White House Press Release, Message from President Harry S. Truman to the United States Congress
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HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
FEBRUARY 23, 1948.
CONFIDENTIAL: To be held in STRICT CONFIDENCE and no portion,
synopsis or intimation to be given cut or published until the
READING of the President's Message has begun in either the Senate
or House of Representatives. Extreme care must therefore be
exercised to avoid premature publication.
CHARLES G. ROSS
Secretary to the President
TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES:
In the next few weeks legislation authorizing rent con rol and
emergency financial aids for housing construction will expire. The Congress
should extend and improve this essential legislation, and at the same
time should enact urgently needed new housing legislation. The objective
should be an integrated program to assist in obtaining more housing at
lower cost, both in the immediate futur and for the long run.
This program should be based on the needs of all our people
for housing, the ability of the housing industry to meet those needs,
the most practical and effective method of giving Federal assistance,
and the urgent necessity for reducing costs and prices in the housing
field. I am glad that the Congress through several of its Committees
has been making an extensive study of these matters.
Today, far too many of our families are living in sub-standard
housing, in painfully cramped quarters, or doubled up with friends or
relatives. Over five million of our present homes are below minimum
standards. About two and one-half million married couples live with
other families, a 50 percent increase since 1940. Large numbers of
families do not have enough space to give their children decent accom-
modations. These conditions cannot help but be reflected in unsatis-
factory home life and lowered standards of health. Their impact is
greatest on our low income families, minority groups and new families
started by veterans.
These are some of the symptoms of our long-range housing
problem. To provide better homes for families now in sub-standard or
cramped housing, to meet the increased needs of a growing population,
and to replace our supply of housing as it wears out we must look ahead
to a long period of high volume construction. It will be necessary to
produce an annual average of more than one million new houses and apart-
ments in urban areas during the next ten years, and in addition a sub-
stantial amount of housing in rural areas, if we are to have the housing this
Nation needs and can afford. This will require the joint strength and
effort of management and labor in the building industry, of private
financial institutions and of Federal, state and local governments.
As we make progress toward this goal, we will overcome the
critical housing shortage by providing enough dwellings at prices which
families who need them can afford. At the same time, we can also
stabilize the housing industry and thus make a contribution toward
preventing the violent fluctuations of the business cycle in general.
The expansion of housing production is necessary in this
inflationary period, just as it is necessary to expand the production
of other articles in short supply which are vitally needed by our
people. The critical housing shortage is contributing to the upward
pressure on the selling price and rental price of housing. While we
need rent control until this shortage can be overcome, the basic problem
is to increase housing production to eliminate the shortage.
The long-range and immediate aspects of the housing problem
are intermingled. We must now take steps both to increase the immediate
volume of housing construction and to achieve progressively better housing
at lower cost over the years ahead. Without measures to "achieve both
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