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Section 8 housing assistance was originally designed as temporary help—a safety net to keep families afloat until they could get back on their feet. But in today’s reality, the program often functions as a permanent system. Many families stay on assistance for years, sometimes decades, and the structure discourages advancement.
In this episode, Jason Grandon of The Grandon Group and Instantrenters.com explores HUD’s proposed reforms to Section 8, including a two-year cap on housing benefits, and why this change could help families grow, create accountability, and strengthen communities.
Jason shares real examples of how the current housing voucher program discourages success—for instance, a tenant who received a $2,500/month voucher for seven years but turned down a raise at her federal job, fearing the loss of her benefits. This isn’t about laziness; it’s about how the system traps people instead of empowering them.
Key Topics in This Episode:
At The Grandon Group, we believe real estate is more than property—it’s about building futures. At Instantrenters.com, we see housing, whether through Section 8 or private rentals, as a launchpad to independence. With the right reforms, today’s renters can become tomorrow’s homeowners—strengthening the housing market and local communities.
This isn’t about politics—it’s about responsibility, growth, and opportunity. By shifting the focus from dependency to independence, Section 8 reform has the potential to transform lives, improve neighborhoods, and build a stronger housing market for everyone.
Closing Thought: Let’s stop seeing housing as a system that holds people down and start treating it as the foundation that builds people up.
Thank you for watching The Lockbox brought to you by Arizona's #1 Brother and Sister Real Estate Team, THE GRANDON GROUP powered by My Home Group.
Call us anytime at 480-276-2954 JASON or my sister Stacey at 602-312-5610
By Jason Grandon3
22 ratings
Send us a text
Section 8 housing assistance was originally designed as temporary help—a safety net to keep families afloat until they could get back on their feet. But in today’s reality, the program often functions as a permanent system. Many families stay on assistance for years, sometimes decades, and the structure discourages advancement.
In this episode, Jason Grandon of The Grandon Group and Instantrenters.com explores HUD’s proposed reforms to Section 8, including a two-year cap on housing benefits, and why this change could help families grow, create accountability, and strengthen communities.
Jason shares real examples of how the current housing voucher program discourages success—for instance, a tenant who received a $2,500/month voucher for seven years but turned down a raise at her federal job, fearing the loss of her benefits. This isn’t about laziness; it’s about how the system traps people instead of empowering them.
Key Topics in This Episode:
At The Grandon Group, we believe real estate is more than property—it’s about building futures. At Instantrenters.com, we see housing, whether through Section 8 or private rentals, as a launchpad to independence. With the right reforms, today’s renters can become tomorrow’s homeowners—strengthening the housing market and local communities.
This isn’t about politics—it’s about responsibility, growth, and opportunity. By shifting the focus from dependency to independence, Section 8 reform has the potential to transform lives, improve neighborhoods, and build a stronger housing market for everyone.
Closing Thought: Let’s stop seeing housing as a system that holds people down and start treating it as the foundation that builds people up.
Thank you for watching The Lockbox brought to you by Arizona's #1 Brother and Sister Real Estate Team, THE GRANDON GROUP powered by My Home Group.
Call us anytime at 480-276-2954 JASON or my sister Stacey at 602-312-5610