Miami Herald

In a day, more than 35,000 people sign up for Miami-Dade’s new Section 8 waiting list

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

It has been 13 years since Miami-Dade County added a name to its waiting list for federal Section 8 rental vouchers. On Thursday, the long wait just to make it onto the waiting list finally ended.

“We had about 200 people lined up outside the library,” said Ignacio Ortiz-Petit, an administra­tor with Miami-Dade’s Public Housing department. “I told everyone: ‘Listen, it’s not first-come, first-served. We have applicatio­ns for everybody.”

More than 35,000 people signed up online after registrati­on started at noon, Ortiz-Petit said. That’s not counting the printed forms turned in at libraries. The tally reflects the crush of demand, since Miami-Dade is taking only 5,000 names for its new waiting list.

While there was a rush on the first day, people seeking the low-income vouchers have two weeks to get on what’s essentiall­y a waiting list for the waiting list. The window to apply closes on May 27.

Demand for the federal rent vouchers doesn’t match supply, and it took Miami-Dade more than a decade to whittle down the original 2008 list, which started with 72,000 names.

Now, the county is taking a different approach. Rather than allowing anyone on the waiting list as the county did in 2008, Miami-Dade will only allow 5,000 people on the list this time.

After May 27, a computer will create a list by randomly selecting 5,000 names from the people who signed up.

Housing administra­tors expect it to be 12-18 months before the 5,000 applicants have either obtained Section 8 vouchers or have been removed from the list — either for changed circumstan­ces, such as moving away from Miami-Dade, or for not meeting federal requiremen­ts for the rental aid.

At that point, a new waiting list would be launched.

Promene Jean Baptise, 72, has looked to prayer as she tries for a slot on the waiting list. The retiree rents a place to sleep that has no kitchen access, leaving her able to cook only when she visits friends and family.

Hours after the registrati­on process opened Thursday, she was at the Sant La Neighborho­od Center for help filling out the online forms.

“I would have a place to cook,” Jean Baptiste said in Creole through a translator, “and live like a human being.”

About 16,000 Section 8 vouchers are in MiamiDade right now, according to county estimates, with the bulk of them used by residents to pay 70% of their rent. The remainder will be used to provide vouchers to people who land on the county’s new waiting list.

Though administer­ed by the county, Section 8 vouchers come from the federal government. They provide rent vouchers for private residences but are restricted by the income levels of renters. A family of four qualifies for Section 8 if household income is $45,200 or less.

“If you get selected, it’s kind of like an act of

God,” said Leonie Hermantin, director of developmen­t at Sant La.

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