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SSHP rent policy will receive more study
Rent for newcomers to stay at $210 until
Sept. 30, 2003
SEATTLE—January 22, 2003—The Seattle Housing
Authority will spend the next several months considering various
options for rent structure for the Seattle Senior Housing Program.
Meanwhile, rents for in-coming residents will remain at $210 until
the beginning of the housing authority’s next fiscal year, October
1, 2003.
Even though the rent policy enacted in September of
2002 would solve the financial difficulties faced by SSHP, if left
in place over time it would limit access to this housing for
extremely low income seniors. Since this is not the housing
authority’s long-term intent, SHA will evaluate a range of options
for rent structures over the next several months.
According to SHA Deputy Director 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."
The housing authority is beginning the process by
hiring a consultant to conduct a market study. The purpose of the
study is to better understand the demand for low-income senior-only
housing in Seattle. After collecting this information, SHA will look
at a variety of rental options, including a tiered rent structure
that would price apartments within various affordability ranges. For
example, an apartment with rent set at $300 would be reserved for
people earning less than 30 percent of median income. A different
apartment would be rented for $400 and
would be reserved for applicants earning from 30 – 50 percent of
median income.
A committee of interested stakeholders will assist
the housing authority in evaluating new rent structures for SSHP.
The first meeting of the committee is expected to take place in
early February. SHA is inviting members of a broad range of
organizations to participate, including the City’s Office of
Housing, the City’s Human Services Division, the SSHP Advocates,
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., will also serve on
the committee.
The committee’s work plan calls for the group to
meet about five times between now and next June, when a new proposal
should be ready.
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