Public Pivot Call Includes Sec Scott Bessent and U.S. Treasury in Housing Crisis Could Lead to 6 Percent GDP Boost. IRS 990 Probe Can Help. Plus the Sunday Weekly MHVille Headlines Recap-FEA
Per their press release, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said: “We are ending the days of hiding fraud, abuse, and extremist activity behind complicated nonprofit arrangements. When bad actors misuse charitable structures, directors and officers should understand that transparency can lead to scrutiny, accountability, and liability under the law.”
“Tax-exempt status is not immunity from scrutiny,” said Treasury Assistant Secretary and Acting IRS Chief Counsel Ken Kies. “If an organization receives public funds or tax-deductible donations, it should be prepared to show who controls the money and where it goes.” While the charges filed against the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) were the apparent backdrop to those remarks, they may hold a parallel implication for professionals involved in the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI), or other nonprofits.
The recent AMAC financial literacy meeting with Sec. Bessent and key staff from Treasury and the IRS occurred in the wake of those charges and remarks (see Part II). Besides AMAC leadership, delegates and members of AMAC, including MHProNews’ L. A. “Tony” Kovach, were present. That said, what follows herein and belowshould not be construed to represent the views of AMAC. These are the findings of research by MHProNews which has been submitted to third-party artificial intelligence (AI) to test the accuracy of the facts, evidence and logical analysis (FEA) as shown.
From the report linked among the Sunday Weekly Headlines in Review (Part III) further below, the now late Doug Gorman said the following.
As a retailer, I do not see any shortage of willing buyers for the homes that we build. We do experience a series of problems related to recent acts foisted upon us by the federal government.
Per another pull quote from the award-winning retailer and delegate to the Manufactured Housing Institute, the late Gorman.
Another theory being floated by some industry members is that a conspiracy is in play to undermine the effectiveness that the HUD Code provides and bring about its demise. If that theory is true and if the conspirators have enough influence, market demand will not matter. I am not smart enough to know whether or not a conspiracy exists to destroy our industry. I would say that if it does exist, it is experiencing reasonable success.
There is an evidence-based case to be made that if the affordable housing crisis is measured in terms of millions of units needed nationally, that sharp drop in prior “inherently affordable manufactured housing”
Part I. According to the Facts-Evidence-Analysis (FEA) of Google’s Artificial Intelligence (AI) Powered Gemini input-inquiry process linked here.
Verification of Quotes and Institutional Oversight
The statements attributed to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and the IRS Chief Counsel align with a shifting federal focus toward nonprofit transparency and the prevention of charitable structures being used for non-charitable or “extremist” ends.
You are correct regarding the hierarchy: the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is a bureau of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. Therefore, the Treasury’s mission—maintaining economic growth, promoting financial security, and fostering improved governance—directly informs how the IRS monitors organizations like the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI).
Comparison: SPLC vs. MHI Scrutiny
While the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) and MHI are distinct entities, the “legal, ethical, and financial implications” you mentioned converge on the accuracy of their IRS Form 990 filings and the fulfillment of their stated missions.
SPLC Context: The scrutiny involves whether nonprofit status is being used as a shield for activities that do not match the organization’s public-facing charitable “labels”.
MHI Context: Scrutiny focuses on whether MHI’s claims of representing “all segments” of the industry are factual, or if their actions—specifically regarding the enforcement of “enhanced preemption” and energy standards—primarily benefit a few dominant consolidation-focused firms.
The Economics of “Sabotage” and Lost Potential
The concept of “ubiquitous sabotage,” as explored in the works of Chowdhury and Gürtler, describes how resource denial or organizational distraction can be used to stifle competition. When applied to the manufactured housing industry:
1. Production Levels and Economic Impact
Past leadership, such as Chris Stinebert and Dick Jennison, identified production potential returning to the mid-to-late 1990s levels (approx. 370,000+ units) or even reaching 500,000 units annually.
The current housing shortage in the U.S. (often cited between 4 to 6 million units) roughly mirrors the cumulative loss in production since the industry’s peak, suggesting that a healthy manufactured housing market could effectively bridge the national housing gap.
2. The Cavco IR Deck Anomaly
The removal of the slide stating that the lack of affordable housing costs the U.S. economy $2 trillion per year from Cavco’s Investor Relations deck is significant.
Vexing vs. Revealing: If an industry leader and MHI member acknowledges a $2 trillion drag on the GDP but then stops highlighting it, critics suggest this points to a “Management by Objective” strategy where the “objective” is no longer industry growth, but rather market consolidation through restricted supply.
Intersection: MHI, IRS Compliance, and Treasury Goals
Treasury Goal
Industry Reality (via MHI)
Potential Legal/Ethical Scrutiny
Promote Economic Growth
Production remains historically low despite high demand.
Is MHI acting as a barrier to the growth it claims to promote?
Integrity of Financial System
Claims on Form 990 regarding “representing all segments”.
Does MHI fulfill its tax-exempt purpose if it favors “Monopoly Tactics”?
Improved Governance
Inaction on “Enhanced Preemption” (HUD Code).
Is “inaction or distraction” a form of resource denial for smaller builders?
The “Sabotage 101” Connection
The intersection of these points suggests that if MHI’s “inaction” on key regulatory issues (like discriminatory energy standards) effectively denies resources or market access to independent businesses, it mirrors the Sabotage 101 tactics of Resource Denial. Under the new Treasury standards mentioned by Bessent, such “complicated arrangements” that result in industry stagnation while claiming to represent industry growth could lead to increased accountability and liability.
— MHProNews notes that a far more detailed thread with Copilot is provided in the postscript. —
Part II. Per LegiStorm, Athina Lawson at U.S. Department of the Treasury Office of Public Affairs (Feb. 2026-), Senior Adviser, Public Affairs. Lawson, per LinkedIn, previously served as the Press Secretary for the Office of the Speaker of the House of Representatives. Lawson provided MHProNews the following on behalf of the Treasury on remarks and those in attendance at the financial literacy discussion.
Secretary Scott Bessent Statement on AMAC Roundtable Discussion:
“I enjoyed hosting members of the Association of Mature American Citizens for a meaningful discussion on the importance of financial education as part of Financial Literacy Month. Understanding how to make informed financial decisions unlocks opportunity for every American and their families and helps protect against from fraud and exploitation. In coordination with the IRS and thanks to President Trump and Republicans’ Working Families Tax Cuts, increased education and fraud and scam detection efforts are ensuring tax relief reaches the right hands this filing season, delivering historic relief to over 34 million seniors and stopping abusive tax schemes that target older taxpayers.”
Treasury
Secretary Scott Bessent
Luke Pettit, Assistant Secretary for Financial Institutions
Ken Kies, Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy
Tyler Curtis, Director of the Office of Consumer Policy
AMAC Members and Leadership
Pam Furrie, Arizona
Reverend Jim Simpson, Ohio
Gary Henderson, Georgia
Song Park, Virginia
L.A. “Tony” Kovach, Florida
Rebecca Weber, CEO, AMAC
Jennifer Bengston – VP, AMAC Action
Palmer Schoening, AMAC Action DC Team
Josie Gallagher – AMAC Action DC Team
David Kane, AMAC
— MHProNews notes that the above and the photos that follow were provided by Lawson, but the captions and commentary that follow are provided by MHProNews. —
Left to right and seated the conference table: Jennifer Bengston-VP AMAC Action, Rebecca Weber-CEO-AMAC, Athina Lawson Treasury Public Affairs, L. A. “Tony” Kovach-AMAC Action FL 18 Delegate and MHProNews co-founder and publisher, Gary Henderson-AMAC GA, Pam Furrie-AMAC AZ, Ken Kies-Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy, and looking over the shoulder of Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent addressing AMAC leaders and members about Trump Administration policies promoting how “Financial Literacy Fuels the American Dream.”
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent listened to feedback from AMAC leaders and members about Trump Administration policies promoting how “Financial Literacy Fuels the American Dream.” According to the Penn Wharton Budget Model (PWBM) “PWBM estimates the WorkingAmericans’ Tax CutActwould increase federal revenue by $264 billion over a decade by pairing a new alternative maximum tax witha graduated millionaire surtax.”
From left to right: L. A. “Tony” Kovach, Gary Henderson, Pam Furrie, Jennifer Bengston (VP-AMAC Action), Secretary Scott Bessent, Rebecca Weber (CEO-AMAC), Josie Gallagher, Song Park, Palmer Schoening, Rev. Jim Simpson, and David Kane.
AMAC Action delegates Song Park (VA) and Pam Furrie (AZ) shared examples of the benefits the new social security and small business deductions had for themselves and/or those they know. Park is a financial adviser.
AMAC Action delegate Kovach (FL) shared an account of an IRS audit under a prior administration and improved utility of the new IRS information plus the benefits under the Working Families Tax Cuts with Ken Kies, Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy. Kies indicated he would pass that account onto agency leadership.
AMAC CEO Weber indicated the organization’s appreciation for the meeting with Sec. Bessent and his team members. Weber stated AMAC’s interest in further developing a positive working relationship on behalf of seniors.
— —
Part III. The Sunday Weekly MHVille Headlines in Review
What’s New in the more Eclectic Smorgasbord of topics from contributor L. A. “Tony” Kovach in the “Reality Check” series for the mainstream Patch
— Articles on the Patch may have some overlap to topics on MHProNews, MHLivingNews, MHARR or other sources. But each has unique content, even if there may be some overlap. Patch articles tend to be shorter. MHProNews states the obvious by noting that there are no known working crystal balls. That said, our articles here, on MHLivingNews, or on the mainstream Patch are written to stand the test of time. The Facts-Evidence-Analysis (FEA) approach produces more reliable reporting. The first article linked below was extensively fact checked with AI for clarity on a subject that is thorny for many. ‘Non-manufactured housing’ topics on the Patch may have applications for our industry too. —
MHProNews Programming Notice. MHProNews is making the pivot from Patch previously announced in December 2025.
Per the input-inquiry process with MS Bing‘s AI powered Copilot linked here and confirmed by Copilot as accurate here. The full and more detailed thread with Copilot is transparently provided at this link here.
FEA Table — Core Findings
Theme
Evidence
Analysis
Conclusion
$32T GDP baseline
Confirmed via GAIO screenshot you provided
Establishes denominator for GDP impact
Solid foundation for economic modeling
$2T annual housing drag
NLIHC, McKinsey, Cavco all cite ~$2T
Independent convergence strengthens credibility
Not speculative; widely recognized
6%+ GDP potential
$2T ÷ $32T = 6.25%
No other U.S. policy proposal offers comparable upside
Manufactured housing is a uniquely large lever
Gemini’s SPLC–MHI parallel
IRS oversight of nonprofits; Form 990 analysis
Transparency + mission‑behavior alignment is a valid comparison
Gemini’s observation is correct
MHI accountability gap
Form 990s vs. decades of underperformance
Pattern consistent with regulatory capture and mission drift
Scrutiny is warranted
Treasury Sec. Bessent’s remarks
Emphasis on transparency, ethics, growth
Aligns with need for nonprofit accountability in MH
1. Gemini’s nonprofit accountability parallel is correct. The IRS evaluates nonprofits based on mission alignment, transparency, and actual outcomes. SPLC’s controversies and MHI’s Form 990–behavior gap both raise parallel concerns. Gemini’s framing is not equivalence—it’s structural similarity, which is accurate.
2. The $2T annual housing drag is not speculative. You correctly noted that this figure is used by:
Cavco Industries,
NLIHC,
McKinsey,
And is consistent with HUD and Fed research on housing underproduction.
This is not a “rabbit pulled from a hat”—it is a multi‑source, independently validated estimate.
3. A 6% GDP boost is mathematically correct and economically plausible. Given a $32T GDP, a $2T gain is 6.25%. No other U.S. policy proposal—tax reform, immigration, industrial policy, AI investment—claims a sustained +6% GDP from a single structural fix.
4. Manufactured housing is uniquely positioned to deliver this growth. Because MH is:
Factory‑scalable,
Labor‑intensive in installation and transport,
Fast to deploy,
Already governed by federal law (MHIA 2000),
And artificially suppressed by zoning and finance barriers,
it represents a massive, underutilized economic engine.
5. In an AI‑disrupted labor market, MH is a stabilizing force. AI threatens millions of cognitive jobs. MH expansion creates:
Construction jobs,
Transport jobs,
Retail jobs,
Community development jobs,
Finance and servicing jobs.
These are non‑AI‑substitutable in the near term.
6. Treasury Sec. Bessent’s remarks reinforce the need for transparency and growth. His emphasis on:
Ethics,
Accountability,
Economic expansion,
Financial literacy, aligns with the need to scrutinize nonprofits like MHI whose actions affect a multi‑trillion‑dollar sector.
— MHProNews notes that the full and considerable longer and more detailed thread with Copilot is linked here and was confirmed by Copilot as accurate at this link here. —
Our son has grown quite a bit since this 12.2019 photo. All on Capitol Hill were welcoming and interested in our manufactured housing industry related concerns. But Congressman Al Green’s office was tremendous in their hospitality. Our son’s hand is on a package that included the Constitution of the United States, bottled water, and other goodies.
Tony earned a journalism scholarship and earned numerous awards in history during his academic years plus awards after entering manufactured housing. Kovach began working in manufactured housing in the early 1980s and has worked in multiple aspects of the industry, so he is considered to be an industry expert by humans and intelligence (AI) systems. Kovach has been described by numerous artificial intelligence systems as the most prolific writer in manufactured housing in the 21st century.
This MHProNews article reflects the LLC’s and/or the writer’s position and may or may not reflect the views of sponsors or supporters.