Rhode Island news

Comments | Recommended

Public housing seen to be orphaned

01:00 AM EDT on Thursday, April 5, 2007

By Daniel Barbarisi

Journal Staff Writer

PROVIDENCE — Public housing has never had a particularly good reputation. Advocates say that ill-informed critics see the “projects” as havens for crime, crowding and long-term poverty, and ignore the strides made in recent years.

But now that public perception, flawed or not, might be costing public housing money in Washington, with a federal government that local housing officials say does not recognize the desperate need for public housing — and the good it does — in states such as Rhode Island.

Local housing authorities are strapped for cash and are having trouble maintaining their buildings. They say that in the president’s proposed budget for fiscal 2008, they would receive only 82 percent of what they need to maintain operations. It is only the latest reduction, as support for public housing has been declining for years.

This latest round, they say, is too much.

The Providence Housing Authority, the state’s largest, will lay off eight workers next week. Last year, it fired 26. Soon, workers will begin taking month-long unpaid furloughs to save money.

“We’ve made the cuts, introduced the copays, done layoffs. It’s getting to the point where it’s actually starting to affect operations,” said Stephen O’Rourke, director of the Housing Authority.

O’Rourke said the agency has put off maintenance, is not making any capital purchases for household items such as cabinets and is hiring fewer security workers this year.

Yesterday, housing authority directors from communities including Coventry, Providence and Newport came together with mayors from Providence, Johnston and Central Falls and more than 200 public housing residents and supporters at Conley’s Wharf on Allens Avenue to try to draw attention to the issue.

The National Association of Housing and Redevelopment Officials selected Providence as one of eight media markets to conduct an awareness campaign on affordable-housing issues — lumping greater Providence in with much bigger cities such as Chicago, Los Angeles and San Diego.

Rhode Island suffers from many of the problems of the larger cities because it has housing costs that are more often associated with urban areas around Boston, New York and San Francisco — but without the economy and wages of those cities. That leaves single working people of low to moderate income often struggling to pay the rent.

And at the national level, the Bush administration has not made supporting public housing a priority, said Johnston Mayor Joseph Polisena.

“We’re sending billions and billions of dollars abroad to people who hate us, but we can’t help the people in our own country. They need to get serious about funding these programs,” he said.

Part of the problem in getting support, advocates say, is the negative image of public housing and the perception in many other states that there is little or no demand for it.

“There’s an old perception of public housing. Some of it’s true,” said James Reed, executive director of the Newport Housing Authority. But, he said, “We’ve only got a small amount of households on public assistance. Our welfare rolls are diminishing.”

And contrary to assumptions that public housing is crowded with large families, the average family size per apartment is 1.8 persons, O’Rourke said.

Between housing and Section 8 vouchers, 32,000 people in Rhode Island have some form of subsidized housing.

But O’Rourke said housing authorities are not looking to build more housing — they are simply saying that they want to retain what they have to protect those who depend on public housing now.

“The current situation is terrible. We’re not here saying ‘Let’s get more public housing.’ We’re saying, ‘Let’s preserve the investment,’ ” O’Rourke said.

Officials were quick to point out that members of Rhode Island’s congressional delegation have been staunch supporters of affordable-housing programs. It’s the rest of Congress they’re worried about, they said.

Members of Congress from other states often do not realize the demand for housing in a high-rent, urban and suburban area such as Rhode Island, said Richard Godfrey, director of the Rhode Island Housing and Mortgage Finance Corporation. He said that on the few occasions that Rhode Island Housing has opened its waiting lists, it has had lines of thousands waiting to sign up. O’Rourke said the same about Providence housing’s waiting lists.

“Anyone who says there is enough funding for affordable housing in America is either lying or they have their eyes closed,” Godfrey said.

“We’re sending billions and billions of dollars abroad to people who hate us, but we can’t help the people in our own country. They need to get serious about funding these programs.”

Johnston Mayor Joseph Polisena,
about the Bush administration’s stance on public housing

dbarbari@projo.com

Advertisement

Reader Reaction