Bills/S. 890

Choice in Affordable Housing Act of 2025

Choice in Affordable Housing Act of 2025

In CommitteeEconomySenateSenate Bill · 119th Congress
Bill Progress · Senate
Introduced
Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Passed Both
Signed

Plain Language Summary

# Choice in Affordable Housing Act of 2025 - Summary **What the Bill Would Do** The Choice in Affordable Housing Act of 2025 aims to expand housing options and affordability for vulnerable populations. Based on its subject areas, the bill would likely address affordable housing programs, establish standards for the housing industry, and improve access to housing for specific groups including people with disabilities, veterans, Native Americans, and those experiencing homelessness. The legislation would also establish congressional oversight mechanisms for these housing programs. **Who It Affects** This bill would impact several groups: low-income renters and homebuyers, people with disabilities, veterans seeking housing assistance, Native American communities, individuals experiencing homelessness, and landlords operating affordable housing units. State and local housing authorities would also be affected through changes to funding or program requirements. **Current Status** As of now, the bill (S.

890) is in committee review, meaning it has been introduced but not yet debated or voted on by the full Senate. The bill was sponsored by Senator Christopher Coons (D-DE). Without access to the specific text, the exact provisions aren't detailed here, but the subject areas suggest it addresses multiple housing-related challenges across different populations.

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Latest Action

March 6, 2025

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.

Subjects

Congressional oversightDisability and paralysisHousing and community development fundingHousing industry and standardsIndian social and development programsLandlord and tenantPublic housingVeterans' loans, housing, homeless programs

Sponsor

9 cosponsors

Key Dates

Introduced
March 6, 2025
Last Updated
March 6, 2025
Read Full Text on Congress.gov →
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