FAULT LINES

The decades-long battle for affordable housing in San Francisco is reaching a breaking point, with dire warnings for the rest of the country.

FAULT LINES is the antidote to its toxic predecessors. It is the documentary I have been waiting for. It is the documentary that Americans need to see.
— Kevin Erdmann, Mercatus Center at George Mason University
A film like FAULT LINES can make a huge difference in building a political constituency that better understands the interrelationship between community politics and homelessness.
— Doug Shoemaker, President, Mercy Housing California

From directors Nate Houghteling (American Pathogen, State of Pride) and Yoav Attias (Brick City, Chicagoland) comes a new film that dives headfirst into the epicenter of the housing crisis, to explain how we got here and predict where we might be headed. Fault Lines takes a street level approach to the intersecting issues of housing affordability, homelessness, and local laws, using human stories to illuminate the impact of decades of policies that are now choking the Bay Area – and threatening to become a national emergency.

Next
Next

Chasing the Thunder