We’re testifying on behalf of our member organizations who have been working tirelessly on the ground to apply for rent relief. Our members are the community-based organizations who are tasked with assisting the most marginalized tenants in accessing relief – those who do not have internet access or devices, who are not comfortable or experienced with filling out complex forms and uploading documentation online, who fear applying due to their immigration status, or who need assistance because the application and resources are not available in their primary language. Our members are also non-profit landlords of affordable housing, who are struggling to continue to operate their buildings and provide services in the face of diminished rental income with no relief received as of yet.
To Chairs Cymbrowitz, Rosenthal, Winstein, and Members of the Committees on Housing, Social Services, and Ways and Means, thank you for the opportunity to testify today.
My name is Barika Williams, and I am the Executive Director of the Association for Neighborhood & Housing Development. ANHD is a member organization whose mission is to build community power to win affordable housing and thriving, equitable neighborhoods for all New Yorkers. We believe housing justice is economic justice is racial justice. Our members are neighborhood-based affordable housing and equitable economic development organizations across New York City. They are tenant advocates as well as non-profit landlords of affordable housing; we have seen how the dysfunction of ERAP is negatively impacting both tenants and housing providers.
We’re testifying on behalf of our member organizations who have been working tirelessly on the ground to apply for rent relief. Our members are the community-based organizations who are tasked with assisting the most marginalized tenants in accessing relief – those who do not have internet access or devices, who are not comfortable or experienced with filling out complex forms and uploading documentation online, who fear applying due to their immigration status, or who need assistance because the application and resources are not available in their primary language. Our members are also non-profit landlords of affordable housing, who are struggling to continue to operate their buildings and provide services in the face of diminished rental income with no relief received as of yet.
Our rent crisis is indisputably one of racial justice. While almost six in ten New York City households–almost two million of them–make less than 80% AMI,[1] Black households in New York City make just 56% of the income of white households and Latinx households make 46% of the income of non-Latinx households.[2]
Because of long-standing inequity and systemic racism in our housing and health systems, Black, indigenous, and people of color communities face an extremely high risk of owing back rent and losing their homes. ANHD’s research shows that eight out of the ten zip codes in New York City with the highest rates of eviction filings are over 80% people of color, compared to 52.6% citywide. This compounds the impacts of COVID-19: the zip codes in New York City with the highest rates of deaths from COVID-19 were 68.2% people of color, compared to 29.2% in the zip codes with the lowest rates of death. Evictions are being filed 3.6 times as fast in those hardest-hit zip codes as the least hard-hit. [3]
Doling out more than $2 billion of rent relief statewide is a monumental job, and New York State has monumentally failed to rise to the task. Advocates made it very clear how important it was for the program to be accessible, and not only is it inaccessible, it is dysfunctional. Tenants and the organizations that serve them, like our members, are wasting their time dealing with preventable technical issues, receiving conflicting information, and staying in the dark about the status of applications. This spells disaster for New York’s BIPOC communities. We need you to do better.
Our members that are community based organizations (CBOs) have been overwhelmed by the same barriers that individual tenants face: technical issues, inconsistent or lacking support from OTDA, obscure or nonexistent information about the status of applications, and slow responses.
These technical and accessibility issues were both easily predictable and preventable, and they are unacceptable at a time when rent relief is a matter of life or death.
The bottlenecks and delays in distributing the money allocated for rent relief hurts landlords as well as tenants. We must simplify and streamline the application process to help make community development corporations (CDCs) and other nonprofit providers of affordable housing whole after struggling to stay afloat amidst reduced cash flow for the past 18 months. Specifically:
ANHD’s members who are non-profit housing providers operate on razor thin margins; any reduction in rental income directly hurts their ability to maintain their buildings, pay staff, and provide services and programs to residents and to the community.
It is clear to all of us that this process has been outrageously slow. Two months into the program, OTDA had disbursed less than one percent of 2.7 billion dollars. We are seven weeks away from risking the federal government recapturing these funds, and such an outcome would be shameful and immoral. The issues we have outlined in this testimony must be remedied in order to get tenants and landlords relief, and it is a matter of political will and prioritization. Our state government needs to get rent relief funds out the door now. Tenants and landlords cannot wait.
Thank you for the opportunity to testify. If you have any questions or for more information please contact me at Barika.W@anhd.org.
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[1] ANHD, AMI Cheat Sheet 2019, https://anhd.org/file/ami-cheat-sheet-2019. The share of NYC households making under 80% AMI is 58.6%. As of 2019, 1,852,816 New York City households made under 80% AMI.
[2] Census American Community Survey 2019 5-Year Estimates, Table S1903.