SHA commissioners approve new waiting list
preferences
Changes will help house people more quickly
SEATTLE—December 16, 2002—Seattle Housing
Authority has changed the way it gives priority to people on its
waiting lists for housing assistance. The new rules, or
"waiting list preferences," were unanimously approved by SHA’s Board of Commissioners at a board meeting on Dec. 16.
Under the new preferences,
first priority for housing assistance will go to all extremely
low-income and homeless applicants. Within the first priority group,
applicants who have been referred by qualified housing and service
programs will receive expedited processing. (See tables and
definition, below.)
Applicants who had first
priority under the previous rules but do not qualify under the new
rules will retain their first priority status until March 2003.
Regardless of their priority status, all applicants for public
housing will continue to be screened to ensure that they will be
good tenants, and SHA will continue to perform criminal background
checks for applicants to the Housing Choice Voucher Program.
Why change the preferences?
SHA changed the waiting list
preferences because they were difficult to manage and often
counterproductive for applicants. For example, thanks to the new
policy’s simpler definition of "homeless," homeless
applicants will no longer have to go through a complicated process
to establish first priority.
"Administering the old
preferences was extremely difficult," said Kathy Roseth,
director of PorchLight. PorchLight includes the admissions and
Section 8 departments of SHA.
According to Roseth, the new
preferences will make it much easier for those with the most urgent
housing needs to receive assistance.
"We want to go directly to
the people with the most urgent needs and highest likelihood of
successful tenancy," she said.
Because all homeless people and
people earning 30 percent of median income or less will have first
priority under the new preferences, applicants will not have to
prove that they are overcrowded, displaced or rent burdened in order
to get and retain first priority status.
That means overcrowded,
displaced and rent-burdened people will continue to receive first
priority, because they almost always have incomes below 30 percent
of median. But applicants and staff will no longer have to endure
the difficult, invasive and time-consuming task of verifying these
conditions.
Furthermore, by giving first
consideration within the highest priority group to applicants from
qualified housing and service programs, the new preferences will
encourage households’ movement through Seattle’s continuum of
affordable housing, from shelters to permanent affordable housing.
Giving housing to applicants that no longer need supportive
environments frees up services for those who do.
SHA will offer no more than
half of new public housing admissions or Housing Choice Vouchers
through referrals, so applicants will not have to be associated with
an agency to receive assistance.
"The new preferences continue to give
first priority to the very lowest income households, and at the same
time remove the administrative barriers that have prevented many
needy people from gaining access to SHA resources," said Roseth.
"We expect that the application process – when the changes
are fully implemented – will be simpler, faster, and more logical
from the applicant’s point of view."
Working with stakeholders
The new policy emerged from
months of revision and public discussion, during which stakeholders
attended several meetings and offered feedback. All comments were
taken into consideration, and several suggestions found their way
into the final policy.
The Seattle-King County
Coalition for the Homeless, or SKCCH, was one of the most active
contributors to the feedback process, and praised SHA’s
receptiveness in its official response letter to the new policy.
"Thanks for respectfully considering
SKCCH’s position and, by way of this process, listening to the
voice of the homeless people we work alongside," wrote
co-chairs Tara Connor and Dan Owcarz. "We look forward to
continued dialogue on into the future."
| |
Public Housing
|
Housing Choice vouchers
(Section 8 vouchers)
|
First Priority
|
Applicants who are:
EXPEDITED PROCESSING within this group for
applicants who are referred by qualified providers, subject to
terms of executed referral agreements. Providers include
recognized transitional housing programs and other
service-enriched housing programs. |
Applicants who are:
- Earning 30 percent of area median income or less
EXPEDITED PROCESSING within
this group for applicants who are referred by qualified
providers, subject to terms of executed referral agreements.
Providers include recognized transitional housing programs,
other service-enriched housing programs case management to
people with disabilities. |
Second Priority
|
All
others |
All
others |
Number in household
|
30% of median
|
1
|
$16,350
|
2
|
$18,700
|
3
|
$21,050
|
4
|
$23,350
|
5
|
$25,250
|
6
|
$27,100
|
7
|
$29,000
|
8
|
$30,850
|
9
|
$32,700
|
10
|
$34,600 |
Seattle Housing Authority definition of
"homeless"
An applicant household that is: 1) living on the street, in an emergency
shelter, or in a transitional housing facility; or 2) is a client of a
case-management program serving the homeless; or 3) has met one of these
conditions within the 12 month period prior to their eligibility determination.
|