The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ossoff gets an earful on bad landlords

Senator, in probe of HUD, hears tenants’ horror stories.

- By Matt Reynolds Matt Reynolds

Rat and roach infestatio­ns. Mold, collapsed ceilings and broken floors. Bathrooms flooded with raw sewage, including blood and feces.

Those are some of the indignitie­s tenants said they faced, as revealed in a hearing conducted Monday in Roswell by U.S. Sen. John Ossoff to hear from residents and housing experts about how some landlords treat renters in Georgia.

The hearing was part of an inquiry into whether the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t is properly holding to account landlords that neglect their properties and tenants. Landlords collective­ly receive millions of dollars in subsidies under the Project-Based Rental Assistance program, according to the senator.

Ossoff’s inquiry was sparked in part by an Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on six-part investigat­ive series, “Dangerous Dwellings,” which exposed unsafe living conditions at several Atlanta apartment complexes, including the now-shuttered Forest Cove in Atlanta.

Cancer survivor and tenant advocate Miracle Fletcher, a former resident of Trestletre­e Village apartments in Atlanta, was among those who spoke at Monday’s hearing, held in Roswell City Hall.

She said poor plumbing at the building resulted in raw sewage contaminat­ing-her home.

Fletcher, driven to tears as she testified, said a foul odor permeated throughout her apartment. She described a time when her daughter was taking a shower and raw sewage bubbled up and coated her feet.

“It was humiliatin­g,” Fletcher said. “I felt degraded. It felt as if my quality of life or my daughter’s life … it didn’t matter.”

When Fletcher organized a tenants associatio­n, she said, the property managers retaliated against her by accusing her of lease violations.

Latysha Odom, a mother of four children who lives at Heritage Apartments in Griffin, and DeAnnna Hines, who lives in Southwood Apartments in Morrow, testified after Fletcher. They described terrible conditions in their homes, including crumbling ceilings and floors, and rat and roach infestatio­ns.

“I can’t leave any food out, even to fix our plates, because if I do, there’ll be roaches in our food,” Odam said. “If I fix anything to drink, we have to cover our cups and cans with a book or something heavy otherwise bugs will get into our drinks.”

The witnesses said property managers and maintenanc­e staff continuall­y failed to fix the problems.

The Senate Human Rights Subcommitt­ee, which Ossoff chairs, uncovered other horror stories in dozens of interviews with tenants, landlords, maintenanc­e staff, housing attorneys and policy experts, the senator said.

Ossoff said the committee had heard from one tenant that their child had fallen through a collapsed floor, and another whose child was bitten by a rat. Others described fires, violent assaults, shootings and kids sickened by mold.

“What we found thus far is that too often landlords and large property owners and managers are securing and receiving massive federal subsidies while subjecting vulnerable families and children to dangerousl­y unsafe and unsanitary living conditions,” Ossoff said.

He said some neglected properties had passed HUD inspection­s.

According to tenants rights attorney Esther Graff-Radford, HUD failed to follow up with another inspection at some troubled apartment buildings and there was “very little meaningful enforcemen­t” when tenants complained.

“When HUD or the [Georgia] Department of Community Affairs inspect they either are missing the worst issues in occupied units or they simply take the landlord’s word for it that issues have been repaired,” she testified.

Ossoff said HUD has enforcemen­t tools to hold accountabl­e thousands of landlords and private property owners and managers.

“It takes far too long to identify bad actors and hold them accountabl­e,” he said.

 ?? NATRICE MILLE/NATRICE.MILLER@AJC.COM ?? U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga., listens to renters talk about unsuitable housing conditions during a Senate hearing in Roswell.
NATRICE MILLE/NATRICE.MILLER@AJC.COM U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga., listens to renters talk about unsuitable housing conditions during a Senate hearing in Roswell.

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