Add low-income housing managers and advocates to the list of people and organizations speaking out against the proposed transportation fee. By their calculation, the fee would impact nonprofit housing organizations hundreds of thousands of dollars annually, including those housing the disabled, elderly and others with no income – or car, for that matter.
The mayor’s office has already suggested, after blowback from multiple business sectors, that the city would consider pressing the street fee on households only, including low-income households. The city says it needs the additional revenue to bring the city’s pavement system up to fair condition and is about an hour away from conducting a public hearing before City Council.
Oregon Opportunity Network, along with the 19 affordable housing organizations it represents, has penned a letter for the City Council in advance of the public hearing:
“Based on our understanding of the current proposal, the impact on low-income residents, and on the nonprofit organizations that operate on very narrow margins to house and support those residents, would be severe. The flat fee concept, even at a discount, will affect our tenants in a regressive way; Portland’s most vulnerable residents living on fixed incomes or no incomes will be hit the hardest.
“Moreover, as nonprofit landlords working under strict federal and state regulation, in rent-restricted units we cannot simply pass on rent increases to our tenants – even if they were able to pay them. Adding to the financial burden of vulnerable residents, as well as of nonprofits receiving scarce public dollars, will result in an increased demand for other City resources and will thus put new strains elsewhere on an already overburdened safety net/support system.”
The letter goes on to give examples of the impact according to the city’s current rate proposal:
“The City’s largest provider of affordable housing and services, Home Forward, has calculated that the total fees for their organization and residents could range between $764,000 and $1.06 million annually, depending on how Section 8 voucher holders are charged.
The list, and the impact, goes on: Central City Concern - $100,000 (not including charges for medical facilities); REACH - $90,000 per year; Catholic Charities/Caritas Housing - $21,000 per year; Human Solutions - $40,000 per year; Northwest Housing Alternatives - $36,000 per year; Hacienda CDC - $20,000 per year; Innovative Housing - $53,000 per year. These impacts are significant, and will have ripple effects on housing affordability and the sustainability of these organizations and, most importantly, the livelihoods of the people they serve.”
Street Roots came out against the street fee last week. Read editorial here.