HOUSTON — Houston has proven something rare in American housing policy: a large city can significantly reduce homelessness.
Through a coordinated, data-driven system, Houston has cut homelessness by more than 60 percent since 2011 — progress highlighted during a November Houston Community Media (HCoM) briefing. At a separate briefing in January, a different group of housing advocates turned the conversation forward, focusing on what happens next: how to keep people housed as affordability tightens and support systems strain.
“Getting housed is only the first step,” said Alexis Loving, president and CEO of SEARCH Homeless Services. “Housing is not the finish line. It’s the starting point.”
There are various agencies and organizations available aimed at tackling the crisis, which looks different on multiple fronts.
Housing Is the Beginning — Not the End
Loving, who has worked in Houston’s homeless response system for more than 15 years, said the city’s progress depends on more than available units. It relies on a fragile web of mental health care, case management, income stability, and ongoing support — conditions that must stay intact for housing to last.
Homelessness, she said, does not end when someone receives keys. Many people entering housing are also managing serious mental illness, substance use, trauma, or chronic health conditions. Those challenges do not disappear overnight.
“These complex behaviors don’t go away the second someone gets housed,” Loving said. “Without wraparound care and stabilization, people are at real risk of losing that housing.”
Public perception often misses that reality, she added. Visible encampments or people returning to the streets are frequently viewed as system failure, when in fact they often signal a breakdown in support — not a lack of effort or willingness.
“The system works when the conditions are right,” Loving said. “When housing is scarce, vouchers are limited, or funding is cut, it doesn’t work as fast — and sometimes it doesn’t work at all.”
Land Exists. The System Is the Barrier.
Houston is often described as land-rich. But without the right systems in place, land alone does not produce affordable housing.
That disconnect is where the Houston Land Bank comes in.
Christa Stoneham, the Land Bank’s president and CEO, said she has identified roughly 1,000 acres of publicly owned land across the Houston region that could be used for affordable housing and community use.
“We’re in Texas — we have land,” Stoneham said. “The biggest solution for affordable housing isn’t access to land. It’s that the system is semi-broken.”
The Houston Land Bank is not a builder or developer. Instead, it acquires vacant or tax-foreclosed properties, clears legal barriers, and sells land to approved builders at deeply discounted prices. In exchange, builders must construct homes that meet affordability requirements and sell them to income-eligible buyers.
“We’re a system for activating land for the public benefit,” Stoneham said.
That approach targets households who can sustain a mortgage but are priced out of homeownership because land costs — not construction — have pushed prices beyond reach.
According to its website, the Houston Land Bank has helped more than 110 Houstonians purchase affordable homes since 2019.
Protection After Purchase
If the Land Bank helps people get into homes, another system focuses on making sure they don’t get priced out later.
“The difference is not just getting people housed — it’s making sure they can stay there,” said Ashley Allen, executive director of the Houston Community Land Trust.
Allen described the Land Trust as the back end of the housing system, where permanence matters most.
“While the Land Bank activates the land,” she said, “the Community Land Trust allows the land to remain affordable, in the hands of the community, and governed by the community.”
Under the land trust model, the trust retains ownership of the land while the homeowner owns the house itself. That separation lowers purchase prices upfront and limits resale prices later — ensuring affordability is preserved instead of lost to the open market.
That structure also protects public investment, particularly as federal housing dollars become less reliable.
“When public dollars go into housing and that home goes back to the market, that money is lost,” Allen said. “We end up subsidizing the same neighborhoods over and over again without a net gain.”
Resale restrictions also stabilize property taxes by tying assessments to what a home can legally sell for — not speculative market values.
“People say they love equity,” Allen said, “until their grandmother can’t afford the property taxes.”
The Houston Community Land Trust serves households earning under 80 percent of the area median income, including teachers, retirees, public servants, and recent graduates. Today, it supports more than 200 families and has expanded to include rental units, community space, and small-business support.
“Affordable housing isn’t public housing,” Allen said. “It’s housing people can live in without having to choose between food, health care, and a roof over their head.”
Vouchers: A Critical Lifeline — When They’re Available
For renters with the lowest incomes, federal housing vouchers can be a lifeline — but access remains severely limited.
Anna Rhodes, an associate professor of sociology at Rice University affiliated with the Kinder Institute for Urban Research, studies housing voucher programs and their impact on rental access.
The Housing Choice Voucher Program is the nation’s largest rental assistance program, serving about 2.3 million households nationwide. It is designed for very low-income renters — typically those earning 50 percent or less of the area medianincome — and caps housing costs at about 30 percent of income.
In Houston, roughly 19,000 to 20,000 households receive vouchers through the Houston Housing Authority, with another 4,500 served by Harris County. But nationwide, the program reaches only one in four eligible households due to chronic underfunding.
Even for those who receive vouchers, finding housing is not guaranteed. Voucher holders must rent in the private market, where Texas law allows landlords to refuse tenants based on source of income.
“If it takes longer to lease to someone using a voucher than someone who isn’t,” Rhodes said, “a landlord may choose the easier option.”
Required safety inspections — intended to protect tenants — can also slow leasing and discourage participation.
Despite those barriers, Rhodes said vouchers remain one of the most effective tools for housing stability when they are accessible. But for families hoping to apply, the obstacle comes earlier.
“Right now, the waitlists for both housing authorities are closed,” she said. “If and when those waitlists open, that’s breaking news for families who have been locked out of assistance.”
Where Help Often Begins
For many Houstonians facing housing instability, help can begin with a simple three-digit phone call.
One of the most practical tools discussed at the Jan. 27 briefing was 211, a free, 24/7 helpline operated locally by United Way Greater Houston. The service connects callers to housing assistance, rent and utility help, food support, transportation, and disaster-related services.
“Every time you call 211, you speak to a real live person who can help connect you to resources in your community,” said Aarti Goswami, assistant vice president of United Way Greater Houston, Community Outreach – 211.
Since the pandemic, Goswami said demand for rent and utility assistance has remained elevated — a sign that more households are living closer to the edge, with fewer buffers when crises hit.
“People don’t call with just one need,” she said. “If they’re housing insecure, chances are they’re also food insecure and struggling with other basic needs.”
By connecting callers to multiple forms of support at once, 211 can help stabilize emergencies before they become displacement.
In a city grappling with rising costs and shrinking safety nets, staying housed is rarely about a single solution. It depends on whether systems connect instead of fragment — and whether help arrives before the margin for error disappears.