Press: News clips
Helping the homeless?
by Cathy Resmer
(Seven
Days,
02/02/05)
Over the past four years, advocates for Vermont's
homeless population have learned to read between the lines. On
January 25, the Department of Housing
and Urban Development trumpeted
a record $1.4 billion in grants to fund emergency homeless shelters.
That includes nearly $2.9 million for Vermont.
HUD Secretary
Alphonso Jackson made the announcement about the "unprecedented
level of funds" at a California shelter, with Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
by his side. "President Bush is deeply committed to supporting our most
vulnerable neighbors," said Jackson, "and today I am pleased to reaffirm
that commitment."
But Vermont's affordable-housing agencies, which
help people move out of homelessness, have been saying for months
that their budgets
are being cut. Claudia Donovan,
director of rental assistance at the Burlington Housing Authority (BHA), confirms
that's true; the federal government has actually slashed $400,000 from the
agency's vital Section 8 voucher program, despite its boast about
record funding. "Aren't
they sneaky?" Donovan asks rhetorically.
Section 8 vouchers, which are
part of a different grant cycle and therefore went unmentioned at last
month's press conference, help defray housing costs
for seniors,
the disabled and working families who can't afford skyrocketing rents.
The program pays a portion of a recipient's rent. If a Section
8 recipient loses
his or her
job, the government will pitch in even more to keep that person off the
streets.
BHA Director Paul Dettman notes that, thanks to
the grants announced last month, his agency will be able to add
seven
housing units for needy families,
but
his threatened Section 8 program funds 1711. He calls the administration's
plan to
end homelessness in a decade "a con game." "We've said time
and time again, 'You're talking out of both sides of your mouth,'" he
says of the government.
Richard Williams, director of the Vermont
State Housing Authority, says the Section 8 program is what really gets people
off the streets. "It's been the backbone
of HUD for 30 years," he says. Williams points out that because of
budget cuts, this year the state of Vermont will actually lose 73 of its
6000 affordable
housing units. And he predicts that, because of the war in Iraq, steeper
cuts will be on the way in 2006.
"Doublespeak" is how Williams describes
HUD Secretary Jackson's comments about record funding to fight
homelessness. "It's not good for us," he
says. "That's the bottom line."
© 2002-2008 Vermont
Housing Awareness Campaign. All rights reserved.
Contact: info@housingawareness.org
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