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…Michigan’s housing stock is old and in critical need of repair if families are going to have healthy and affordable housing opportunities in the state, Julie Cassidy, Michigan League for Public Policy’s senior policy analyst, told lawmakers at the committee meeting.

Research from the University of Michigan and the Michigan State Housing Development Authority last year found that 61% of Michigan’s housing units were constructed prior to 1980, around the time lead-based paint was banned in homes as it posed health risks, most of all for children. Additionally, the 2024 Michigan State Housing Needs assessment, also collaborated on by the two entities, determined there are more than 1 million renter-occupied units in Michigan.

Too many residents in Michigan live in homes with serious health and safety issues that require timely response from landlords, but those issues are not being addressed, Cassidy said.

“Many landlords do operate with ethics and care for their tenants, but the law must be strengthened to empower families whose landlords don’t meet their legal obligation to maintain basic standards of health and safety,” Cassidy said.

Read more at Michigan Advance.

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