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Technical Assistance Collaborative (TAC) . TAC works to expand decent, safe, and affordable housing and support services opportunities for people with mental illness and other disabilitiesTAC focuses on the nation's affordable housing ?delivery system" and how it should respond to the housing nee
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1. Federal Housing Issues and Programs Impacting State Mental Health Systems Ann O’Hara
Technical Assistance Collaborative
NASMHPD Winter 2004 Commissioners Meeting
December 7, 2004
2. Technical Assistance Collaborative (TAC)
TAC works to expand decent, safe, and affordable housing and support services opportunities for people with mental illness and other disabilities
TAC focuses on the nation’s affordable housing “delivery system” and how it should respond to the housing needs of people with disabilities
3. Housing 101: Understanding the Problem
Housing needs and housing affordability affected by two interrelated factors
Income of the household
Cost of housing
People with mental illness have extremely low incomes
People with mental illness need housing assistance from government housing programs
4. TAC Priced Out Studies Priced Out studies released for 1998, 2000, and 2002
Compares SSI income to housing costs
Nationally
By state
Locally in 2,702 housing market areas
Documents a severe housing crisis for people with disabilities with low incomes
New Priced Out in 2004 to be released in 2005
5. Priced Out Findings SSI means extreme poverty
SSI income equal to 18 percent of median income
Average one-bedroom rent is 105.5 percent of SSI
Average studio rent is 89 percent of SSI
SSI equivalent to earning $3.43 per hour
Rents rising twice as fast as SSI cost-of-living adjustments
People with disabilities are 3 times more likely to have incomes below 30 percent of median income
6. SSI Income
7. “Affordable Housing” vs. “Subsidized Housing” “Affordable housing” = Rents are below market rent
Market rent = $700 per month
“Affordable” rent = $600 per month
“Subsidized housing” means tenants pay only 30 percent of income for rent
SSI recipients pay about $160 per month in subsidized housing
Only subsidized housing provides an on-going subsidy needed to close “housing affordability gap” for people with mental illness
8. Key Issues Most subsidized housing programs are federally funded (i.e. HUD)
Recent federal policy emphasis on “affordable housing” rather than “subsidized housing”
“Elderly only” housing policies reducing supply of subsidized housing for people with disabilities
HUD subsidized housing budget targeted
Proposals to fundamentally alter HUD-subsidized housing programs
Proposals would hurt people with mental illness and others receiving SSI
9. HUD Subsidized Programs Important to People with Mental Illness
HUD Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program
HUD Section 811 Supportive Housing for Persons with Disabilities Program
HUD McKinney-Vento Supportive Housing Programs for Homeless People with Disabilities
10. Section 8 Voucher Program At Risk Section 8 is the most important HUD subsidy program
Assists 2 million households
Assists 440,000 disabled households – majority are likely to be people with mental illness
Federal government has proposed to dismantle Section 8 by:
Cutting Section 8 spending
Converting Section 8 to a block grant
Block grant would negatively affect people with mental illness receiving Section 8 and waiting for Section 8
Current HUD policy implemented in 2004 already causing problems for people with mental illness
Strong advocacy effort needed to preserve and expand Section 8
11. Negative Affects of Proposed Block Grant
Proposed cut of $1.6 billion equal to 12 percent of Section 8 budget
Could have eliminated 250,000 vouchers now in use
No extremely low-income targeting
Program re-directed towards higher income households to save money
Increased rents for tenants
Flexibility to local Public Housing Agencies to set policies
Elimination of 62,000 vouchers now targeted by Congress exclusively for people with disabilities
12. Negative Affects of HUD 2004 Policies
2004 cuts already affecting people with disabilities
Increased tenant rents
Decrease in HUD Fair Market Rents
More landlords reluctant to use program
Thousands of vouchers not being re-issued to people on waiting lists
Supportive housing for chronically homeless people stalled
13. Section 8 Vouchers and State Mental Health Systems
Key resource for emerging housing “best practices” in mental health
State mental health funded “Bridge subsidies” linked to Section 8
Permanent supportive housing intended to end chronic homelessness financed with Section 8
People with mental illness who have Section 8
14. Other Key HUD Supportive Housing Programs HUD’s Section 811 Supportive Housing for Persons with Disabilities program
Has provided 2,500 new subsidized units per year for people with disabilities
Funding being cut
HUD’s McKinney-Vento permanent supportive housing programs for homeless people with disabilities
Has provided 10,000 new units of supportive housing per year
Funding being cut
15. State Mental Health Agencies:“Best Practices” in Housing Much has been accomplished and more could be done if these programs are preserved and expanded
Ohio
Washington, DC
Hawaii
California
Connecticut
Accomplishments could be jeopardized
Effects of Section 8 problems now and in future
16. What is Needed Importance of housing knowledge, capacity, and “up to the minute” information
Strong advocacy effort
Governor
State housing officials
Federal officials
NASMHPD’s role with CCD Housing Task Force
Cross disability strategies at state and local level
Data on need and best practices to reinforce policy positions
Technical assistance
17. TAC Information and Advocacy Tools
NASMHPD/TAC Partnership
TAC’s publications
TAC website www.tacinc.org
E-mail us at info@tacinc.org
Weekly housing policy updates from National Low Income Housing Coalition www.nlihc.org
More Section 8 info at Center for Budget and Policy Priorities www.cbpp.org
Other partners: National Alliance to End Homelessness, Corporation for Supportive Housing, NAMI, NCCBH