The Boston University Initiative on Cities recently announced the results of its 2018 Menino Survey of Mayors, a nationally representative survey of mayoral thoughts and challenges on today’s top issues. According to the survey, which is based on interviews with a representative sample of 110 mayors from 37 states, municipal leaders believe that insufficient living-wage jobs (32 percent) and high housing costs (27 percent) are the top two obstacles to achieving social mobility for residents.
The survey indicates that while mayors want to increase the amount of housing in their cities, their desired increases are relatively modest. They hope that a majority of these new units would be owner occupied and that nearly one-third would be single-family homes.
Other survey findings include: