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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (June 23, 2017)
Street Roots • June 23-29, 2017 VOUCHER, fro m page 10 saw how instrumental they were in ending homeless in the Portland region. Since 2015, more than 1,200 homeless veterans have been placed into permanent housing, largely due to a massive influx of vouchers specifically for homeless and low-income veterans. Weinstock said this realization amounted to an epiphany. The fundamental problem that leads to homelessness and housing instability, in his mind, he said, is that people don t have enough money to pay market level rents.” This means that if the gap between what a person can afford and the rent of the apartment unit or home they live in is closed, the person would not have to move due to a rent increase. “M y belief now is that the key to ending homelessness is basically to help low-income people to afford their rent over the long run,” Weinstock said. “I think one of the weaknesses of our system is that we have been providing short term assistance to people who need long term help,” he continued. “A voucher is long term.” Rutger Bregman echoed the idea that poverty and related issues, such as housing instability, is due to a simple lack of money. Bregman is a historian who gave a T E D talk advocating for combating poverty by giving everyone a basic income. “Poverty is a lack of cash,” he said during the talk. In November 2015, Northwest Pilot Project, the Urban League of Portland and Home Forward, the region’s federal housing agency, launched the first pilot project to test the effectiveness of a locally-funded voucher program with funding from the Meyer Memorial Trust. Home Forward supplied 60 of its housing choice vouchers for the program, something the housing agency is able to do because the federal government allows Home Forward to use some of its vouchers for innovative programs. The project targeted seniors on fixed nezLnle’s 3 News Page 11 incomes, who were facing rent increases other ways. they could not afford and who would likely She no longer asks family members to be forced to move. The project was designed help her pay for medications and other to test whether a voucher could prevent expenses. “Nobody would have let me slip those seniors from being displaced from through the cracks,” she said of her family. inner North and Northeast Portland “But you don’t want to ask. They have their neighborhoods, where many of them had own homes, their own lives.” lived for many years. She also felt comfortable adopting a All 60 of the vouchers were used, and at kitten - something she would not have done the end of the pilot year, had she not been sure if only two households did she could stay in her not remain in their home. “It let me get a housing: One person little spirit in, a little life moved to assisted living, I got to say yes to,” " i f f b e lie f n e w Is th a t th e and another person died. Lambert said. “It confirmed that k e y to e iw llììg hom eless- Barbara Ekong has vouchers are probably »ess Is b a s ic a lly to h e lp lived in her apartment in the most powerful tool the Woodlawn lo w -in c o m e p e o p le to to create housing neighborhood since a ffo rd th e ir re n t o w r th e stability for low-income 2003. Like many lo a f n i» / 8 people in the long run,” TOBBY WEIfygTOeiC Portlanders, her rent has Weinstock said. H O U S IN G A D V O C A T E W IT H increased again and N O R T H W E S T P ILO T PROJECT Elisa Harrigan, Meyer again. She receives $907 Memorial Trust’s a month in Social Affordable Housing Security. Initiative program Last year, her rent officer, said the pilot was raised to $1,005. “I program is one of the most successful just couldn’t afford it,” she said. affordable housing initiatives that the Trust She joined the pilot program last year, has funded. and she now pays $272 toward her rent. “I “We’re seeing folks being pushed out of have other bills,” she said. “Before I got the their communities and being priced out of voucher, I was lucky if I had $50 for the where they’re living, particularly seniors,” month.” she said. “It’s more cost effective to help Without the voucher, Ekong doesn’t think people stay in place.” she could have found another apartment. “I Program participants lived in their would probably be out on the street. It housing for an average of 11 years, alleviated a lot of pressure off m e.” according to Northwest Pilot Project's final Other cities have started local voucher report. programs to prevent displacement and The report showed the average monthly homelessness. income of the 60 participants was $1,119, Washington, D .C ., started its Local Rent and the average rent they paid before Supplement Program in 2007, which now receiving the voucher was $901 - subsidizes the rent of 1,718 households that approximately 81 percent of their income. make less than 30 percent of median After receiving the voucher for two-thirds income. The district’s Housing Production of their rent, the contribution the Trust Fund pays for the program with deed individuals made was $242 per month. record and transfer taxes it collects. “It was wonderful to not move,” Lambert Chicago started a trust fund in 1989 that said. Suddenly having hundreds of extra now subsidizes the rent of 2,800 dollars each month from her Social Security households, by bridging the gap between insurance check has improved her life in the rent of the housing unit and 30 percent FARMERS’ MARKET WEDNESDAYS 2-7PM C O FFEE IN STORES New Seasons Market, Whole Foods, Food Front Cooperative Grocery, Green Zebra, Chuck's Produce, Food Fight!, Cherry Sprout Produce, and Know Thy Food. AT YOUR OFFICE Interested in serving Central City Coffee at your office? Get in touch with us and we can help you make that happen. 503.226.7387 ON OUR WEBSITE Buy Central City Coffee online and have it shipped directly to you or a friend. li 3029 SE 21st Ave. btwn Powell & Division A C E N T R A L C IT Y Sourcing & roasting craft coffee to benefit programs at Central City Concern. li s the Joint Office’s voucher pilot project rolls out this year, John, Weinstock and others will examine how local vouchers can best be used and if the local government can administer them effectively at low cost. “The basic notion that they’re more likely to be housed stably with a voucher, we know that’s true,” John said. “The question is,” he said, “are we using these vouchers in the right way, with the right population?” If a locally-funded voucher program becomes permanent in Multnomah County and receives more funding to pay for more vouchers, is it appropriate to use those vouchers exclusively for seniors and disabled people on fixed incomes? Or exclusively for homeless people? Or the working poor? Or a combination? The bigger question is how much money the City of Portland and Multnomah County are willing to put forth for a local voucher program in the future. Weinstock estimates it would cost $6 million dollars to fund 1,000 vouchers. “Taking local voucher programs to scale is a significant financial challenge,” Jolin said. “We don’t print money,” Portland City Commissioner Nick Fish, who is an advocate for local voucher program, said. “Our capacity to fund all these urgent needs is going to be really challenged.” This local voucher program is just one on a growing list of effective, federally-funded, anti-poverty programs that, facing draconian cuts, local governments must ask if they can and should begin funding. © £>fdnb tu-eLL. £ )a pood. We're passionate about helping our community access healthy food that they can tru s t By shopping at our market, you'll get extra food dollars while supporting local farmers and community. of the family’s income. To be eligible for the program, a family of four must make $24,250 a year or less. “The Trust Fund plays an essential role in keeping Chicago affordable for all its citizens,” according to a guide detailing the program. New York City has a similar program that provides rent subsidies for qualifying people who live in homeless and domestic violence shelters. AT KASBAH MOROCCAN CAFE Get your espresso favorites at Old Town's newest spot (201 NW Davis Street), featuring Central City Coffee! Follow our Facebook page for updates and specials. centralcitycoffee.org facebook.com/CentralCityCoffee coffee@Ccconcern.org Come worship w ith us C ity *Prwby ferian Cfwrck Worship every Sunday 10 a m . We are a congregation of the Presby terian Church (USA). O ur congrega tion welcomes all people regardless of race. Nationality, class, gender, age, or sexual orientation. We pledge ourselves to the reconciling work of God through Jesus Christ /fo inciusive community o f faith" NT Sandy Blvd. at 44th Ave. www.rosed.typ arkpres. org Follow us on FacebookT