To direct the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and the Director of the Bureau of the Census to conduct a study and submit a report about how Federal agencies identify and record cases of housing loss in the United States, and for other purposes.
Summary
What This Bill Does
This bill requires a federal data study on housing loss. HUD and the Census Bureau must jointly examine how federal agencies identify and record cases of housing loss in the United States. They must consult the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Federal Housing Finance Agency, and the Commerce Department's Under Secretary for Economic Affairs. Within six months, HUD and Census must report to House Oversight and Government Reform, House Financial Services, and Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs. The report must define all types of housing loss experienced by U.S. residents on or after January 1, 2022, identify which types are most common, identify federal datasets used to count annual cases, and describe each dataset's update frequency, data-sharing policies, specificity to individuals or households, geographic coverage, and source accuracy or reliability. It must recommend ways federal agencies can improve identification and recording of housing loss, including additional data collection. The bill does not create direct housing aid; it is meant to improve the government's evidence base on eviction, foreclosure, displacement, homelessness transitions, and related housing-loss events.
Who Benefits and How
Housing loss researchers benefit from a federal inventory of definitions, datasets, reliability, geographic coverage, and data gaps. HUD policy staff benefit from a cross-agency map of how housing loss is recorded and where collection can improve. Census Bureau statisticians benefit from a mandate to define housing-loss types and assess data specificity. Congressional housing committees benefit from a six-month report on housing-loss data quality and recommendations. People experiencing housing loss benefit indirectly if better data leads to more targeted future policy.
Who Bears the Burden and How
HUD research staff must conduct the study and write the report with Census. Census Bureau staff must analyze datasets, definitions, geography, and source reliability. CFPB data staff must consult on housing-loss datasets and sharing policies. FHFA data staff must consult on mortgage and housing-finance records. Federal agencies holding housing-loss data may need to describe sharing rules, update frequency, and accuracy.
Key Provisions
- Requires HUD and Census to study federal identification and recording of housing loss.
- Requires consultation with CFPB, FHFA, and Commerce economic affairs officials.
- Requires a report within six months to House and Senate oversight, housing, and banking committees.
- Defines report contents around housing-loss types, common events, datasets, update frequency, sharing, specificity, geography, and reliability.
- Requires recommendations for improved federal housing-loss data collection and recording.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Directs HUD and the Census Bureau to study how federal agencies identify and record housing loss, consult CFPB, FHFA, and Commerce's Under Secretary for Economic Affairs, and report within six months to House oversight and financial services committees plus Senate banking on types and frequency of housing loss since January 1, 2022, federal datasets used to count housing loss, data update frequency, sharing policies, individual or household specificity, geographic coverage, source reliability, and recommendations for improving federal identification and recording of housing loss.
Key Policy Areas
Housing, Data, Federal Statistics
Primary Purpose
Directs HUD and the Census Bureau to study how federal agencies identify and record housing loss, consult CFPB, FHFA, and Commerce's Under Secretary for Economic Affairs, and report within six months to House oversight and financial services committees plus Senate banking on types and frequency of housing loss since January 1, 2022, federal datasets used to count housing loss, data update frequency, sharing policies, individual or household specificity, geographic coverage, source reliability, and recommendations for improving federal identification and recording of housing loss.
Policy Domains
Resolution provisions
Identified Gains
- Housing loss researchers
- HUD policy staff
- Census Bureau statisticians
- Congressional housing committees
- People experiencing housing loss
Identified Costs
- HUD research staff
- Census Bureau staff
- CFPB data staff
- FHFA data staff
- Federal agencies holding housing-loss data
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeMr. Olszewski (for himself, Ms. Craig, Ms. McBride, Mr. Thanedar, …
Referred to the Committee on Financial Services, and in addition …
Introduced in House
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
CFPB data staff, Census Bureau staff, Census Bureau statisticians
Housing loss researchers, People experiencing housing loss
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology