UTILITY COST AND RACE: The lower a family’s income, the more that family will pay for lighting and heating the house, running appliances, and keeping the wi-fi on. Such outcomes would suggest that this is a class problem or a function of rational markets. But according to a new study, all low-income households are not equally yoked: Residents of poorer, predominately white neighborhoods are less energy-cost burdened than people in predominately minority neighborhoods of similar economic status. Residents of minority neighborhoods who make less than 50 percent of area median income (AMI) are 27 percent more energy-cost burdened than residents from the same wage bracket who live in white neighborhoods.
Utility Cost and Race
- Greg Brooks
Related Content
Private money is paying for stadiums. Cities should let it.
By
Patrick Tuohey
October 22, 2025
New Resource: Local Policies to Expand Economic Opportunity
By
Patrick Tuohey
September 17, 2025
Building digital trust amid uncertainty: a strategic opportunity for local governments
By
Patrick Tuohey
September 10, 2025
Massachusetts may follow NYC in shifting broker fees to landlords—increasing rents
By
Patrick Tuohey
September 5, 2025
Outdated building codes hold back housing development
By
Patrick Tuohey
August 27, 2025
How Proposition 13 broke California
By
Patrick Tuohey
August 25, 2025