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Opinion: ‘This time it’s different.’ U.S. of AmeRegCorp. AARP. UMMC. MHI. MHARR. Congress and manufactured homes

May 15, 2026 at 7:10 AM Tony Kovach HousingWire

Per the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) website: “MBA issued a Mortgage Action Alliance (MAA) Call to Action urging members to contact their U.S. Representative to ensure…troubling provisions within the Senate-passed 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act are fixed as the House prepares its response.” A survey of quotes from various sources revealed tensions among various interest groups with the emerging bill. The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform (MHARR) are among those pushing changes. 

At the core of the issues for several groups is the question: Would the legislation deliver on its promise of increasing production of affordable housing

The iron triangle and perverse incentives

In the backdrop is this: researchers have explored ‘perverse incentives’ leading organizations or politicians to prioritize maintenance of a problem over the solution.

While that iron triangle of perverse incentives operates under numerous terms, per Gemini: “AmeRegCorp (n.): The symbiotic consolidation of American regulatory agencies and dominant corporate entities, resulting in a market structure that favors established players while suppressing independent competition through legislative and financial bottlenecks.”

Some supporters claiming solutions from the emerging bill may have ‘perverse incentives’ for maintaining the status quo while posturing as the ‘champions of change.’

Recall HUD’s Pamela Blumenthal and Regina Gray said: “Without significant new supply, cost burdens are likely to increase as current home prices reach all-time highs…” and “The regulatory environment — federal, state, and local — that contributes to the extensive mismatch between supply and need has worsened over time. Federally sponsored commissions, task forces, and councils under both Democratic and Republican administrations have examined the effects of land use regulations on affordable housing for more than 50 years.” 

Perverse incentives and the fingerprints of the Iron Triangle or AmeRegCorp are in evidence.

Key takeaways and ideas on affordable housing solutions

Example 1 of legislative disconnects: Patrice Onwuka

Patrice Onwuka shared her ideas in the Washington Examiner op-ed titled “Reclaiming affordability: A housing agenda that will move women forward.” Here are takeaways from her article:

That’s well supported. Onwuka’s disconnect?

That’s Onwuka’s ‘non sequitur.’ Myth #5 from the Senate brief stated the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act will not preempt local zoning. Onwuka and others made the case for change but missed the key: failure to preempt local zoning.

Example 2 of legislative disconnects: Shelterforce

Shelterforce spotlighted members of the Underserved Mortgage Markets Coalition (UMMC). Recall the UMMC addressed Biden-Harris (D) era FHFA Acting Director Sandra Thompson:

Steve Dubb’s article for Shelterforce proclaimed: “The Federal Housing Bill: ‘A Bunch of Tweaks, But Good Ones.” But weeks later, per Shelterforce.

For discussion, accepting at face value statements from “three expert panelists. George McCarthy, CEO of Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. Sara Morgan, president of Fahe, community development financial institution. Tony Pickett, CEO of Grounded Solutions Network, a national group…”

Without fixing finance and zoning, these are disconnects. UMMC should support MHARR’s proposed amendments if they want authentic change.

Example 3 of legislative disconnects: MHI, AARP and others

The Manufactured Housing Institute, AARP or others supporting proposed legislation without the MHARR amendments on zoning and finance are making similar mistakes.

Comparison of Housing Legislation Approaches

FeaturePending “ROAD” Act (Unamended)MHARR Proposed Amendments
ZoningDefers to local authorityEnforce Federal Enhanced Preemption under the Manufactured Housing Improvement Act of 2000
Financing“Tweaks” to existing programsMandatory Chattel Lending under the Duty to Serve (DTS) enacted by HERA 2008
Market ImpactIncremental “tweaks”Structural supply-side expansion is the only proven solution that supplies millions of federally regulated, safety-energy-affordability-structural standards – inherently affordable manufactured homes
FocusPosturing/Status QuoResolution of production barriers

Per Polk County Commissioner Bill Braswell:

“Americans…demanded a solution to the affordable housing crisis…What is government going to do about it? My view is simple. Government is not capable of solving this problem and history proves it. 

…Unfortunately, manufactured housing, commonly referred to as mobile homes, has been stigmatized for decades. Local governments across the country have…regulated them out of existence, based on outdated perceptions…

Today’s manufactured homes are built to dramatically higher standards…They are safer, more energy-efficient, more storm-resistant, and far more attractive than older models. They…remain one of the only truly affordable paths to homeownership.”

Time for action: Enforcing existing housing laws

On paper, Shelterforce, UMMC, MHI, AARP, Onwuka, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHFA, and HUD tipped their hats in favor of more manufactured homes as a key part of the solution to the affordable housing crisis. Our industry-leading platforms have been ‘fisking’ or doing fact-evidence-analysis (FEA) checks for years, before and since the rise of artificial intelligence (AI). More on these organizations, people and topics are documented there.

These examples beg the question. Why hasn’t Congress or the White House mandated enforcement of existing laws that have been ignored or twisted?

Let’s make this bill different. Lawmakers, fix the affordable housing production problem.

 L. A. “Tony” Kovach is the co-founder and publisher of ManufacturedHomeProNews.com and ManufacturedHomeLivingNews.com. 


This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of HousingWire’s editorial department and its owners. To contact the editor responsible for this piece: [email protected].

Originally reported by HousingWire.
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