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Struggling to stay out of high-poverty neighborhoods: housing choice and locations in moving to opportunity's first decade
Authors:Xavier de Souza Briggs  Jennifer Comey  Gretchen Weismann
Institution:1. Office of Management and Budget, The White House , Washington, DC, 20503, USA dkumaraiah@omb.eop.gov;3. The Urban Institute , 2100 M Street, NW Washington, DC, 20037, USA;4. Department of Housing and Community Development , 100 Cambridge Street, Suite 300, Boston, MA, 02114, USA
Abstract:Improving locational outcomes emerged as a major policy hope for the nation's largest low-income housing program over the past two decades, but a host of supply and demand-side barriers confront rental voucher users, leading to heated debate over the importance of choice versus constraint. In this context, we examine the Moving to Opportunity experiment's first decade, using a mixed-method approach.

MTO families faced major barriers in tightening markets, yet diverse housing trajectories emerged, reflecting variation in: (a) willingness to trade location – in particular, safety and avoidance of “ghetto” behavior – to get larger, better housing units after initial relocation; (b) the distribution of neighborhood types in different metro areas; and (c) circumstances that produced many involuntary moves. Access to social networks or services “left behind” in poorer neighborhoods seldom drove moving decisions. Numerous moves were brokered by rental agents who provided shortcuts to willing landlords but thereby steered participants to particular neighborhoods.
Keywords:low-income housing  vouchers  neighborhood  markets
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