990s.2 Still, nonmetro areas remain more homogenous than the nation as a whole.

As the rural American population is diversifying along with the rest of the country, it is also aging. The baby boom generation will remain a significant factor in rural America during the next few decades as baby boomers start to move into the ranks of seniors. This dramatic demographic shift is likely to have profound ramifications for nearly every aspect of rural society, including housing.

Rural households’ structure is changing as well. The number of rural households that are not families increased at three times the rate of family household growth during the 1990s. Among nonmetro nonfamily households, 84 percent are persons living alone, and a large proportion of those are people over the age of 65.

Another noticeable shift from 1990 was in rural education levels. The proportion of nonmetro residents lacking a high school diploma fell 7 percentage points during the 1990s. Despite this progress, educational attainment levels in nonmetro areas still lag behind those in the nation as a whole.

The Economics of Rural America

The last decade of the 20th century witnessed one of the most dramatic economic expansions in our nation’s history. In general, rural America’s economy benefitted from this expansion as earnings increased and unemployment fell. Rural unemployment, however, has begun to tick upwards in the past few years.

In recent decades the national rural economy has diversified, but economic stagnation and poverty remain problems in many rural communities. Industries such as agriculture, forestry, and mining that dominated much of the rural economic system for the better part of the past century have continued to decline in prominence. Manufacturing now accounts for 18 percent of all jobs in nonmetro areas. Service and retail industries, which tend to pay lower wages than the manufacturing sector, experienced dramatic growth in rural areas during the 1990s.

Poverty remains a problem in rural America. Approximately 7.8 million persons in the nonmetro U.S., including disproportionate numbers of minorities, are poor. While the poverty rate is 14.6 percent for the total rural population, the poverty rate for nonmetro African Americans is more than twice that at 33 percent. Likewise, nonmetro Hispanics have a poverty rate of 27 percent and nonmetro Native Americans have a poverty rate of 30 percent. Nineteen percent of rural children are poor, a significantly higher poverty rate than the rates for rural adults (13 percent) and rural elderly people (12.3 percent).

All but 11 of the 200 poorest counties in the United States are nonmetropolitan. Some nonmetro counties, particularly those with large Native American populations, have poverty rates above 40 percent. Three hundred and sixty-three nonmetro counties, accounting for 13 percent of the nonmetro U.S. population and 23 percent of the rural poor, have experienced persistent poverty rates of 20 percent or more since 1960.

Housing in Rural America

Of the approximately 106 million occupied housing units in the United States, roughly 23 million, or 22 percent, are located in nonmetropolitan areas.3 As the population and economy of rural America have changed, so too have rural homes. For the most part these changes have been positive, but affordability and credit access problems have increased, and some physical inadequacies remain. Nearly 30 percent of nonmetro households, or more than 6.2 million households, have at least one major housing problem. Most often they are cost-burdened.

Homeownership is at an all-time high in the United States as 68 percent of the nation’s households are homeowners. In rural areas, the homeownership rate is even higher at 76 percent. As is true in the nation as a whole, in nonmetro areas minorities have much lower homeownership rates than whites, but the level of homeownership for rural minorities is 14 percentage points higher than the level for minorities in metro areas. Furthermore, rural minorities have made significant progress in moving into the ranks of homeownership. Between 1991 and 2001 the number of minority nonmetro homeowners increased by 35 percent compared to 16 percent for nonmetro whites.

Manufactured housing continues to be one of the nation’s fastest growing types of housing, particularly in rural areas where the prevalence of manufactured housing is twice the national rate.4

During the latter part of the 20th century, affordability replaced poor housing conditions as the greatest problem facing low-income rural households in the U.S. Throughout the country, rural housing costs have increased drastically and incomes have not kept pace – especially for rural renters. Rural renters make up 35 percent of nonmetro cost-burdened households while they comprise less than one-quarter of all nonmetro households.

Despite the fact that America’s 5.5 million rural rental households experience some of the country’s most significant housing problems, the importance of the rural rental housing stock is often ignored. Rural rental households have lower incomes than owners, are more likely to have affordability problems, and are twice as likely to live in substandard housing. Approximately 12 percent of nonmetro renters live in either moderately or severely inadequate housing compared to 6 percent of nonmetro owners.

In the past few decades, dramatic progress has been made in improving the quality of housing in rural America, but housing problems still persist. According to 2001 American Housing Survey (AHS) indicators, 1.6 million or 6.9 percent of nonmetro units are either moderately or severely substandard. Minorities in rural areas are among the poorest and worst housed groups in the entire nation, with disproportionally high levels of inadequate housing conditions. Non-white and Hispanic rural households are three times more likely to live in substandard housing than white rural households. Minorities are also more likely to live in inadequate housing in nonmetro areas than in metro areas. Rural African Americans have particularly high substandard housing rates, as nearly one in five nonmetro African-American households lives in substandard housing.

The number of households experiencing crowding in rural America grew slightly during the 1990s. Overcrowding is particularly a problem among Hispanic households, which occupy one-quarter of all crowded housing units in nonmetro areas.

Unfortunately, housing cost, quality, and crowding concerns are not mutually exclusive – an estimated 662,000 rural households have two or more housing problems. Not surprisingly, rural renters are disproportionally represented among households with multiple problems.

During the nation’s recent economic downturn, the overall housing market has remained remarkably strong and homes continue to be the most valuable assets most Americans will ever own. However, limited access to quality credit and affordable mortgage sources impacts the investment potential of many rural homes. Furthermore, the recent proliferation of subprime lending has greatly influenced rural mortgage markets.

Since the mid-1930s, the federal government has supported the production of low- and moderate-income housing and improved the living conditions of millions of low-income rural Americans. Funding for U.S. rural housing programs has not kept pace with need, however, and several programs have been affected by a recent shift in emphasis to indirect subsidies such as loan guarantees and tax incentives. As a result, these programs ability to reach lower-income households has been diminished.

High Need Rural Areas

Poverty and housing problems are particularly pervasive among several geographical areas and populations in rural America: the colonias along the U.S.- Mexico border, Central Appalachia, farmworkers, the Lower Mississippi Delta, and Native Americans. As it did for past Taking Stock research, HAC visited communities representing each of these high need areas and populations and analyzed county and regional data in order to chronicle the progress and need among rural America’s “poorest of the poor.”

The key commonality among the high need rural areas and populations analyzed in this report is their persistently poor economic condition. Despite some progress overall that mirrored a national economic expansion and housing condition improvements in many communities, these areas and populations as a whole remain relatively mired in poverty and inadequate housing.Poverty rates in the high need regions of Central Appalachia, the Lower Mississippi Delta, and the colonias are 17 to 19 percent.

Poverty rates within these regions are higher for sub-populations and minorities. For example, the poverty rate for those living in the Texas colonias is 30 percent and the poverty rate for African Americans in rural areas of the Lower Mississippi Delta is 40 percent. Poverty is even more prevalent for the high need populations examined by HAC: Native Americans living in Census-designated American Indian, Alaska Native, and Hawaiian Homeland areas have a 33 percent poverty rate and fully 61 percent of farmworkers are poor.

Housing affordability problems are extreme and increasing in many of the communities in these high need areas, and physical housing inadequacies are more prominent throughout these areas than in the rest of the United States. HAC researchers, however, found hope amid these depressing regional and community statistics. The case studies in this report include examples of collaborative housing improvement efforts by local governments, nonprofit developers, and federal agencies.

1– The terms “rural” and “nonmetro” are used interchangeably throughout this report.
2– Hispanic is an ethnic origin, not a racial category.
3– Most housing statistics in this Executive Summary are from HAC tabulations of 2001 American Housing Survey data.
4– The terms “manufactured housing” and “mobile homes” are used interchangeably in this publication.


Questions? Contact Janice Clark at HAC, janice@ruralhome.org, 202-842-8600.

Taking Stock

Publications List

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Connecting the Dots

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Connecting the Dots: A Location Analysis of USDA’s Section 515 Rental Housing and Other Federally Subsidized Rental Properties in Rural Areas

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Section 515 program provides more than 400,000 decent, affordable rental homes for rural Americans with low incomes, but many of these rentals are now at risk. Connecting the Dots seeks to inform the debate on preservation of these units. This Housing Assistance Council report examines where Section 515 developments are located with respect to other federally subsidized rentals and reviews their role in their rural communities’ rental housing networks. It discusses the policy implications of HAC’s research findings and makes recommendations.

Full Report (Click to access large file at www.scribd.com)
Sections of the Report (each section includes the title page and complete table of contents)
Research Highlights
  • PDF file (Click to access large file at www.scribd.com)

Order a print copy of the report for $10 (includes shipping and handling)

If you have trouble downloading any of the information on this page contact Leslie Strauss or Janice Clark, 202-842-8600.

If you have questions about the contents of the report, contact Leslie Strauss or Lance George, 202-842-8600.


All Files are in PDF format and require Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Questions? Contact Janice Clark at HAC, janice@ruralhome.org, 202-842-8600.

Publications List

Back to HAC Home Page

What is “Rural”? Working Towards a Better Programmatic Definition

This report examines the most common ways of identifying rural places.
2008, 64 pages, ISBN 1-58064-150-4

What is “Rural”? Working Towards a Better Programmatic Definition (PDF)

Environmental Review: A Guide for Applicants Seeking HUD or USDA Rural Development Financial Assistance

Environmental Review: A Guide for Applicants Seeking HUD or USDA Rural Development Financial Assistance
Print copy: $5.00
Describes environmental review processes required for rural housing development when requesting financial assistance from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development or U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development.
2007, 60 pages, ISBN 978-1-58064-157-9