Wambua Announces Departure from HPD
Aug.23.2013
(left) NYC Housing Preservation and Development Commissioner Mathew Wambua accepts his award as Government Partner of the Year at the Network’s 2012 Awards Gala. (right) Incoming HPD Commissioner RuthAnne Visnauskas. Ms Visnauskas currently serves as the agency's Deputy Commissioner for Development.
After two and a half years at the helm, Mathew Wambua has announced the end of his tenure as Commissioner of the NYC Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD).
Beginning next month, the commissioner will leave HPD to join the ranks of Richman Housing as President of RHR Funding LLC.
Commissioner Wambua's time has been an exciting one at HPD. At the Network's 2012 New York State Supportive Housing Conference, the commissioner announced an ambitious new plan from HPD to double its annual production of supportive housing, from 500 to 1,000 units every year. Despite enormous cuts in federal aid, HPD has kept this record-level commitment and is on target to meet its goals. For this and many other reasons, Commissioner Wambua was awarded the Government Partner of the Year award at our 2012 Awards Gala.
"It has been an honor to work with some of the most dedicated and compassionate public servants in the business," Commissioner Wambua said. "The knowledge that the work we do represents an investment in the future of New Yorkers and their families is why we are so passionate about our mission at HPD."
Continue ReadingGuest Blog: NYC Debate Includes No Questions on Housing, Homelessness
Aug.22.2013
By Rachel Fee, Coordinator of the Housing First! coalition
New York’s Democratic mayoral candidates clashed over an array of issues this week at the first of several televised debates. The debate, though substantive in many ways, didn’t include a single question on affordable housing or homelessness.
This came as a surprise to us at the Housing First! coalition. In pre-debate talk shows such as WNYC’s Brian Lehrer Show and The Call on NY1, callers expressed repeated concerns about the state of affordable housing in New York City. There’s a growing frustration among families who are being priced out of their hometown and spending far more than they can afford on housing. Right now, 33% of New Yorkers spend more than half of their income on rent. For low-income families, that figure is 66%. That kind of rent burden forces families to make difficult choices between rent, food and medicine each month. And too many families are not able to keep up, as evidenced by the 50,000 New Yorkers who sleep in homeless shelters every night.
In the midst of this housing crisis, the lack of questions on affordable housing was a disappointment. It was encouraging, however, that several candidates discussed affordable housing without any sort of prompt.
Continue ReadingNew Report Released on Youth Count
Aug.06.2013
The Urban Institute has released its findings on Youth Count, an effort held earlier this year to count the number of homeless youth in nine cities across the country. The federal government selected New York as one of the nine pilot cities to participate in the count, which was designed as a demonstration project to better understand how best to count homeless youth.
The Institute's report and findings will help shape future youth counts in the city. This invaluable evaluation will help advocates learn from cities across the country about their experiences with this year's youth count. You can read the report here. The Urban Institute also released a video on this year's effort, which features homeless youth from around the country as they discuss the importance of the count effort. See the video below:
Continue Reading
Housing First! Releases ‘Building Stronger’
Jul.09.2013
The Housing First! coalition has released a new $8 billion plan to preserve and expand affordable housing in New York City over the next eight years. The plan, which you can read here, calls on New York's next mayor to build 60,000 new affordable housing units -- including 10,000 supportive housing and 6,000 senior housing units -- and preserve 90,000 at-risk affordable housing units.
First formed in 2001, Housing First! is coalition of 40 diverse coordinating committee members seeking policy innovation and capital investment to address New York City's affordable housing crisis. The new plan, titled Building Stronger, has more than 100 organizational endorsements to date. Along with calling for increased affordable housing production and preservation, Building Stronger outlines proposals to strengthen the NYC Housing Authority (NYCHA), support affordable home ownership and address the housing needs of low-income families.
Continue ReadingNYC Passes 2013-2014 Budget
Jun.24.2013
Great news: The NYC Council has approved a budget that restores $5.1 million in proposed cuts to HIV/AIDS supportive housing contracts!
The cuts, proposed in Mayor Michael Bloomberg's 2013-2014 fiscal year budget for the fifth year running, would have impacted tenants in 4,500 supportive housing units funded by the NYC Human Resources Administration HIV/AIDS Services Administration (HRA HASA). Because the program receives a 29% match from New York State, the total budget cut to HASA supportive housing contracts would have been $7.2 million. The cuts would have also resulted in more than 200 social workers being laid off. Thanks to this restoration, thousands of vulnerable tenants will get to keep their case workers.
The final budget used the Council's legislative initiative funding to restore both HASA supportive housing contracted case management cuts ($2.718 million) and HASA supportive housing contract cuts ($2.368 million). These restorations were made possible thanks to the leadership and unwavering support of Council Speaker Christine Quinn and General Welfare Chair Annabel Palma. The Network also wishes to thank the many Council members who fought hard to restore this funding, especially the members of the General Welfare Committee.
Continue ReadingNYC Homelessness Coalition Holds Launch Rally
Apr.11.2013
Network staff joined more than 250 friends and advocates on April 9 at the launch of United to End Homelessness, a coalition created to highlight homelessness during the 2013 mayoral election in New York City. The rally took place on the steps of City Hall and featured a slate of guest speakers, including Rev. Calvin O. Butts of the Abyssinian Baptist Church.
The event marked the start of a long campaign, one designed to both shed light on NYC's homelessness crisis and offer policy solutions to the mayoral candidates.
Christy Parque of Homeless Services United (HSU) served as the day's emcee. Faced with an unseasonably hot afternoon, Ms. Parque kept her cool as she introduced the coalition as a broad array of experts, advocates and faith leaders.
"We must have a diversity of solutions to match the diversity of reasons why our friends become homeless in New York City," she said.
The ever-eloquent Rev. Butts then took the stage to offer an impassioned plea to New York's next mayor.
Continue Reading