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Maryland Manual, 1994-95
Volume 186, Page 333   View pdf image
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Maryland Manual 1994-1995 Department of Hawing & Community Development /333

Acts of 1937). By this act, municipal governments could set up housing authorities to receive federal grants
or loans for public housing projects. As with most subsequent laws for low-income housing or community
renewal, the act followed on the heels of federal legislation which provided funds for its purposes.

During World War II, the influx of workers into Maryland caused a housing shortage. The Federal Public
Housing Authority built thousands of units on vast tracts, but existing communities were hard pressed to
provide necessary services and schools. After the war, the federal Veteran's Emergency Housing Act permitted
the sale of government barracks and construction equipment to counties and municipalities to build or convert
to civilian housing. The Maryland Veterans' Housing Commission coordinated the work of State and federal
agencies dispensing funds or material to provide homes for returned veterans (Chapter 878, Acts of 1947).

The private sector embarked on a postwar building boom, marked by suburban developments containing
miles of modest houses on treeless lots for veterans and their new families. Federally funded highway projects
demolished housing and cleared slums, perpetuating the housing shortage, since construction of public units
could not keep pace. The Federal Housing Act of 1954 financed local and regional planning assistance, including
the Baltimore Regional Planning Council (created in 1956). Under the 1954 law, the Department of State
Planning oversaw comprehensive planning assistance grants in Maryland.

Prosperity of the 1950s continued as federal funds solved many problems and created new ones. Poor
families were displaced by highway construction and slum clearance in the 1950s, and by urban renewal
in the 1960s. Private firms reaped profits building expensive suburban homes while Maryland municipali-
ties struggled with the continual lack of low-cost housing. Federally subsidized public housing of the 1960s
gave way to subsidized rent policies of the 1970s, and the Maryland Housing and Community Develop-
ment Authority was created to encourage private construction of low- and moderate-income housing by
grants and loans (Chapter 553, Acts of 1969). One year later, the Authority was abolished when the
Department of Economic and Community Development was formed (Chapter 527, Acts of 1970). Within
the new department, the Community Development Administration assisted and funded community
development projects that provided some accommodations for families of limited income.

The accelerating rate of postwar growth and change put Marylanders in danger of losing touch with their
past. Poor families were not the only victims of urban renewal; structures of irreplaceable historical value had
been bulldozed for highways and development. Cultural and historical agencies emerged in the decade after
1960 to preserve the collective memory and restore its physical symbols. Joining the Department of Economic
and Community Development in 1970 were two such agencies mandated to stop destruction and save the
tangible evidence of Maryland's past. First was the Maryland Historical Trust, created in 1961 and dedicated
to identifying and preserving structures of historical or architectural merit (Chapter 620, Acts of 1961). The
Trust also advised communities on the establishment of historic districts, a type of urban renewal which worked
well in Maryland. Historical interest and the hope of developing a tourist attraction had spawned the St. Mary's
City Commission by 1966, the offshoot of a study commission appointed in 1965 (Chapter 115, Acts of 1966).
Other commissions to preserve ethnic culture later were added to the Department ofEconomic and Community
Development: the Commission on Afro-American and Indian History and Culture (Chapter 386, Acts of
1974), divided into two commissions in 1976 (Chapter 120, Acts of 1976); and the Maryland Ethnic Heritage
Commission (Chapter 116, Acts of 1984).

In 1971, the Department ofEconomic and Community Development was assigned responsibilities for
overseeing the implementation of both the Industrialized Building and Mobile Homes Act and the Model
Performance Building Code (Chapters 662 & 663, Acts of 1971). The Building Codes Administration
was established within the Department to handle these duties and, in 1978, began to set energy
conservation standards for buildings. Other energy-related agencies such as the Energy Policy Office which
originated in the Department of Natural Resources (Chapter 320, 1976), became components of the
Department of Housing and Community Development in 1987.

Within the Department of Economic and Community Development, the Maryland Housing Fund was
created in 1971 to stimulate construction of low and moderately priced housing by insuring lenders against
mortgage losses (Chapter 669, Acts of 1971). The Housing Fund in 1976 became part of the Division of
Local and Regional Development, which acted as a liaison between federal agencies and local communities.
Federal policy had shifted to granting blocks of funds to the states for distribution to local governments
and community action groups who were encouraged to find innovative ways to meet their own housing
and development needs. The Division helped communities apply for block grants. At the same time, the
Community Development Administration became responsible for the Maryland Home Financing Program
and the Maryland Housing Rehabilitation Program.

As programs proliferated, the aims of economic and industrial development did not always mesh with
community goals, and housing as an issue remained critical in complexity. The need for affordable housing never



 
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Maryland Manual, 1994-95
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