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Seattle City Wire

Friday, November 8, 2024

How many King County public housing residents in 2021 identify as a minority?

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In King County public housing 60% of residents in 2021 identified as a minority, according to the U.S. Census.

Black people was the most represented minority living in taxpayer-funded public housing in 2021, amounting to 33% of the 13,584 people living in public housing.

The percentage of Black people living in public housing in King County was unchanged from the previous year.

Public housing options in King County were 97% occupied during the year.

The occupancy rate was unchanged from the previous year.

Public housing throughout the U.S. costs billions each year. The Department of Housing and Urban Development requested a budget of nearly $72 billion in 2023, which is almost $12 billion more than the previous year. This didn’t include an additional request for $35 billion to create new public housing units.The high cost of taxpayer-funded public housing has come under scrutiny from both sides of the political spectrum.

Brookings Institute, a left-leaning think tank, found that directions given by the government about creating public housing are vague and involve municipalities that shouldn’t bear such a heavy responsibility. The Institute called public housing a short-term solution that’s too expensive.

Scott Beyer, owner of the right-leaning Market Urbanism Report, said public housing suffers due to government involvement, and claimed money is being wasted since there are so few qualified organizations to operate the public housing units.

He said taxpayer-funded public housing is built “in the most expensive way possible, sticking units in nice neighborhoods and building them to an unnecessarily high standard."

Public Housing Projects in King in 2021
Public Housing ProjectTotal # of People Living in Project% Minority% Change From Prior Year
WA King County 5303313,58460%0%

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