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Research Article

Extreme Heat Vulnerability of Subsidized Housing Residents in California

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Pages 843-860
Received 29 Oct 2019
Accepted 10 May 2020
Published online: 24 Jul 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Extreme heat is the leading weather-related cause of mortality in the United States, but there is little evidence about how this climate hazard affects residents of different housing types. In this study, we examine whether Californians living in subsidized housing are more vulnerable to extreme heat than those living in unsubsidized housing. We create a tract-level data set combining housing characteristics, downscaled climate projections, and an index of adaptive capacity and sensitivity to heat. We analyze exposure and vulnerability to heat by housing type and location. We find that subsidized housing is disproportionately located in the hottest tracts that simultaneously also have the most sensitive populations and barriers to adaptation (high-high tracts). Whereas 8% of California’s housing units are in high-high tracts, these tracts contain 16% of public housing units, 14% of Low-Income Housing Tax Credit units, and 10% of Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers. Our findings indicate the need for targeted housing and land-use policy interventions to reduce heat vulnerability.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the California Strategic Growth Council; Climate Change Research Program Grant [CCRP0056].

Notes on contributors

C. J. Gabbe

C. J. Gabbe is an assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Studies and Sciences at Santa Clara University. His research focuses on land use planning, housing policy, and environmental justice.

Gregory Pierce

Gregory Pierce is Associate Director of the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation and a faculty member in the Urban Planning Department at UCLA. His research examines how environmental policy design affects social justice inequities, and how communities strategize and build resilience to overcome these inequities.
 

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