Affordable housing is a major problem in the City of Pittsburgh.
Many African AmeriĀcans who once lived in East Liberty, Uptown, the South Side Flats area and parts of the Central North Side have been uprooted, with sparkling, flashy new apartment developments that, if the developers had their way, would have all the units priced at marĀket-rate.
But in the words of PittsĀburgh Mayor Ed GainĀey, the city’s first Black mayor, “if you’re coming to ask me for city subsidy, I’m gonna tell you what I need; I need affordability. In providing affordabiliĀty we are re-establishing neighborhoods,” the mayĀor told the New PittsĀburgh Courier during his 75-minute exclusive sit-down with the Courier edĀitorial board, Jan. 23.
This article is the third installment of the CouriĀer’s series, “Mayor GainĀey Unfiltered.” The first two reports focused on the mayor’s “culture change” that he brought to the City of Pittsburgh Mayor’s OfĀfice, including making the workplace safer for many of its Department of PubĀlic Works employees and establishing a new conĀtract with the city’s police officers and firefighters; and the mayor’s strategy towards fighting gun vioĀlence.
More than 10,000 Black people left the City of Pittsburgh between 2010 and 2020, according to U.S. Census data. Most of them probably didn’t want to leave, but when rents started going up, or in the case of the Penn Plaza Apartments, a mostĀly-Black set of buildings in East Liberty that were torn down to make way for a new development anĀchored by Whole Foods, it left African Americans no choice but to flee.
“When we came in, there was no plan for affordable housing,” Mayor GainĀey told the Courier when he took office in January 2022. “We had to create this, so we’re creating it as we go and we’re being able to make sure we use the tools that we have to be able to do it.”
One of those tools was the announcement of a $31.575 million bond, about $30.6 million of which to be used to make “unprecedented investĀments into affordable housing that Pittsburgh residents so urgently need,” according to a City of Pittsburgh press reĀlease from Dec. 28, 2023. That collaboration beĀtween the city and the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh has come to fruition with an announcement on April 3, 2024, of the “AfĀfordable Housing Bond Spending Plan.” The plan estimates the creation or preservation of 1,000 afĀfordable housing rental or for-sale units within the next three years. Half of the funds used for the plan would benefit famiĀlies and individuals at or below 30 percent of the Area Median Income, 25 percent of the funds would benefit those at or below 50 percent of the AMI, and the remaining 25 percent would support homeownĀership opportunities for people at or below 80 perĀ cent of the Area Median Income.
As of 2022, the Area Median Income in AlĀlegheny County was $94,800 for a family of four, or $66,400 for an individual. Most African Americans in the counĀty fall beneath the AMI, which would qualify them for the affordable housing percentage proĀgrams that stand at 80, 50 and 30 percent, reĀspectively. As an examĀple, if a newly created apartment building in East Liberty is marketĀed to those families at 50 percent of the AMI, then a family of four making up to $47,400 (as of 2022) would qualiĀfy to live in the building. In many cases, however, market-rate apartment buildings are only alĀlowing, for example, 15 percent of the units to be classified as “affordĀable.” This means that if the apartment buildĀing allows 15 percent of the residents/families to rent one of the units at “80 percent AMI,” then an individual that makes up to $53,100 annually would qualiĀfy to live there, and 85 percent of the residents would be paying higher, market-rate rent costs.
“In essence, the AfĀfordable Housing Bond is not just a financial instrument; it’s a tesĀtament to our collective commitment to building a more inclusive, equiĀtable, and prosperous Pittsburgh where everyĀone can have a place to call home and thrive,” read an excerpt from the Bond Spending Plan, acĀquired by the Courier on April 7.

PITTSBURGH MAYOR ED GAINEY
Not surprisingly, MayĀor Gainey was blunt in speaking to the Courier. Even before he became mayor, then-state Rep. Ed Gainey knew all-too-well about the affordĀable housing crisis. In May 2016, while he was a state representative for a district that inĀcluded East Liberty, the city’s Affordable HousĀing Task Force reported “a defined affordabiliĀty gap” of 17,241 units for households earning up to 50 percent of the city’s median household income.
Thus, the Pittsburgh Black population is on the decline, while the Black population is on the incline in places like McKees Rocks, Stowe Township, Penn Hills, Bellevue, etc. PittsĀburgh’s Black populaĀtion, once upwards of 28 percent in 2000, is now under 23 percent.
“Everything was marĀket-rate, market-rate, market-rate,” Mayor Gainey told the CouriĀer about the apartment building boom that hapĀpened in the East LibĀertys of the city in the past 10 years. “Yes, it grew a tax base but at the end of the day, it shrunk population.”
A realist, Mayor GainĀey said he’s not asking every developer to make their apartment buildĀings all “affordable.” “We’re not saying give us all affordable housĀing,” the mayor said. “Just give me 15 percent of what it is you want to do and we can make a deal.”
Mayor Gainey told the Courier that affordĀable housing “stabilizĀes neighborhoods,” just like jobs. “We know that technology is very big in this city now. We’re talking to the technolĀogy community about how we continue to see the advancement of that and how we diversify that in a way that evĀerybody feels they have an opportunity to thrive here. That’s how you beĀgin to grow population.”
The mayor also pointed to how affordable housĀing is being preserved in the Hill District with a major investment into Bedford Dwellings, the sprawling housing comĀplex on Bedford AveĀnue. Mayor Gainey said a $50 million federal grant was the final piece the city and the URA needed to make it hapĀpen. Eventually, each housing unit at BedĀford Dwellings will be replaced and hundreds of new units will be creĀated. Part of that reinĀvestment will include the creation of a sevĀen-story building called “City’s Edge,” where the vast majority of the 110 units would be marked for those making up to 60 percent of the AMI. Pittsburgh City CounĀcil President R. Daniel Lavelle estimated the entire revitalization would take six years.
Between Mayor Gainey, his staff and other electĀed officials and stakeĀholders, they know how important it is to fix the affordable housing criĀsis in Pittsburgh. There are a number of DownĀtown building owners who are struggling with keeping the lights on with business contracts, so they’re turning their buildings into housing spaces. The mayor, AlĀlegheny County ExecĀutive Sara Innamorato and others are working to make sure a good number of those DownĀtown housing units are classified as affordable. The mayor’s communiĀcations director, Maria Montano, said the city is working with VisitĀPittsburgh on a marketĀing strategy “to target residents who have left home (Pittsburgh) and to reintroduce them to the city and say, ‘come back home.'”
Mayor Gainey spokesĀperson Olga George addĀed: “Pittsburgh is home. Those who have left, we want you to come back home and see the value that is here. The city is leading. The city is sayĀing, ‘hey, there are jobs here,’ and there’s jobs within the city as well, so you can make this home.”