HR-8877-119
Referred to the House Committee on Financial Services.
Sponsored by Sylvia Garcia (D-TX)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to conduct a study on work requirements that have already been implemented by public housing agencies participating in the Moving to Work (MTW) demonstration program. The study would examine short-, medium-, and long-term effects on residents and housing agencies, including impacts on homelessness, poverty, earnings, job attainment, and administrative capacity, using both quantitative data and interviews with residents. HUD would be required to submit an initial findings report to Congress within one year — but only if the Secretary first determines that enough participating agencies exist to support a rigorous evaluation and that the study itself would not negatively affect low-income families receiving assistance.
Who benefits
Policymakers and Congress, who would receive evidence-based data to inform future decisions about work requirements in federal housing programs. Public housing agencies considering or already implementing work requirements, who would gain a formal federal evaluation of their approaches. Researchers and advocacy organizations on all sides of the work-requirements debate, who would gain access to government-collected data. Residents of MTW housing agencies who participate in interviews, giving them a formal channel to share their experiences. Indirectly, future applicants to HUD-subsidized housing programs, whose program rules may be shaped by the study's findings.
Who is hurt
There are no direct, immediate harms from a study bill. However, current residents of MTW public housing agencies subject to work requirements could face indirect risks if the study's findings are used to expand or entrench those requirements. Housing advocacy organizations that oppose work requirements may view the study's framing — focused on "self-sufficiency" — as presupposing a favorable outcome. Public housing agencies would bear some administrative burden in cooperating with the study. Taxpayers would bear the cost of conducting the study, though that cost is not specified in the bill.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that evidence-based policymaking requires rigorous evaluation before expanding or contracting any federal program requirement, and that the Moving to Work demonstration has been running long enough to generate meaningful data on outcomes. They contend that the bill's built-in safeguards — requiring HUD to verify sufficient sample size and confirm the study would not harm participants — demonstrate a careful, measured approach. They further argue that understanding the real-world effects of work requirements on earnings growth, job retention, and poverty rates is essential for Congress to make informed decisions about the future of federal housing assistance.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's title and framing — emphasizing "self-sufficiency" — signals a predetermined conclusion favorable to work requirements, potentially biasing the study's design and interpretation before it begins. They contend that existing research, including HUD's own evaluations of the MTW program, already documents significant barriers faced by housing-assisted residents such as disability, caregiving responsibilities, and lack of accessible jobs, and that a new study may be used to justify expanding requirements rather than addressing those barriers. They further argue that the bill does not require the study to examine whether work requirements cause residents to lose housing assistance, a critical outcome measure.