Anne Ray

Florida Housing Data Clearinghouse Manager University of Florida

  • Gainesville FL

Anne Ray's research focuses on affordable housing policy in Florida. Anne manages the Florida Housing Data Clearinghouse.

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University of Florida

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Biography

Anne Ray is the manager of the Florida Housing Data Clearinghouse at University of Florida's Shimberg Center for Housing Studies. She directs the center's statewide rental market study and has performed research on preservation of assisted rental housing, public housing, the housing needs of persons with disabilities, farmworker housing and states' implementation of the low-income housing tax credit.

Areas of Expertise

Housing Data
Florida Housing Policy
Affordable Housing
Rental Housing

Media Appearances

Locked Out: Low pay, soaring rents, pro-landlord laws set up Florida renters for eviction once COVID hit

Orlando Sentinel  online

2021-05-16

Jocelyn Bennett paints her daughters’ toenails, not bothered by the strong scent of nail polish filling the room at the HomeTown Studios in Orlando. The girls show off their pink toes, toddling around the small pay-by-the-week hotel room, one of many the Bennetts have called home since the pandemic began and they got evicted. It’s just one room with a bathroom with not enough area to even open the front door all the way. But it’s got a stove and a fridge, and it’s better than living in their car or outside.

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Rising housing costs are prompting protests and possible solution from lawmakers across Tampa Bay

WUSF Public Media  online

2022-01-25

This week, we start our look at housing affordability in the greater Tampa Bay region. Since early on in the pandemic, rising rents and evictions have brought more awareness of the issue — especially as both lower- and middle-class residents are being priced out of neighborhoods in cities such as St. Petersburg and Tampa. Experts say the pandemic is accelerating a problem that has been growing over the past few years. In this episode, host Steve Newborn talks with people on different ends of the issue.

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Skyrocketing housing costs spark calls for state leaders to respond

WJCT News  online

2022-05-13

Many parts of Florida have simply become too expensive for many people to live. Across the state, protesters are calling for relief from skyrocketing rents and home prices. Earlier this month, domestic workers across South Florida gathered for a march through Downtown Miami on International Workers' Day to protest high rents. Protesters say the housing affordability crisis is pricing them out of their neighborhoods.

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Social

Articles

The Lost Properties Inventory: Affordability of Post-Subsidy Rents Shimberg Center for Housing Studies, University of Florida - Data and Methods

Shimberg Center

Anne Ray

2019-06-28

A property with a three-bedroom gross rent in the 30.01-60% AMI range but a two-bedroom gross rent in the 60.01-80% AMI range was categorized as “affordable” at the 80% AMI level, “mixed” at the 60% AMI level, and unaffordable at the 30% AMI level. Results Affordability Current rents for most of the formerly subsidized properties would not be affordable by the standards of the Housing Credit and SAIL programs. Of the 61 properties in the survey sample.

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Household Energy Costs and the Housing Choice Voucher Program: Do Utility Allowances Pay the Bills?

Housing Policy Debate

Anne Ray, et. al

2019-04-01

Utility bills present a hidden threat to the affordability of a family’s housing—unknown before a household moves into a unit, and unpredictable from one month to the next. In theory, tenants receiving Housing Choice Vouchers are shielded from energy cost burdens through utility allowances built into rent subsidies. However, tenants may face actual energy costs that far outstrip allowances, effectively rendering their housing unaffordable.

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Opting In, Opting Out

Cityscape

Anne Ray, et. al

2018-01-01

This article updates the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) report Multifamily Properties: Opting In, Opting Out and Remaining Affordable (Finkel et al., 2006). The original report examined the loss of affordable housing associated with HUD's Section 8 project-based rental assistance and Section 236 and 221(d)(3) subsidized mortgage programs between 1998 and 2004.

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Media

Spotlight

3 min

Florida renters struggle with housing costs, new statewide report finds

Nearly 905,000 low-income renter households in Florida are struggling to afford their housing costs, according to the 2025 Statewide Rental Market Study, released by the University of Florida’s Shimberg Center for Housing Studies. Prepared for Florida Housing Finance Corporation, the report provides a comprehensive look at the state’s rental housing conditions and is used to guide funding decisions for Florida Housing’s multifamily programs, including the State Apartment Incentive Loan (SAIL) program. “Florida’s strong population growth has collided with limited housing supply, pushing rents beyond what many families can afford,” said Anne Ray, manager of the Florida Housing Data Clearinghouse at the Shimberg Center. “This report helps policymakers and housing providers target resources where the need is most acute — including communities that are experiencing the fastest growth and the greatest affordability gaps.” Key findings from the 2025 study include: A growing affordability gap: An estimated 904,635 renter households earning below 60% of their area median income (AMI) are cost burdened, paying more than 40% of their income toward rent. These households are spread across the state, with 64% in Florida's nine most populous counties, 33% in mid-sized counties and 3% in small, rural counties. Surging population and higher rent and housing costs: Between 2019 and 2023, Florida added more than 1 million households — nearly 195,000 of them renters — driven by in-migration from states like New York, Illinois and California. Despite the addition of more than 240,000 multifamily units, median rent soared nearly $500 per month, from $1,238 to $1,719. After years of growth, Florida's older renter population is holding steady: Renters age 55 and older represent 39% of cost burdened households, up from 29% in 2010 but similar to 2022 numbers. Most renters are working: 79% of renter households include at least one employed adult, compared to 67% of owner households. Most non-working renters are seniors or people with disabilities. Homelessness is on the rise: The report estimates 29,848 individuals and 44,234 families are without stable housing, up from 2022, as hurricanes and tight markets contribute to displacement. Assisted housing provides an alternative to high-cost private market rentals: Developments funded by Florida Housing, HUD, USDA and local housing finance authorities provide over 314,000 affordable rental units statewide. Future risks to affordable housing stock: More than 33,000 publicly assisted units may lose affordability protections by 2034 unless renewed. Evalu ating affordable housing in Florida “Stateand federally-assisted rental housing developments are essential to providing stable, affordable homes for Florida’s workforce, seniors, and people with special needs,” Ray said. “Florida Housing Finance Corporation’s programs make up a significant portion of this housing, and our study helps ensure those resources are directed where they’re needed most. Preserving these developments — and expanding them — is critical to keeping pace with Florida’s growing population and maintaining affordability.” Since 2001, the Shimberg Center has produced the Rental Market Study every three years to inform strategic investments in affordable housing across Florida. The study evaluates needs across regions and among key populations including seniors, people with disabilities, farmworkers and others. The Rental Market Study and the Florida Housing Data Clearinghouse are part of a 25-year partnership between the Shimberg Center and Florida Housing Finance Corporation to support data-driven housing policy and planning.

Anne Ray