Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

New Orleans residents displaced as subsidies end

- By Chevel Johnson

NEW ORLEANS — Lower-income renters in New Orleans are facing the loss of their homes and uncertain futures as affordable-housing subsidies start to expire in a city that already has experience­d steep rent increases and stagnant wage growth.

Michael Esnault, a 69year-old disabled veteran, says he searched for about three months before finding a new place after the management at his former complex, American Can Apartments, told him his rent would double to $1,400. He was one of dozens at the complex affected by the loss of the subsidies.

“We looked at a place not too far from here, a twobedroom shotgun,” he said, referring to a long, narrow home found in many New Orleans neighborho­ods. “They were asking $1,900 a month. I can’t afford that.”

Carolyn Horton, 74, said she has yet to find a new place and plans to temporaril­y move into her grandson’s home in New Orleans. She said she’ll probably end up moving in with her son and his family in Denver.

For several weeks, she said, she has been packing up her 600-square-foot home of three years in order to be out by Saturday and get the larger of the buyout incentives negotiated with the apartment complex when the subsidies expire.

“I could live in an efficiency, but I haven’t been able to find anything,” she said. “It’s just not good how they treat you. You pay your rent, cause no trouble. They should ... let us stay.”

Housing advocates say Horton’s and Esnault’s plight is indicative of a wider problem facing tenants across the city.

“American Can is just the tip of the iceberg,” said Breonne DeDecker, a program manager for Jane’s Place Neighborho­od Sustainabi­lity Initiative, a nonprofit that works to increase affordable housing options for low- and moderate-income residents.

Cashauna Hill, executive director of the Greater New Orleans Fair Housing Action Center, described the situation as a “very-largescale problem.”

A former can manufactur­ing plant was transforme­d into the American Can Apartments in 2000 with the help of $39 million in public resources, including bonds and grants. In return, developer HRI Properties had to keep at least 20 percent of the 268 units at affordable rates when the property opened a year later.

In 2013, HRI Properties sold the complex to Georgia-based Audubon Communitie­s Management. Attorneys for the complex didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The lower rents expired in March, but the complex is allowing those affected to stay until the end of October at the reduced rates, said Hannah Adams, an attorney with Southeast Louisiana Legal Services who worked with Esnault.

The length of subsidies in New Orleans varies from developmen­t to developmen­t, ranging from as little as five years to 15 years or more, said Ellen Lee, director of housing policy and community developmen­t for Mayor Mitch Landrieu’s administra­tion.

Affordable-housing subsidies for about 1,200 units will expire in 2021 with another estimated 5,000 scheduled to expire 10 years later, she said.

Since Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005, rents in New Orleans have increased by about 50 percent, while wages have only risen by about 2 percent, Hill said. Three out of five renters spend more than 30 percent of their income on housing costs, she said.

Orleans Parish residents must earn at least $18.54 an hour to afford a two-bedroom home as of this year, according to a 2017 report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition. That’s out of reach for many in a city driven by the hospitalit­y industry. In the New Orleans area, more than three-quarters of all hotel jobs have median hourly earnings of less than $15, including tips, said Allison Plyer, chief demographe­r for The Data Center in New Orleans, which compiles such statistics.

“We know the city is in dire need of at least 33,000 affordable units just to deal with the current market conditions,” DeDecker said.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT/AP ?? Carolyn Horton packs her belongings as housing subsidies expire. She says she’ll probably move in with her son.
GERALD HERBERT/AP Carolyn Horton packs her belongings as housing subsidies expire. She says she’ll probably move in with her son.

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