By Jake Thomas and Joanne Zuhl, Staff Writers
By now, every American is probably familiar with the term and concept —— if not the reasoning behind —— the national budget sequester.
As of March 1, evidence of its fallout nationally has been trickling in, from international airline delays to local job furloughs. But the impact on some of the poorest populations remains a slow burn. The Department of Housing and Urban Development is taking a 5 percent cut across the board, with its primary programs —— Section 8 vouchers, homeless assistance, housing loan services —— impacting millions of low-income citizens.
“A 5 percent cut may not seem like a big deal, but to a family it’s 100 percent,” said Leland Jones, HUD’s regional spokesperson based in Seattle. Jones said that the sequester will mean fewer services for fewer families.
One of the largest single casualties is Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers, which provides rental subsidies for the elderly, disabled and impoverished. Prior to this sequester, Congress had traditionally protected funding for the actual Section 8 vouchers, regardless of cuts elsewhere in the program budget. The wholesale nature of sequestration changes all that. According to a report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the voucher program will lose an estimated $938 million from 2013. (Read the complete report from the Center here.)
HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan has said these cuts could put 125,000 individuals and families at risk of losing their Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers, resulting in more than 100,000 formerly homeless people becoming at risk of returning to the streets. It could also result in 75,000 fewer households receiving foreclosure prevention or other counseling, in addition to deferred maintenance to public housing among other effects.
HUD estimates that Oregon will see a $13 million reduction in funding for HUD programs for the upcoming fiscal year. The bulk of that is $11 million in cuts to tenant-based rental assistance, a HUD subsidy to help households rent market-rate units, impacting nearly 2,000 families. According to HUD, Oregon will see a $641,000 reduction in HOME funds, which are used to create affordable housing, resulting in fewer units being produced. Funding for HUD homeless programs will be reduced by $1.2 million. Another HUD program helping people with AIDS find housing will see a $73,000 reduction in Oregon as well.
In Portland, government and social-service agencies that rely on HUD funding, are expecting the cuts to be painful, even if their precise damage is to be determined.
For Portland’s housing authority —— Home Forward —— sequestration means between $4 million and $5 million in funding reductions.
HUD provides about three-quarters of Home Forward’s annual budget, which this year was adopted at nearly $121 million.
The cuts come in myriad tiers —— applied to administration, operating funds and capital. But by far, the bulk of the cut from HUD, more than $4 million, will hit rent assistance funds that come through the housing authority and go directly to landlords to pay rent for low-income residents. The sequestration took a hatchet to a sacred budgetary cow by chopping 5 percent of reimbursements to Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers, which means that HUD will only pay Home Forward 95 percent of what it pays out in Section 8. This means some cuts at the administration level, along with possible increases in the amount renters’ pay for their housing.
“The housing authority system in this country is in as much jeopardy as it has been —— ever,” says Steve Rudman, Home Forward’s executive director, who described it as far worse than the war on welfare during the Reagan administration. Rudman put the blame squarely on a Congressional game of chicken that is “nickel-and-diming” the most vulnerable.
“These are just easy little cuts to people who don’t have any power,” Rudman said. “We’re like pawns in their game.”
Home Forward anticipates that much of the $4 million sequestration dent can be absorbed by its own reforms in Section 8. Years of budget constraints had prompted Home Forward to revamp its payment structure for the approximately 10,000 very low-income households it serves, adding incentives for people to transition back to work and off assistance. In some cases, renters could see the percentage they contribute to rent increase. That revenue had been intended to meet the growing demand for Section 8 vouchers: Last year 3,000 people joined the waiting list out of 21,000 who applied. They will be waiting another year before any more vouchers are released.
“We might be able to skate through, but there’s going to be an impact longer term,” says Rudman. “That money could have been put into all kinds of useful things, instead of backfilling the federal government on the backs of the poor people.”
In addition to the cuts, the Portland rental market is nearly sealed up with vacancy rates at less than 4 percent. That rate drives rents higher. So costs are going up while the federal government is pulling out.
Northwest Oregon Housing Authority manages Section 8 vouchers for nearly 1,100 families in Columbia, Tillamook and Clatsop counties, providing about 20 to 30 new vouchers every month. The cut there mean no new recipients for the vouchers beyond attrition, or about six to eight vouchers a month, according to NOHA Executive Director Todd Johnston.
“I think for the short-term, it’s sustainable —— six months at the most. But I think long-term, it’s going to affect our staff and that’s ultimately going to affect our clients and our ability to respond and get things up in a timely matter,” Johnston said.
Johnston said the impact is not just the sequester itself but the ripple effect of falling behind on meeting families’ needs, overburdening fewer staff to meet the myriad HUD requirements with landlords. Landlords unhappy with inspection schedules and agency services are more inclined to disallow Section 8 renters altogether.
There is also the expected shift in caseloads to other social services as people fall through the cracks into homelessness. It is especially difficult in the rural communities of Northwest Oregon, where people rely on seasonal, self-employment and low-income service jobs to get by, Johnston says.
“The safety net just isn’t here,” Johnston says of his region. “If this goes on for the long term, the effects are just going to be compounded. If this becomes a trend, or a long-term proposition, people are going to have to start looking at other options.”
Those options are bleak —— including people living out of cars or outside, Johnston said.
In the Clackamas County Housing Authority, interim director Dan Potter says they will have to cut back in staff, but they hope to absorb most of the loss in voucher payments with financial reserves. In addition to public housing, the county serves more than 1,600 recipients on vouchers for the elderly, disabled and families with children.
While the state-directed funding is distributed to various smaller municipalities and agencies across Oregon, the Portland Housing Bureau receives its own pool of HUD funds. This year, PHB is anticipating a 10 percent reduction to its programs due to HUD’s sequestration, including a projected loss of $770,178 in Community Development Block Grants and $292,039 in HOME funds, respectively. The PHB also projects a $78,216 reduction to its Emergency Solutions Grant, which is used for homelessness-relief programs. Additionally, the PHB projects a $109,072 reduction to Housing Opportunities for People with HIV/AIDS.
As a result of these cuts, the PHB anticipates that 65 households will not receive short-term rent assistance, 14 households with HIV/AIDS will not receive rent assistance and 130 households from communities of color will not receive homeownership education and counseling.
“Short-term rental assistance and affordable rental housing, both of which utilize federal funds, are two effective tools in keeping people off the streets and in homes,” said Portland Housing Bureau Director Traci Manning in a statement to Street Roots. “We’re still operating on the assumption of our budget forecast, which would mean a $1,249,505 reduction in federal funds, because we have not received allocations or new information from HUD.”
Multnomah County’s, safety net services, including aging and disability programs, domestic violence services, and mental health and addiction treatment, are anticipating a $4.3 million hit. This includes funding for direct services for homeless families, the disabled and the elderly through a variety of organizations. (Multnomah County’s HUD funds are recieved through federal, state and local streams.)
For Mary Li, the director of the Community Services division of the Department of Multnomah County Human Services, the cuts leave her sad and frustrated with lawmakers in Washington D.C.
“In many ways, it’s a very cynical calculation that in no way takes into account the real harm that is going to befall communities as a result of this gamesmanship,” Li said. “I expect better.
“I have great faith and belief that we in the county can figure how to best help ourselves,” Li says. “We can’t do that without the resources, and the federal government must come to the table. ... The citizens of Multnomah County will save the citizens of Multnomah County before the government does, but the federal government needs to send the resources to us.”
Oregon Opportunity Network represents nonprofit and low-income housing developers that house more than 72,000 families across the state. The financial blow from the HUD cuts are among many they have been dealt from local, state and federal sources.
“Our members are working hard on the front lines to help struggling Oregonians, and these cuts are on top of previous cuts and continued disinvestment at the federal level,” says Ruth Adkins, policy director for Oregon ON. “They’re working in an extremely complex and challenging regulatory environment, as well as facing an overwhelming human need.”
Adkins says it’s still too soon to see how this will play out among families, but that the wholesale nature of the sequester leaves few services untouched.
“We’re all interconnected,” Adkins said, referring to not only housing cuts but also cuts to education, infrastructure and other programs that help vulnerable and middle-class populations. “It’s really discouraging. To succeed you need a place to call home.”
Tony Bernal, development director at Transition Projects, said that at this point it’s unclear how the cuts will play out. Transition Projects gets part of its funding from multiple federal sources, some of which pass through local governments, making it difficult to anticipate exactly how his organization will be impacted.
“HUD is a particularly complicated story,” he says.
However, he does say that the cuts to Home Forward will have ripple effects because organizations like his direct clients to it as a housing resource.
“For all the mainstream providers, that’s going to be a real problem because that’s a major source of low-income housing,” he says of the cuts to Home Forward. “It’s really ripping holes into the social safety net.”
He says that the one bit of good news in the budget is that Transition Projects will see an increase in a HUD rent-assistance grant for the upcoming fiscal year.
Jean DeMaster is the executive director of Human Solutions, which like Transition Projects, gets its funding from a variety of government sources. The details of the direct impact aren’t yet known, she says. However, she is preparing for at least a 10 percent cut, which will mean fewer services for fewer people, said DeMaster.
“I can’t say that one thing is going to hurt the most,” said DeMaster. But she added that the cuts to HUD’s Community Development Block Grants and federal heating assistance programs will be significant.