February 15, 2012

Extreme Housing Shortage for Low Income Renters

From Housing Action Illinois and the National Low Income Housing Coalition

An analysis released today shows a dramatic shortage in the number rental homes affordable and available to extremely low-income households. These renter households, often faced with excessively high housing costs, are at great risk of becoming homeless.

Jointly released by the National Low Income Housing Coalition and Housing Action Illinois, Housing Spotlight: The Shrinking Supply of Affordable Housing, shows that in Illinois there are only 28 rental homes both affordable and available for every 100 renter households considered extremely low-income, that is, earning 30% or less of the area median income. In Illinois, a family of four is extremely low-income if their annual household income is at or below $21,650.
Illinois is one of 13 states below the national level of 30 affordable and available units per 100 households at or below the extremely low-income threshold. No state in the nation has an adequate supply of affordable, available rental housing.
“These numbers counter the perception that the foreclosure crisis and decline in home values has resolved the shortage of affordable rental housing,” said Bob Palmer, Policy Director for Housing Action Illinois. “What’s actually happened is that competition for those few rental units affordable to extremely low-income households has increased and rents for these households have continued to go up.”
By comparison, the data shows that there are 102 rental homes both affordable and available for every 100 renter households considered low-income, that is, earning 80% or less of the area median income. In Illinois, a family of four is low-income if their annual household income is at or below $$57,700.
At the federal level, advocates call for funding of the National Housing Trust Fund, which would provide communities with funds to build, preserve, and rehabilitate rental homes that are affordable for those households impacted by the affordable housing shortage. Unlike other federal housing programs, the great majority of National Housing Trust Fund resources are targeted at extremely low-income households. Signed into law in 2008, the National Housing Trust Fund has not yet been funded. President Obama included $1 billion for the National Housing Trust Fund in his FY13 budget proposal, released on February 13.
“Solving the shortage of affordable rental housing is the most important homelessness prevention measure we can undertake,” said Sheila Crowley, President and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition. “Investing in the National Housing Trust Fund is our best chance of ensuring affordable housing for all Americans.”

An affordable unit is one in which a household at the defined income threshold can rent without paying more than 30% of its income on housing and utility costs. A unit is affordable and available if that unit is both affordable and vacant, or is currently occupied by a household at the defined income threshold or below.

The full report is available at http://nlihc.org/doc/HousingSpotlight2-1.pdf.

February 05, 2012

Tax Wall Street, TIF Reform - on ballot


NA4J members have placed two advisory referenda on the March 20 primary ballot in Uptown precincts, to give voters the chance to make a direct statement to policymaker on two hot issues:

1) Should the hundreds of millions of dollars in Chicago's TIF slush funds be refunded to schools, parks, county health care, services, etc. (instead of being used for corporate welfare for friends of Mayor 1% (no, that's not the wording ... see below)
* more than $800 million sits in these slush funds, while libraries and health/human services are slashed, transit is cut, etc.
* these TIF dollars were long ago diverted from their intended purpose of spurring development in blighted communities

2) Should Wall Street (and their Chicago counterparts at Chicago Mercantile Exchange) pay for wrecking the economy through a small sales tax on financial transactions?
* A national financial transactions tax would generate about $350 Billion per year.
* A sales tax of one dollar (a buck from from the billionaires) on each contract traded at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (average value of contract: $225,000. price with the 'buck from the billionaires': $225,001) would generate $6Billion for Illinois to put people back to work, fund our schools, create low cost housing, restore the human in human services, etc.

These questions are on the ballot March 20, and the vote will send a message to elected officials how seriously to take the multiple coalition campaigns on these issues.

Join the fight!
- register voters
- work a precinct (knock doors, make phone calls)
- host an educational house meeting
- work election day (March 20) GOTV, poll watching, leafleting

contact us at info@actionforjustice.org

Donate to the campaign online by getting your ticket to the Feb 19 'Song & Struggle' event.

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Here is the text of what will be on the March 20 ballot:

“Should the city of Chicago return all tax dollars held in TIF (Tax Increment Financing) districts that should have been allocated to the Public Schools, Parks and the County, to these public bodies and only be permitted to use future TIF revenues to preserve and develop affordable housing (including homeless shelters and transitional housing), living wage sustainable jobs and businesses and youth and senior services and programs?”


“Should local, state and federal governments adopt policies to tax speculative financial transactions, including but not limited to derivatives and futures contracts, and us e the revenue collected to fund the creation and maintenance of programs and services that help low and moderate income people meet basic human needs including jobs, affordable housing, health care and education?”