by James Quinn
This doesn’t even take into account the hundreds of thousands
of people in Section 8 housing who are “earning” money under the table
and not reporting it to the IRS. Then there are the additional “tenants”
who pay to live there, which is also not reported. This article is only
the tip of the iceberg.
Via Washington Post
A family of four in New York City makes $497,911 a year but pays
$1,574 a month to live in public housing in a three-bedroom apartment
subsidized by taxpayers.
In Los Angeles, a family of five that’s lived in public housing since
1974 made $204,784 last year but paid $1,091 for a four-bedroom
apartment. And a tenant with assets worth $1.6 million — including
stocks, real estate and retirement accounts — last year paid $300 for a
one-bedroom apartment in public housing in Oxford, Neb.
In a new report, the watchdog for the Department of Housing and Urban
Development describes these and more than 25,000 other “over income”
families earning more than the maximum income for government-subsidized
housing as an “egregious” abuse of the system. While the family in New
York with an annual income of almost $500,000 raked in $790,500 in
rental income on its real estate holdings in recent years, more than
300,000 families that really qualify for public housing lingered on
waiting lists, auditors found.
(HUD Office of Inspector General)
But HUD has no plans to kick these families out, because its policy
doesn’t require over-income tenants to leave, the agency’s inspector
general found. In fact, it encourages them to stay in public housing.
“Since regulations and policies did not require housing authorities
to evict over income families or require them to find housing in the
unassisted market, [they] continued to reside in public housing units,”
investigators for Inspector General David Montoya wrote.
The review, conducted in 2014 and 2015 at the request of Rep. Phil
Roe (R-Tenn.), found that 45 percent of the 25,226 public housing
tenants with incomes higher than the threshold to get into the system
were making $10,000 to $70,000 a year more. About 1,200 of them had
exceeded the income limits for nine years or more, and almost 18,000 for
more than a year.
HUD sets the low-income limits at 80 percent and very low-income
limits at 50 percent of the median income for the local area. The agency
sets “fair market rents” every year based on incomes, housing demand
and supply. In Los Angeles, for example, the threshold was $70,450 for a
family of five. In Oxford, Neb., it was $33,500 for an individual.
New York, Puerto Rico and Texas had the most over-income families in
public housing, while Utah, Idaho and Wyoming had the fewest,
investigators found.
(HUD Office of Inspector General)
About 1.1 million families in the country live in public housing. The
over-income tenants represent 2.6 percent of the system. Based on these
numbers, HUD officials said the inspector general was “overemphasizing”
the problem. But the watchdog didn’t buy it.
“Although 25,226 over income families is a small percentage of the
approximate 1.1 million families receiving public housing assistance, we
did not find that HUD and public housing authorities had taken or
planned to take sufficient steps to reduce at least the egregious
examples of over income families in public housing,” the audit said.
“Therefore, it is reasonable to expect the number of over income
families participating in the program to increase over time.”
The watchdog estimated that taxpayers will pay more than $104 million
over the next year to keep these families in public housing, money that
should be used for low-income people.
But under HUD regulations, public housing tenants can stay as long as
they want, no matter how much money they make, as long as they are good
tenants. The agency is only required to consider a tenant’s income when
an individual or family applies for housing, not once they’re in the
system. This is different from the housing choice voucher program that
used to be called Section 8, which gives families subsidies for rentals
in private apartment buildings. That program has an annual income limit;
tenants who go above it get less money.
Tenants can wait years to get into both programs.
(HUD Office of Inspector General)
HUD tweaked its policy on high-earning tenants in 2004, encouraging
the thousands of housing authorities in the system to move families out
of public housing if they earn more than the income limit for their
area. While HUD gives money to the housing authorities, they’re run by
states and local governments.
But the 15 authorities investigators looked at told them they had no
plans to evict these families, because if they did, poverty would
continue to be concentrated in government-subsidized housing. The goal,
they said, was to create diverse, mixed-income communities and allow
tenants who are making good money to serve as role models for others.
HUD officials repeatedly objected to the audit, saying that evicting
over-income families could “negatively affect their employment and
destabilize properties.”
“There are positive social benefits from having families with varying
income levels residing in the same property,” Milan Ozdinec, HUD’s
deputy assistant secretary for public housing and voucher programs,
wrote in a lengthy rebuttal to the inspector general.
“Forcing families to leave public housing could impact their ability
to maintain employment if they are not able to find suitable housing in
the neighborhood,” Ozdinec wrote. “Further, for families with children,
it may be more difficult to find affordable child care, and it may
impact school-age children’s learning if they are forced to change
schools during a school year.”
The watchdog said it didn’t believe that HUD should kick out every
family that earns more than the income threshold. But at the very least,
the agency should create “limits to avoid egregious cases.”
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