Thursday
Aug192010
A HOME OF THEIR OWN
Thursday, August 19, 2010 at 10:22AM
The end of the American Dream?
The implosion of Wall Street and the Great Recession has hurt us all. But the most vulnerable among us have lost their piece of the American Dream - home ownership. Others never had that chance because their jobs don't pay enough for them to buy a home but just barely enough to rent.
With unemployment still at 9.5% (and going up today given lost jobs from the government sector) - more and more Americans are "at risk" of being homeless - somewhere around 18 million at least. In Oregon 16,000 families are homeless. So the crisis is not an abstraction.
Below is a link to one part of the problem, the diminished role of the federal government in building affordable housing, a decline that began in the Reagan years. It's now gotten worse with fewer and fewer Section 8 vouchers even in the Obama era. So much for a Democrat being in the Oval Office.
Funding for low-income housing has been falling for years. And nationwide, many public housing units have been torn down. The wait for housing vouchers in some cities can now last a decade, just as the recession has left more Americans struggling to pay the rent.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129233128
All politics is "local"
Here's the scene in Washington County Oregon - the hub of Oregon's "Silcon Forest" economy and the 25th largest agri-business county in the nation.
The face of poverty in Washington County includes families with children, victims of domestic abuse, victims of bank foreclosure, the newly unemployed, elderly living on Social Security, those with disabilities, school aged children couch surfing or on the streets, our farm worker community and veterans from Vietnam to the current conflicts in the Middle East.
The promise we need to reclaim:
1. Hardworking people should be able to afford housing and still have enough money for groceries and other basic necessities.
2. Children deserve an opportunity to succeed in school and life, which is tied to having a stable home.
3. Housing gives people an opportunity to build better lives. To succeed you need a place to call home.
4. It’s only fair that everyone has a safe, decent place to live. Seniors, people with disabilities and single parents ought to have housing they can afford.
The problem:
When residents of Washington County are paying more than 30% of their monthly income on housing, most often rental housing, then they have less income to cover other basic monthly expenses on –
Health Care,
Food,
Clothing,
Transportation
Since the early 1990s study after study of Washington County has indicated that the richest county in Oregon, the center of economic growth has an affordable housing crisis:
• Over 5600 families are on the Housing Authority’s waiting list for affordable rental housing;
• They will wait 4-5 years to get assistance for which their current income makes them eligible;
For those in greatest need, the homeless, the challenges we face are even more severe. On any given night we have @ 1400 homeless in Oregon's richest county!
Our county 5 homeless shelters can only care for a tiny share of those needing assistance;
Since the onset of the Great Recession the crisis of homelessness has gotten worse;


















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