Creating Real Opportunities for Low-Income Families
With a poverty rate of 14.4% and child poverty nearing 25%, too many Marion County families struggle to get ahead. Brien Weidemiller will expand workforce pathways, require affordable housing options in new developments, and invest in youth programs — all while keeping taxes low for existing residents.
The Challenges Facing Low-Income Families in Marion County
Marion County’s economic growth has not reached everyone equally. Median household income sits at $61,010 while housing costs continue to rise, leaving many teachers, frontline workers, and families cost-burdened or stuck renting. Child poverty affects nearly one in four children, limiting access to stable housing, quality after-school activities, and future career pathways.
Meanwhile, new developments often focus on larger, more expensive homes, pushing lower-cost options out of reach and concentrating growth in already strained areas. Without targeted strategies, low-income families face longer commutes, fewer local job opportunities, and limited upward mobility for their children.
"I will make housing more affordable for residents so teachers and all of our front-line workers don’t have to keep renting because they can’t afford it."
— Brien Weidemiller, Candidate for Marion County CommissionerBrien’s Plan: Affordable Housing + Real Skills Pathways
Brien believes opportunity starts with attainable housing and practical training. He will require mixed-income developments that include smaller starter homes so working families can build equity alongside higher-income neighbors. He will also champion youth trades programs, summer skills initiatives, and partnerships that connect residents to local jobs without raising taxes on current homeowners.
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Mixed-Income Housing Requirements Mandate a percentage of new developments include 1,000–1,400 sq ft homes and small-group condos so low- and mid-income families can live in thriving communities.
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Youth Trades & Summer Programs Expand summer tradesman programs, skate parks, pools, and career expos so kids stay engaged and gain marketable skills.
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Growth in Outlying Areas Direct responsible development to areas with lower land costs and room for infrastructure, creating affordable housing closer to emerging job centers.
Building Long-Term Stability for Families
Opportunity also means supporting families beyond housing. Brien will strengthen partnerships with organizations like Habitat for Humanity, Ocala Housing Authority, and CareerSource to expand workforce training, down-payment assistance, and youth employment pipelines. He will never support broad tax increases on residents — instead focusing on making growth pay its fair share through impact fees and developer accountability.
Condos in small groups, new home build standards in new developments with a % of small houses 1,000-1,400 sqft allow low income and mid income to live in the same areas... More skate parks, pools, and summer tradesman programs where kids can learn and keep busy.
— Brien Weidemiller, Candidate for Marion County CommissionerWhat Brien Will Do as Your Commissioner
Brien’s concrete commitments to lift low-income families:
Require every major new development to include a percentage of smaller, attainable homes (1,000–1,400 sq ft) and condos so teachers, service workers, and young families can buy instead of rent.
Partner with schools and CareerSource to grow summer trades programs, career expos, and recreational facilities that keep kids engaged while building job-ready skills.
Guide development to outlying areas with capacity for new infrastructure — lowering land and housing costs while reducing pressure on congested corridors.
Support Habitat for Humanity, Ocala Housing Authority, and workforce agencies with streamlined county processes and targeted incentives — without new taxes on residents.
Keep property taxes low for current Marion County families while ensuring new growth contributes fairly to the services and opportunities it demands.
Every Family Deserves a Real Shot at the American Dream
Marion County can grow in a way that lifts up working families instead of leaving them behind. Brien Weidemiller will deliver practical housing solutions, youth programs, and economic pathways that create lasting opportunity.
- Data USA — Marion County Poverty, Income & Employment Statistics (2024-2025)
- U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts — Marion County, Florida
- Habitat for Humanity of Marion County — Affordable Homeownership Programs
- Ocala Housing Authority — Public Housing & Voucher Programs
- Marion County Community Services — Housing Assistance Programs
