125,000 Families to be Cut from Section 8 Housing by HUD
Saturday, January 29, 2005 at 07:09AM
TheSpook
Thousands
of Metro Detroit's poorest residents, already forced to wait years for
federally subsidized housing, will find even fewer homes available this
year as local agencies brace for steep cuts in funding. An estimated
125,000 families nationally are expected to be cut from the program
called Section 8, which is funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development. The demand for subsidized housing in Metro Detroit
is so heavy that county governments won't even accept people to get on
a waiting list. Local agencies that administer the program learned this
week that they will receive at least a 4 percent reduction in federal
aid, in addition to previous cuts, at a time when Michigan is reeling
from a rocky economy. The state's unemployment rate soared to more than
7 percent in December, giving it the nation's highest jobless rate.
With the funding reductions, many agencies are considering scaling back
the number of families they serve, eliminating programs or lowering
payments to landlords. "I don't think HUD really cares," said Wayne
Moran, a 59-year-old Vietnam War veteran who lives in a subsidized unit
in Westland. "They want to look the other way. Whenever there's a
problem, they always tell me to go to someone else. They're good at
pushing paper." Housing advocates say they are being hurt by a HUD
funding formula that allocates agencies a lump sum of money to divvy up
for Section 8, without taking into account the rising costs for the
program. [more]
- Pictured above:
Bush and his flunkey, HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson, who said "being
poor is a state of mind, not a condition" [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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