OPTECH 2025 featured two policy discussions that brought Congress members together with rental housing technology leaders to explore artificial intelligence governance, data privacy, broadband deployment, and sector-specific regulation for the rental housing industry. The takeaway: engagement matters, and decisions today will shape how innovation is deployed in multifamily housing for years to come.
Advocacy groups such as RETTC and NMHC are instrumental in educating lawmakers across party lines. Their bipartisan approach aims to keep regulation credible and grounded in real-world operations, so innovation isn’t hamstrung by fragmented or overly rigid rules.
Senator Shelley Moore Capito, appearing via hologram, pressed for regulatory efficiency as a driver of affordability. She highlighted that permitting delays and duplicative oversight push up costs before a project opens, and she urged balancing AI’s promising capabilities with protections that earn public trust.
A second panel featured Representatives Jay Obernolte and Ted Lieu, co-chairs of the House Bipartisan Task Force on Artificial Intelligence. The panel noted a federal report with more than 60 AI governance recommendations and emphasized a governance model that empowers existing regulators to oversee AI within their domains, rather than a single national AI bureaucracy.
For the rental housing sector, the plan envisages sector-based regulation: resident screening, leasing, and property management AI would be overseen by agencies already versed in housing law, tolerance for fair housing, and employment protections. The aim is to safeguard consumer trust while mitigating bias, data misuse, and opacity, without stifling innovation.
Regulatory fragmentation remains a concern as dozens of states pursue their own AI and data privacy frameworks. Lawmakers cautioned that without a national standard, smaller providers and startups could face uneven costs. The White House’s AI initiative has reignited questions about federal preemption and how to align top-down goals with sector-specific flexibility.
Overall, the discussions suggested that the future of AI policy in housing will be co-authored by multiple players. Ongoing bipartisan collaboration—grounded in industry realities—offers the chance to shape how AI advances residents’ outcomes, affordability, and community well-being.