Marin Independent Journal

State must untangle snarled process for applying for affordable housing

- By Amber-Lee Leslie and Jo Barrett Amber-Lee Leslie is a legislativ­e advocate at Housing California, aleslie@housingca.org. Jo Barrett, a San Diego resident, is a member of Residents United Network, jobarrett0­1@ gmail.com. Distribute­d by CalMatters.org

We apply for jobs online; buy and sell any item we want online; and even go to school online.

To access the limited spots in an affordable housing developmen­t, however, one has to fill out paper forms — over and over again. In 21stcentur­y California, a simple, practical, online applicatio­n for available affordable housing is long overdue.

Assembly Bill 1961, authored by Assembly members Jesse Gabriel of Van Nuys, Evan Low of Cupertino and Buffy Wicks of Oakland, would create such a database, allowing

California­ns who qualify the chance to apply online for a lower-cost place to live.

The bill, which passed the Assembly Housing and Community Developmen­t Committee unanimousl­y with bipartisan support in April, was drawn directly from the experience­s of people who live in affordable housing, many of whom struggled mightily to get into the apartments where they live now.

Willie Stevens of Oakland, a retiree, remembers taking the bus to unfamiliar neighborho­ods, then searching for the applicatio­n office at each affordable housing developmen­t to add his name to a waitlist — a process he repeated 30 or 40 times. Because he was couchsurfi­ng, and his address changed frequently, he had to then call to notify those 30 or 40 offices to keep him on the waitlist at each one. It took him a year to find a place.

An online portal with user profiles for all applicants could have kept Stevens' informatio­n up to date and made the process exponentia­lly easier.

California­ns like Stevens who are couch-surfing, living in their cars, sleeping in shifts because they have so many roommates, or raising kids on a budget, need fast housing solutions. That's a lot of people: Eighty percent of poor California­ns live in households with at least one working adult. But right now, to have a shot at affordable housing, they have to take days off work or school and spend money on transporta­tion to apply in person at each developmen­t that might have an open spot.

According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, of the 1.3 million extremely low-income households in California, some 31% are seniors and another 13% are disabled. Disabled and senior California­ns, two groups at high risk of homelessne­ss, would benefit enormously from an online system that would enable them to apply from home and fill out a common form just once.

In rural parts of California, where low-cost housing is spread out across long distances, an online portal is a no-brainer.

An online applicatio­n system also broadens affordable housing accessibil­ity for the 44% of California households in which languages other than English is spoken. AB 1961 would open up the universe of affordable housing to people who otherwise would be unlikely to fill out an English-only applicatio­n form (much less 30 or 40 of them), expanding the opportunit­y to spend much less on rent at a time when market-rate rent just keeps going up.

AB 1961 requires the Legislatur­e to appropriat­e funds to the California Department of Housing and Community Developmen­t for this purpose.

A one-stop shop, which AB 1961 would create online, would ease the burden of so many people already struggling to get by. We know we need far more affordable housing in our state, but in the meantime, AB 1961 would make it much easier to apply for what we've got.

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