Rent Structure Advisory
Committee convened to help design new SSHP rent policy
SHA strives to keep most units affordable for extremely-low income seniors while
protecting the financial viability of this senior housing program.
SEATTLE—March26, 2003—About a dozen people,
including Seattle Senior Housing Program residents, City of Seattle officials, real estate
experts and low-income housing developers and activists have been
meeting regularly since early February to help SHA design a new rent
policy for SSHP.
Today, about 86 percent of SSHP's 993 apartments are
housing people with incomes below 30 percent of the area median
income ($16,350 for a one-person household). SSHP tenants
are charged 30 percent of their monthly income for rent. This amount
is
often considerably lower than the cost to SHA of operating and maintaining
the apartment. In most other low-income housing programs, subsidy
is available to cover this gap. SSHP has no dedicated sources of outside
subsidy, so it must meet all its expenses from rent
revenues.
According to SHA Deputy Director and Committee Chair
Al Levine, "We
hope to identify solutions that will solve SSHP’s long-term
revenue needs in a way that also serves a large proportion of
extremely low-income seniors. We would like to see at least 75
percent of the units continue to serve this group of tenants."
Members of the Rent Structure Advisory Committee
include SSHP residents and representatives from the City’s Office of
Housing and Human Services Division, the Seattle Displacement Coalition, the Northwest Justice Project
and the Housing Development Consortium of Seattle and King County.
Two SHA Commissioners, Marie Cook and Al Winston, Jr., also serve.
The Committee is evaluating a variety of options, including a tiered rent structure
that would price apartments within various affordability ranges. For
example, an apartment with rent of $250 would be reserved for
people earning less than 20 percent of median income. A different
apartment would be rented for $350 and
would be reserved for applicants with incomes up to 30 percent of
median income.
Other issues that the Committee is considering
include: the use of Housing Choice Vouchers in SSHP, the
performance and marketability of SSHP buildings and units, and
adjustments in management and maintenance that will reduce operating
costs and allow rents to be kept low.
The Committee is expected to issue its
recommendation by the end of April. In May, SHA will hold a
series of public meetings in SSHP buildings around Seattle to inform
SSHP residents and others about the recommendation and solicit their
comments. The SHA Board of Commissioners is scheduled to adopt
a new rent policy in June along with SHA's Fiscal Year 2004
budget. The new policy would go into effect by October 1,
2003. Meanwhile, the minimum rent for new residents remains at
$210.
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