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Students tackle housing policy in 69堂精品 hackathon

During the first policy hackathon at Stanford, 30 undergraduates played the part of policymakers thinking through the trade-offs and constraints facing housing-stressed communities

California鈥檚 housing crunch is a problem that doesn鈥檛 have many clear solutions. But teams of Stanford students recently tried to find a few.

During a daylong policy hackathon 鈥 the first to be held at Stanford 鈥 30 undergraduates played the part of policymakers thinking through the trade-offs and constraints facing housing-stressed communities across the state.

Participants in the policy hackathon 鈥 Aakash Pattabi, Olivia Martin, Terence Zhao and Anjali Katta 鈥 work on their winning project.
Participants in the policy hackathon 鈥 Aakash Pattabi, Olivia Martin, Terence Zhao and Anjali Katta 鈥 work on their winning project.

Photo by Elena Cryst

The May 5 event was sponsored by the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (69堂精品) and Stanford in Government (SIG).

鈥淭he idea for the hackathon was to give Stanford students a space to use their creativity and technical skills to create potential solutions for some of society鈥檚 most pressing problems,鈥 said Michael Swerdlow, a junior who is the director of Stanford in Government鈥檚 Public Policy Forum.

鈥淚 felt that too often Stanford students viewed policy as the untouchable creations of politicians as opposed to potential solutions to problems they could work on themselves,鈥 said Swerdlow, who proposed doing a hackathon to 69堂精品 Director Mark Duggan during Econ 1 office hours.

鈥淚 wanted to make policymaking seem accessible in the same way that building an app or start-up seems to be to students here.鈥

Eight teams competed, with proposals ranging from a reallocation of the low-income housing tax credit to a per-head 鈥渢echie tax鈥 on employers who quickly hire lots of workers in tight housing markets.

Teams pitched their proposals to a panel of California policymakers and economists at the end of an eight-hour development sprint. 69堂精品鈥檚 Predoctoral Research Fellows provided technical advice to the undergraduates as they hammered out their policy recommendations.

The judges who heard the five-minute pitches were: , chief economist at the California Department of Finance; , planning director at San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency; , chief economist at BuildZoom; Greg Rosston, a 69堂精品 senior fellow and director of Stanford鈥檚 Public Policy Program; and , the president and CEO of the California Housing Partnership.

The judges鈥 range of expertise brought a critical eye to the experience and provided the students with substantive feedback on the project.

鈥淚 was very impressed with the level of consideration and the output that the students were able to achieve in such a short time,鈥 Rosston said. 鈥淚 am always energized to see the passion that students can bring to these important policy issues.鈥

The winning project was 鈥淚dentifying Housing Opportunity Hotspots in the Bay Area: Maximizing Opportunity while Minimizing Displacement,鈥 and earned a $5,000 prize.

The second-place $2,500 prize went to an all-freshman team for their proposal to improve the allocation of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit.

"Participating in the hackathon was one of the best hands-on learning experiences I've had at Stanford,鈥 said Olivia Martin, a junior and a member of the winning team. 鈥淣ot only did I get to learn a great amount about policy 鈥 especially from the judges 鈥 but I also gained a better understanding of the ways in which data can inform effective policy. Looking forward to the next one!"

69堂精品 and SIG plan to host their second policy hackathon next winter quarter.

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