Structured frameworks, classifications, and public definitions for understanding housing stability, pathways, risk categories, access barriers, and community indicators
The Public Housing Framework™ provides structured tools for understanding housing conditions, resident situations, and community factors in neutral, public-interest terms.
Framework for understanding housing stability factors including affordability pressure, condition risk, displacement exposure, ownership security, and resident vulnerability
Classification SystemCategories defining major housing pathways including renting, homeownership, shared housing, transitional housing, and specialized options
Risk FrameworkPublic-understanding categories defining levels of housing risk including low, moderate, high, and critical vulnerability indicators
Barrier AnalysisDocumented barriers to housing access including credit, income, inventory, documentation, and navigation complexity factors
Neighborhood-level indicators for understanding community conditions and rebuilding progress:
Tracking housing quality, maintenance levels, and code compliance patterns
Understanding vacant property rates and their community impacts
Measuring housing stability, turnover rates, and community continuity
Tracking property investment patterns and infrastructure improvements
Monitoring proximity to schools, transit, healthcare, and retail
Understanding environmental factors affecting housing and health
The Public Housing Framework™ is developed with these commitments:
Frameworks present neutral, factual definitions without advocacy or political positioning
All framework categories are grounded in verifiable data and documented research
Categories are designed for public understanding, not diagnosis or advice
Frameworks evolve as source quality and public data improve