New York Congressional District Data Profile NY-10
Key Facts
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55,132 OR 25%
Renter households that are extremely low-income
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-30,516
Shortage of rental homes affordable and available for extremely low-income renters
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$41,637
30% of area median income
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$132,182
Annual household income needed to afford a two-bedroom rental home at HUD's Fair Market Rent.
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$3,305
is the average Fair Market Rent (FMR) for a two bedroom rental home in this district. It is $2,975 for a one bedroom rental home.
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$1,041
is the monthly rent a household at 30% of the area median income (AMI) can afford in this district. A household at 50% AMI can afford a monthly rent of $1,735.
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$11,015
is what a household in this district must earn monthly to afford the average two-bedroom FMR — without paying more than 30% of their income on housing. This translates to an annual income of $132,182. A household must earn $9,917 monthly or $119,005 annually to afford a one-bedroom home at FMR.
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$63.55
is the two-bedroom Housing Wage in this district. It is the hourly wage a worker must earn - assuming a 40-hour work week for 52 weeks per year – to afford a twobedroom rental home. The one-bedroom Housing Wage is $57.21.
Solutions
- Provide significant resources to build and preserve homes affordable to renters with the lowest incomes through investments in public housing and the national Housing Trust Fund
- Encourage states and local communities to reform zoning and land use regulations that prevent housing from being built and push up housing costs
- Bridge the gap between incomes and housing costs by expanding rental assistance so that it is universally available to all eligible households or consider other innovative approaches, such as a fully refundable renters’ tax credit
- Prevent evictions and homelessness by creating permanent tools, such as emergency rental assistance, to help stabilize families in crisis
- Other federal housing resources, including the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit, should be reformed to better address the underlying market failure that results in the rental housing shortage for these households.
New York Congressional Districts
- District NY-01
- District NY-02
- District NY-03
- District NY-04
- District NY-05
- District NY-06
- District NY-07
- District NY-08
- District NY-09
- District NY-10
- District NY-11
- District NY-12
- District NY-13
- District NY-14
- District NY-15
- District NY-16
- District NY-17
- District NY-18
- District NY-19
- District NY-20
- District NY-21
- District NY-22
- District NY-23
- District NY-24
- District NY-25
- District NY-26