Tenant Summit 2013

 

Tenant Summit 2013! A great opportunity to become acquainted with people and nonprofit organizations throughout the city that work with tenants and tenant groups on a number of issues providing legal advice, administering rental assistance programs, working to improve housing conditions, and otherwise seeking to prevent displacement in all of DC. Come to find out what services are available to you, and learn about your rights as a DC tenant! Free registration here.

DC’s Budget Season All Wrapped Up

Budget season is over. The process takes several months starting with a budget proposed by Mayor Vincent Gray, then hearings in which members of the public comment on the mayor’s proposed budget, an amended budget proposed by members of the city council, a contingency list of items that the Mayor would like to fund but isn’t sure we can afford, etc. Finally, last Wednesday, June 26, 2014 the DC City Council took their final vote on DC’s budget for fiscal year 2014, deciding on behalf of the residents of the District of Columbia how to spend our tax dollars.

As part of Grassroots DC’s mission to provide media coverage of issues that impact the underserved communities of the District of Columbia, we’ve reported on some of the issues in question on this blog. We wanted to cover more but alas, lacked the manpower. (Feel free to take that as a veiled plea to potential contributors.)

Here’s an update, as per DC’s Fiscal Policy Institute, on some of the provisions in the budget that are generally favorable to DC’s low-income and working-class residents:

Help for homeless residents. The FY 2014 budget included many increases in funding to help homeless residents or residents at risk of homelessness. Increases included:

$2.2 million increase in permanent supportive housing, which provides housing to chronically homeless families and individuals. $1.5 million increase in emergency rental assistance, which helps prevent residents from becoming homeless. $400,000 to offer services to single homeless residents to help move them out of shelter quickly and into housing with supportive services. $5 million increase to the Office on Aging, including $3.5 million in operating funds. $1.5 million in capital funds.

Help for vulnerable families and individuals. The FY 2014 budget included two changes to DC’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program that will improve the lives of vulnerable families with children. First, the mayor’s budget included a delay in the benefit cut for families who have been on assistance for longer than 60 months. In addition, the Council also included funding to exempt some families with severe barriers from the time limit. These protections, which most states offer, give families a break from the 60-month time limit on benefits to give them time to deal with serious issues that interfere with their ability to work such as domestic violence, illness, or caring for a family member with a disability.

Help for parents who need child care. The FY 2014 budget increased funding for DC’s Subsidized Child Care program by $11 million. This program pays part of the childcare costs for parents of young children who are in school, working or looking for work but who cannot afford child care. The $11 million will increase the number of spaces available for infants and toddlers in community-based child care programs. It will also increase the reimbursement rates paid to providers by 10%. This is the first increase since 2004.

Help with rising housing costs. The FY 2014 budget includes significant increases to affordable housing. In addition to Mayor Gray’s proposed $100 million for affordable housing, the Council added funds for key affordable housing programs that had not received an increase in the mayor’s proposed budget. Including:

An increase to DC’s Local Rent Supplement Program, which provides rental subsidies to families with very low-incomes. The Council’s budget includes $1.75 million to provide rent vouchers that will help approximately 120 low-income families obtain affordable housing. Increases to Low-Income Property Tax Relief or Schedule H, which is a tax credit for lower-income residents when rents or property taxes are high relative to income. An expanded property tax break for seniors. Under current law, senior homeowners with income under $100,000 qualify for a 50 percent cut in property taxes. The FY 2014 Budget will provide property tax reductions for seniors with incomes between $100,000 and $125,000.

On the flip side, I’m not too happy about the Council’s decision to accept Mayor Gray’s proposal to restore a tax break on income from out-of-state bonds. This will reverse legislation adopted in recent years to phase out the tax break for investments made starting in 2013. DCFPI points out that much of the tax-exempt income in DC is earned by very high-income residents, including some who earn millions from these investments. They proposed phasing out the tax break for wealthy residents while maintaining the exemption for low- and moderate residents. But the Council has proposed allowing all residents to retain the tax break, regardless of income.

On the whole, the DC . . . → Read More: DC’s Budget Season All Wrapped Up

Juneteenth March and Rally for Liberation

cross-posted on behalf of the ANSWER Coalition

The ANSWER Coalition supports the work of Jobs not Jails and encourages all our supporters to participate in this demonstration

Saturday, June 22 @ 12:00 noon 4th and F St. N.W. (Judiciary Square on the Red Line) We demand: Jobs not Jail! Affordable Housing for All! Quality Schools in Every Neighborhood

Initiated By: Jobs Not Jails Coalition, Movement For Love and Unity, Returning Citizens United, PEAC-Howard University, Justice not Jails-American University, Ceasefire Don’t Smoke the Brothers and Sisters

Endorsed By: ONE DC, DC Jobs or Else, Operation Beloved Communities, ANSWER Coalition, Students Against Mass Incarceration, and more…

What is Juneteenth?

Juneteenth is the oldest known holiday celebrating the end of slavery in the United States. On June 19th, 1865 Union soliders landed in Galveston Texas, where slaves had not heard of the Emancipation Proclamation, that they were free. Freed slaves combined “June” and “nineteenth” to create “Juneteenth,” which became a significant holiday in Texas. Juneteenth spread rapidly around the country during the Civil Rights Movement. In particular the Poor Peoples Campaign of 1968 held a massive demonstration on Juneteenth 1968 which helped energize Juneteenth as a national holiday. We come together on June 22, 2013 to celebrate this important date in Black history, and continue its spirit of resistance!

Jobs Not Jails!

Despite tremendous wealth in the city Washington D.C. has a serious jobs crisis. While the city’s overall unemployment rate is 8.5%, in areas like Wards 7 and 8 the official average is closer to 20%. For those with criminal records unemployment sits at roughly 50%. The other 50% of those with criminal records are restricted to just a few low-income job categories. This fits in more widely with the District’s poverty rate of 18.7% overall, and 30.3% for children. Not surprisingly in 2011 D.C. had the biggest gap between rich and poor of any other state in the U.S.

Affordable Housing for All!

In the last 10 years D.C. has lost over half of its low-cost rental units and 72% of its low-value homes. The typical person with a low-income paid 63% of their income towards rent. Average rent on a one-bedroom apartment has jumped from $735 in 2000 to 1,100 in 2010. In the same period the price of homes has jumped 50%. The cities public housing waiting list, now closed, has an estimated wait time of 28 years!

Quality Schools in Every Neighborhood!

For years the public schools in the District of Columbia have not been up to the task of delivering a quality education for every child in every neighborhood. In a recent study of test scores from 2007-2011 the authors found that there was no meaninful rise in 3rd grade reading or math scores. It also found that low test scores almost always seemed to cluster in the poorest neighborhoods. City leaders have been far too dismissive, pushing a range of options that abandon quality neighborhood education, and mostly ignore the tight links between poverty and learning. Instead they push privitization and school closures in the poorest, lowest performing neighborhoods. The result has been progress far below that promised by city officials, and higher profits for city real estate interests and private education companies who have benefited from closed schools.

This Just In: Tenant Town Hall

If you rent in DC, and are unhappy about just how much rent you have to pay. If you rent and have concerns about health and safety issues in your apartment or apartment complex, you should go. The Tenant Town Hall is organized by the Latino Economic Development Center and the Housing for All Campaign but any DC resident who rents is encouraged to attend. It’s your opportunity to make your housing concerns known to those with the power to do something about it.

Tenants Demand Safe, Affordable Housing

Join the tenant movement for affordable housing and safe, healthy conditions! Hundreds of DC tenants will gather to raise their concerns to Councilmembers and agency directors just days before the DC Council votes on the budget and decides how to fund key housing programs. Wins made by tenants at the Tenant Town Hall have improved the lives of all DC renters. Stand for Housing For All at the Tenant Town Hall!

Saturday, May 18 All Souls Unitarian Church 1500 Harvard St NW (16th and Columbia Rd NW, 3 blocks from Columbia Heights Metro)

Free lunch, 1-2 PM Free childcare with RSVP by May 10. Interpretation in Spanish, Amharic and Chinese.

1 – 2 PM: Speak with DC housing agencies – DC Housing Authority, Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, Department of Housing and Community Development, legal service providers and non-profit organizations. Lunch

2 – 4 PM: Town Hall presentations by residents focusing on DC’s affordable housing budget and Safe and Healthy Housing (no mold, asbestos or lead!) and responses from elected officials and Housing Agencies.

For more information contact Elizabeth efalcon@cnhed.org.

Empower DC and BFTAA Confront Mayor Gray at Barry Farm

Empower DC and the Barry Farm Tenant and Allies Association (BFTAA) confronted DC Mayor Vincent Gray during his planned photo opportunity at the “ground breaking” for the new Barry Farm Recreation Center. While the ground breaking occurred on the grounds of the existing Rec Center, the plans for the new one have not yet been made public and the only existing public plans have the Center built on another location entirely, not only raising the question of why the ground breaking was at the wrong location, but why the existing Rec Center has to close in order to build a new one slated to be built on a separate piece of property.

Through the power of protest, Barry Farm residents and Empower DC won a reprieve for the Center as the city promised not to shutter the facility until they actually meet with the residents. Empower DC organizer Schyla Pondexter-Moore spearheaded the organizing of the action. Executive Director Parisa Nouruzi was featured on the news, as well as members Joe-Ann Donaldson, Phyllissa Bilal and Michelle Hamilton. See news clips below.

View more videos at: http://nbcwashington.com.