Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Allegheny fund would encourage more renting to Section 8 tenants

Landlords to receive incentives from grant

- By Kate Giammarise

A special fund aims to encourage more local landlords to participat­e in the Housing Choice Voucher Program, commonly referred to as Section 8.

Allegheny County will start a fund to give more landlords incentives to participat­e in the program. Using a $50,000 grant from the Pennsylvan­ia Housing Finance Agency, county human services officials will have money to cover any extensive damage or lengthy vacancies — sort of like an enhanced security deposit. It would be open to landlords participat­ing in the program, or who are willing to house tenants receiving other types of housing subsidies, such as rehousing assistance available to formerly homeless families.

The idea is modeled on similar programs in other cities, said Chuck Keenan, administra­tor of the bureau of homeless services for the county. It also grew out of focus groups with rental landlords hosted by the Housing Alliance of Pennsylvan­ia.

“We believe that this program will serve as an incentive for landlords who may have previously been unwilling to accept a tenant

that may not pass the landlord’s screening criteria due to past evictions, poor landlord references, poor credit, and/or previous criminal activity.

In most jurisdicti­ons that have Landlord Mitigation Funds, the funds are rarely used and serve mostly as ‘peace of mind’ for a landlord who agrees to take a chance on a tenant they normally would deny,” county officials wrote in their applicatio­n for the grant.

Such a fund was the top recommenda­tion of a report issued earlier this year by The Housing Alliance of Pennsylvan­ia.

“The research that we did, about what are the barriers for landlords to working with rental assistance programs, there are some real business challenges ,” noted Gale Schwartz, a Pittsburgh­based project specialist with Housing Alliance of Pennsylvan­ia.

The Housing Choice Voucher Program allows low-income families to rent a unit on the private rental market, with a subsidy paid by the housing authority administer­ing the program directly to the landlord; the family pays the difference between the actual rent and the subsidy.

As rental costs rise, it has become harder to find rental apartments that accept vouchers, particular­ly in certain neighborho­ods. County officials noted in their applicatio­n for funds that the turnback rate of vouchers at the Housing Authority of the City of Pittsburgh is 60 percent, meaning that applicants in the HACP Section 8 program often wait years to be issued a voucher, but in 60 percent of those cases, must return it unused when they can’t find housing.

Josh Caldwell, president of the Pittsburgh Real Estate Investors Associatio­n, which represents about 1,300 local landlords, said he was pleased by the county’s outreach on the issue.

Landlords can often be intimidate­d by the red tape and rigorous inspection process required by Section 8, he said.

“[This] is like an insurance policy against damage to the property,” he said. “It’s there to hold our hand so we are not as frightened about the program.”

“The research that we did, about what are the barriers for landlords to working with rental assistance programs, there are some real business challenges.” — Gale Schwartz, Pittsburgh-based project specialist

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