Legislation Details

File #: 260454    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Resolution Status: Referred
File created: 5/7/2026 In control: Neighborhood Planning and Development Committee
On agenda: 5/12/2026 Final action:
Title: Sponsor: Councilmember Melissa Patterson Hazley RESOLUTION - Directing the City Manager to evaluate City housing programs and policies to ensure they do not unintentionally exacerbate the concentration of poverty and to recommend strategies that promote diverse housing access, neighborhood stability, and balanced economic development investment throughout Kansas City; and report back to the City Council within 90 days.
Sponsors: Melissa Patterson Hazley
RESOLUTION NO. 260454

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Sponsor: Councilmember Melissa Patterson Hazley

RESOLUTION - Directing the City Manager to evaluate City housing programs and policies to ensure they do not unintentionally exacerbate the concentration of poverty and to recommend strategies that promote diverse housing access, neighborhood stability, and balanced economic development investment throughout Kansas City; and report back to the City Council within 90 days.

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WHEREAS, the City of Kansas City has launched the Housing Gateway Program to help connect individuals experiencing homelessness with immediate housing and supportive services; and

WHEREAS, the City has established the Housing Trust Fund to support the creation and preservation of affordable and deeply affordable housing; and

WHEREAS, Kansas City continues to face a significant shortage of affordable housing, with an estimated need for approximately 64,000 units; and

WHEREAS, communities such as the Third District continue to experience the effects of historic disinvestment, depressed housing stock, aging infrastructure, redlining, discriminatory lending and appraisal practices, urban renewal, highway construction, and other public and private decisions that destabilized neighborhoods and limited generational wealth-building; and

WHEREAS, the construction of United States Highway 71 and other large-scale infrastructure projects contributed to displacement, neighborhood disruption, and long-term barriers to reinvestment in many East Side communities; and

WHEREAS, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has recognized that living in areas of highly concentrated poverty limits opportunity, mobility, economic potential, and social cohesion; and

WHEREAS, concentrated poverty harms school performance, public health, public safety, life expectancy, economic mobility, housing stability, and overall quality of life; and

WHEREAS, even well-intended housing p...

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