
More housing needs to be built in order to lower prices.
On the public record
Every politician on the site, every statement on file. Search, filter, and read the public record.
3,200+·quotes on file

More housing needs to be built in order to lower prices.

the cost of post-secondary education has gone--is pricing itself out of the market.

When I do visit all 92 counties in our State, by far the issue I hear even above and beyond rural broadband, affordable housing, would be workforce.

I challenge employers throughout the country to make sure to take that into consideration.

Can you cite a couple of the key regulations that drive costs up? And generally, they are always well intended, but then can work at cross-purposes for the affordability factor.

I do look forward--sometimes we are at odds in terms of what we should do, but there is always practical legislation in the middle, and I would hope that we can have those conversations that get us there.

A lot of times things we do here are well-intended, but you cannot do it by borrowing from future generations.

I mean, that just seems outrageously high as a median, and that is actually higher than what the median is across the country.

Federal Government, I think too, can help generally on the main drivers of an economy that folks are wondering what do we have, by not spending and borrowing more, because you don't need a macroeconomics degree, that creates inflation.

we need more of them to fill that high demand, very high pay niche.

I want to give a shout out to a company in Indiana, the Cook Medical Group, who does medical device manufacturing as its business, but it has taken on trying to make affordable housing something that they are going to try to make.

Federal bureaucrats should not step in the way. We must do more to address federal regulatory burdens.

I think that is the wrong way to accomplish maybe a goal that is noble to help those that need help affording a place to live, but not like that.

Spending policies, I think, have exacerbated an already unaffordable housing market.

I think the solutions to all of these are probably left best to the laboratory of the states.

I do look forward--sometimes we are at odds in terms of what we should do, but there is always practical legislation in the middle, and I would hope that we can have those conversations that get us there.

I mean, that just seems outrageously high as a median, and that is actually higher than what the median is across the country.

we need more of them to fill that high demand, very high pay niche.