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Publications by G. Thomas Kingsley on Housing Markets and Choice

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High Cost and Investor Mortgages (Research Report)
G. Thomas Kingsley, Kathryn L.S. Pettit

Neighborhoods likely to be the hardest hit by foreclosure impacts in 2009 are those that experienced the highest densities of subprime (high-cost) lending during the peak 2004-2006 period. This brief examines patterns of such lending in the 100 largest metropolitan areas. The very highest subprime densities were found in minority neighborhoods that were, interestingly, at the higher rather than the lower end of the income spectrum. But there was considerable variety in characteristics among the most troubled. Of the fifth of census tracts that ranked highest in subprime density, 35 percent had predominantly white populations and 60 percent were in the suburbs.

Posted to Web: August 21, 2009Publication Date: July 01, 2009

Metropolitan Conditions and Trends: Changing Contexts for a Community Initiative (Research Brief)
Leah Hendey, G. Thomas Kingsley

This brief reviews recent social and economic trends in the ten metropolitan areas that form the context for the neighborhood programs being operated as a part of the Annie E. Casey Foundation's Making Connections initiative. It finds that these areas are strikingly different along a number dimensions and in are many ways representative of the diversity in conditions and trends across America's metropolitan areas. Since 2002, for example, two of these areas attained among the nation's highest rates of employment growth (Denver and Seattle) while two others experienced serious declines (Oakland and Milwaukee). Although there were important differences in magnitudes, all sites did share in a number of trends: minority groups growing as a share of total population, improvements in several social indicators (e.g., in crime and teen pregnancy) but, disturbingly, notable increases in child poverty.

Posted to Web: July 10, 2009Publication Date: July 09, 2009

The Impacts of Foreclosures on Families and Communities: A Primer (Research Report)
G. Thomas Kingsley, Robin E. Smith, David Price

The foreclosure crisis is now having dramatic effects throughout America. In mid-2008, recognizing that this phenomenon was still quite new, the Open Society Institute asked the Urban Institute to scan available research to document what we know about: (1) the way foreclosures impact families; (2) how foreclosures affect communities; and (3) the efforts now underway, or being suggested, to address the crisis, focusing on actions at the local level. This report summarizes a longer report presenting the results of this review.

Posted to Web: July 01, 2009Publication Date: July 01, 2009

The Impacts of Foreclosures on Families and Communities (Research Report)
G. Thomas Kingsley, Robin E. Smith, David Price

The foreclosure crisis is now having dramatic effects throughout America. In mid-2008, recognizing that this phenomenon was still quite new, the Open Society Institute asked the Urban Institute to scan available research to document what we know about: (1) the way foreclosures impact families; (2) how foreclosures affect communities; and (3) the efforts now underway, or being suggested, to address the crisis, focusing on actions at the local level. This report presents the results of this review. A final section offers the authors' recommendations on priorities for additional research to fill important gaps in the knowledge base.

Posted to Web: June 22, 2009Publication Date: May 01, 2009

Committee on Oversight and Government Reform (Testimony)
G. Thomas Kingsley

Neighborhoods with high concentrations of foreclosures and increasing vacancy rates are likely to generate substantial unanticipated costs for resident families and jurisdictions. Any formula distributing resources to help cover those costs must be carefully constructed if it is to be equitable. In this testimony, Kingsley makes six points related to that goal.

Posted to Web: May 22, 2008Publication Date: May 22, 2008

District of Columbia Housing Monitor (Series/District of Columbia Housing Monitor)
Peter A. Tatian, G. Thomas Kingsley

The District of Columbia Housing Monitor provides a quarterly look at the Washington, D.C., housing market, tracking home prices, real estate listings, new construction, and affordable housing. This issue's special section provides the most extensive tracking to date of the city's subsidized affordable housing stock, reporting numbers of units by location, program type, ownership, and expiration of affordability restrictions.

Posted to Web: March 26, 2008Publication Date: March 26, 2008

Have MTO Families Lost Access to Opportunity Neighborhoods Over Time? (Research Brief)
G. Thomas Kingsley, Kathryn L.S. Pettit

Families in HUD's Moving to Opportunity program had the chance to move to neighborhoods with lower poverty, lower crime rates and, presumably, more opportunities for employment, good schools and better quality of life. Did they benefit from the moves and did they remain there to continue those benefits? This brief identifies patterns of moving for MTO families and the characteristics of the neighborhoods both from and to which they moved.

Posted to Web: March 20, 2008Publication Date: March 01, 2008

Housing in the Nation's Capital 2007 (Research Report)
Margery Austin Turner, G. Thomas Kingsley, Kathryn L.S. Pettit, Mary Kopczynski Winkler, Barika X. Williams, Mark Woolley

This is the sixth in a series of annual reports about housing in the Washington metropolitan region. It assembles and analyzes the most current data on housing conditions and trends in the District of Columbia and the surrounding suburbs. Last year's report focused on linkages between housing and schools in the District of Columbia and the metropolitan region. This year's report takes a regional perspective, examining how the region addresses housing for special needs populations. More specifically, the report assesses the housing options and services available to the elderly, disabled, and homeless and explores the consequences and opportunities for housing policy across the region.

Posted to Web: November 29, 2007Publication Date: November 29, 2007

Estimating the Public Costs and Benefits of HOPE VI Investments: Methodological Report (Research Report)
Margery Austin Turner, Mark Woolley, G. Thomas Kingsley, Susan J. Popkin, Diane K. Levy, Elizabeth Cove

The HOPE VI program has invested over $6 billion in federal funds for the redevelopment of severely distressed public housing. Drawing on the existing research evidence, this study systematically compares the costs (both monetary and nonmonetary) of maintaining severely distressed public housing developments to the potential costs and benefits of effectively revitalizing them. An effective redevelopment strategy can dramatically improve living conditions for families, resulting in better physical and mental health and increased employment and earnings. Moreover, redevelopment can trigger the revitalization of previously blighted communities. These outcomes also save public resources. In fact, for a typical distressed public housing project, mixed-income redevelopment can save the public more than $20 million over 20 years.

Posted to Web: July 16, 2007Publication Date: June 01, 2007

Housing in the Nation's Capital 2006 (Research Report)
Margery Austin Turner, G. Thomas Kingsley, Kathryn L.S. Pettit, Jennifer Comey, Barika X. Williams, Mark Woolley, Jessica Cigna

This is the fifth in a series of annual reports that analyzes the most current data on housing conditions and trends in the District of Columbia and the surrounding suburbs. This year's report focuses on linkages between housing and schools in the District of Columbia and the metropolitan region. The availability and quality of public schools play a critical role in shaping demand for housing, and, correspondingly, housing market trends shape school enrollment patterns. To explore these issues, this report reviews trends in housing and public school enrollment in the Washington region, with more in-depth coverage of the District's neighborhoods.

Posted to Web: October 25, 2006Publication Date: October 25, 2006

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