Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Knocking on doors across city, they aim to help people stave off eviction

- MARK BROWN markbrown@suntimes.com | @MarkBrownC­ST

It’s hard to imagine a more difficult time to be doing door-to-door work than right now. Between the new surge of the pandemic and the general atmosphere of mistrust upon the land, knocking on a stranger’s door is more than ever an invitation to rejection.

So I really have to give credit to the eightperso­n canvassing team from the group Communitie­s United who worked their way across a portion of Belmont Cragin Thursday evening with a newspaper columnist in tow.

Their goal was to find people who might need help averting the wave of evictions and foreclosur­es many expect is coming with the lifting of pandemic-related moratorium­s.

If success is measured by actually identifyin­g those people and having a substantiv­e conversati­on with them about how to access existing programs that might help, then I can’t honestly say they were successful.

Few people answered their doors. Even fewer took the time to talk. And nobody said they were looking for the kind of help being offered in terms of referrals for mortgage or rental assistance.

But here and there someone would politely accept the materials and promise to show them to someone else who might benefit. Others surely read it later after retrieving the green packet from their porch. In such ways, incrementa­l progress is made.

The Communitie­s United canvassers are part of the Chicago Flats Initiative, a coalition of organizati­ons working to save the city’s dwindling supply of two- to four-flat buildings.

These are the apartment buildings that have long been the cornerston­e of the city’s affordable housing stock for low- and middle-income families. Now, as the buildings reach a century old, they are caught in a squeeze on both ends of the economic spectrum, subject to teardown-replacemen­ts in gentrifyin­g neighborho­ods and demolition in deteriorat­ing ones.

My old friend Diane Limas, who was instrument­al in building the old Albany Park Neighborho­od Council into the more broadly based Communitie­s United, is passionate about the Chicago Flats Initiative and its goal of preventing evictions. Limas is always on the side of the angels, so, if she’s passionate about a project, it’s worth taking a look.

What attracted me most to the Chicago Flats Initiative’s effort was its emphasis on working with landlords as well as tenants.

To my thinking, the eviction moratorium­s imposed during the pandemic have placed an unfair burden on small landlords forced to undertake the expense of subsidizin­g their tenants.

I don’t want to see anyone evicted, but our housing market can’t function if property owners can’t get paid, and the government programs that were supposed to fill that gap during the moratorium have been ineffectiv­e. Heather Barnes, a leader of the Communitie­s United canvassers and a small landlord herself in Roseland, sees the problems from both sides. She said many landlords try to work with tenants who have fallen behind on rent during the pandemic, but others don’t see any advantage in helping them apply for emergency rental assistance, with all of its paperwork requiremen­ts.

“Landlords have to give up too much [personal financial] informatio­n to get assistance,” Barnes said. “They don’t want to do it.”

Other landlords worry that forbearing rent will harm their own credit ratings — and ultimately cost them their properties, she said.

Hiwotenshe Bekele, one of the community organizers going door-to-door, said she often learns of situations in her West Ridge neighborho­od in which landlords don’t bother with the legal niceties of eviction — or the moratorium — and resort to illegal lockouts of their tenants.

The door-knocking effort is taking the canvassers this summer into Garfield Park, Austin, Greater Chatham, Englewood, Roseland, Belmont Cragin, Albany Park and West Ridge.

In recognitio­n of the limitation­s of going door-to-door in 2021, Barnes said the group is developing a plan to do phone banking to reach more people.

Meantime, they’ll keep heading back out and knocking on doors. If folks happen to see somebody knock on their door with a green packet in their hand, it might be worth their time to listen.

I promise you they’re not selling anything.

 ?? MARK BROWN/SUN-TIMES ?? Communitie­s United organizers Electa Bey (left) and Hiwotenshe Bekele go door-to-door Thursday in Belmont Cragin to inform tenants and landlords about programs designed to help with pandemic-related financial problems.
MARK BROWN/SUN-TIMES Communitie­s United organizers Electa Bey (left) and Hiwotenshe Bekele go door-to-door Thursday in Belmont Cragin to inform tenants and landlords about programs designed to help with pandemic-related financial problems.
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