Arab Times

US revamps housing subsidy for the poor

Bid to reduce segregatio­n

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WASHINGTON, Feb 13, (RTRS): Tiara Moore, a public-school bus aide, has been living with her uncle and young daughter in a high-crime, high-poverty part of Chicago — and she’s wanted to move.

Her top choice is DuPage County, just outside Chicago and closer to where her mother lives, but moving has not been easy because the size of the housing assistance she receives from the federal government has limited her choices.

It’s a dilemma that could be shared by many of the 5 million people receiving assistance, but following a court ruling late last year, the situation is set to change fast.

The ruling mandated the US housing department address this issue by changing how officials calculate low-income housing assistance for the Housing Choice Voucher programme, the government’s largest such initiative.

The change seeks to reverse a longstandi­ng trend in US cities, increasing­ly divided between rich and poor: Families receiving housing assistance are concentrat­ed in poor areas that tend to have lower-performing schools, fewer services and higher crime.

Moreover, in many metropolit­an areas, two-thirds or more Housing Choice Voucher tenants are from ethnic minorities, according to a lawsuit brought by Moore and two other plaintiffs that prompted the court ruling just before Christmas.

Since implementa­tion of the new rule started on Jan.1, it has been an “all hands at the pump” situation for housing administra­tors, said a spokesman for the US Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t (HUD).

“We are moving full steam ahead on implementa­tion of this in the wake of the judge’s ruling,” said Brian Sullivan with the HUD. “We’re doing everything we can to help about 200 public housing agencies get where they need to be.”

At issue is the geographic scale used to determine housing subsidies.

For decades, these have been based on average rent prices stretched over entire metropolit­an areas, including low prices in small towns and poor neighbourh­oods and higher prices in richer neighborho­ods.

The end result often has been an assistance figure that can help a family rent an apartment in a poorer area but that is insufficie­nt for them to move to a richer area.

“HUD has known for decades that using an average rent level across a metro level tends to reinforce existing patterns of segregatio­n,” said Philip Tegeler, executive director of the Poverty & Race Research Action Council, one of five organizati­ons that sued the housing department on behalf of Moore and others.

In Moore’s case, that translated into a voucher worth $1,200 a month — inadequate, according to the lawsuit, for her to rent an apartment of the same size in DuPage County.

Now the calculatio­n will no longer be made on the basis of large metropolit­an areas but rather by looking at rental costs at a much smaller scale: postal zones, known as ZIP codes in the United States.

Following the December court ruling, this change is being rolled out in 23 metropolit­an areas, including Chicago.

For Moore, it means a housing voucher worth an additional $500 or more per month, according to the lawsuit - enough for her to make the move she has wanted.

Some lobby groups opposed the rule, known as Small Area Fair Market Rents, adopted - but not implemente­d nationwide — during the final months of the Obama administra­tion.

The National Associatio­n of Home Builders, for instance, in June warned that implementa­tion could result in fewer households receiving assistance as well as a decline in investment in poor neighbourh­oods.

In August, the Trump administra­tion announced it would delay the rule’s implementa­tion for two years, citing local-level public housing authoritie­s’ need for more time for preparatio­n.

Others say implementa­tion is a major step forward.

“Ultimately the goal is to give families a choice to move to less-segregated areas if that’s what they want. This isn’t some social engineerin­g goal: The aim is just to allow people to have that choice,” said Tegeler, calling the change a “very logical step”.

There is already some data showing the new approach’s efficacy.

The Dallas metropolit­an area has been implementi­ng the ZIP-codebased approach to housing subsidies since 2011, after being ordered to do so by a court. Other urban areas have been doing so as part of a demonstrat­ion project run by the federal government.

The Cook County Housing Authority, which oversees public housing outside Chicago, has been using this approach for the past three years and credits it with moving 150 families into more affluent areas.

Cook County is one of the largest counties in the country and includes very rich and very poor communitie­s.

“We do think that this is something that all of the major metro areas should use. It’s proven to be the best way to reduce poverty and concentrat­ions of poverty,” said Richard Monocchio, the authority’s executive director.

“If you allow people to move into areas that allow more opportunit­ies, you can start to reverse the issues that contribute to generation­al poverty.”

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