Subject: Advocacy

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    Decision 2012: What About Housing?

    I just took a stroll through the Obama and Romney campaign Web sites, and neither includes a single mention of the words “housing,” “mortgage,” or “foreclosure.”  Apparently the housing crisis that brought our national economy to its knees is over,…

  • No More Excuses: Principal Reduction Will Give Relief to American Homeowners

    One by one, the excuses have fallen. Yet Edward DeMarco, acting head of FHFA, the agency that runs Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, still fails to offer the most effective relief available to American homeowners struggling with mortgages held by…

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    Honoring Justice

    Earlier this month, I had the honor of speaking at the memorial service for civil rights hero and respected jurist Judge Robert L. Carter. These were my reflections: I had the privilege of serving as Judge Carter’s Law Clerk in…

  • Everyone Saves with Short Sales

    Short sale--in which a home is sold for less than the balance due on the mortgage but the lender accepts that as payment in full--is a far better alternative for homeowners. And also for the lenders. That's not just an…

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    A First Look at Real CFPB Authority

    Now that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is properly equipped with Richard Cordray as its director, news that it will monitor nonbank entities (independent lenders, brokers, servicers) in the same way it does banks is certainly good news for those…

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    Accountability for Countrywide is Good for the Market

    The annoucement of the Justice Department's settlement with Countrywide over violations of fair lending laws is a landmark victory that deserves recognition. For years, NCLR (the National Council of La Raza) has called attention to a particularly egregious form of…

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    My Holiday Wish List

    The holiday season is a time when we express our lofty wishes and set new resolutions for personal improvement, but there is nothing lofty about my holiday wish list this year. It is pragmatic and reasonable; better yet, it will…

  • Criminalizing Homelessness

    Last week, when we asked if homelessness should be a more prominent Occupy Wall Street issue, we pointed to an article by author Barbara Ehrenreich that looked at homelessness from a logistic standpoint; that examined the legal obstacles that face…

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    Work That Needs Doing

    How many times have you pointed to something in your community and said “If only we could put someone to work fixing that [house/sidewalk/bridge/factory/park…]?” The American Dream Movement has created a website as part of its push to put American back to work doing infrastructure investment. It’s a simple collection photos of places where public investment would create multiplier effects for public safety and economic health. It’s called Work That Needs Doing. This strikes me as a perfect project for community-based organizations small and large to tap into their own knowledge of their neighborhoods, their existing neighborhood plans, and their volunteer and member bases—especially youth. What needs doing in your community? Post links here if you add pictures to the site, and we’ll consider the best shots to illustrate Shelterforce stories on relevant topics in the coming year! (Photo from Work That Needs Doing, by Deanna J Marquart, Sacramento, CA) more

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    California’s Anti-Foreclosure Movement

    Rose Gudiel is on the front lines of a growing protest movement to stop banks from foreclosing on families victimized by the economic crisis and abusive banking practices. The 35-year old Gudiel, who juggles two jobs and lives with her…

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    Conrad Egan

    I suspect I came to the same conclusion when titling this post as Harold Simon did when thinking of a title for our summer 2011 interview with Conrad Egan, who retired as president of the National Housing Conference in 2010. Conrad Egan — an organizer, housing developer, HUD official, and affordable housing advocate — is often best identified by name alone. Don’t be mistaken: the whole cliche that he “needs no introduction” is not applicable here. Egan deserves an introduction. Our interview spans his five-decade career, from his time at the University of Michigan School of Social Work where he specialized in community organizing, to his abrupt meeting with Saul Alinsky in Chicago (who promptly told Egan to get back to Detroit), to his first stint at HUD working with the likes of Marilyn Melkonian, to the National Housing Partnership, to a second stint at HUD, to NHC, and to a decidedly busy post-retirement working to end homelessness in Fairfax County and serving on advisory boards to the Virginia governor, Housing Virginia, and DC’s Community Preservation Development Corporation. It’s a fascinating interview on several levels, but Egan’s ability for storytelling is on display here, particularly when he describes being in Detroit during the 1967 race riots: We could hear the guns — there would be a “pop,” and then there would be a 50-caliber machine gun response, “pop-pop-pop.” And the major rioting occurred a little north of us, up 12th Street, north of the boulevard, and then over on the west side, over on Cass and other streets like that. Our neighborhood supermarket got burned out. A lot of our neighbor institutions were destroyed. We were in our home and we heard all this stuff going on, but we didn’t feel threatened or endangered. I was working at the time at University of Detroit Housing Law Project over on the immediate other side of the CBD at the University of Detroit Law School. And I walked into the office, and there was nobody there, and the streets were deserted. So I eventually called my boss, who was located close by in a development called Lafayette Park. This is an interesting development in Detroit that was designed I think by Mies van der Rohe, if I have my architects correct. It’s typical Mies style. And so she said, “Hey, come on over to my apartment and we’ll get together.” It was a fascinating, amazing picture. If you looked out over this high-rise, and looked down on the folks who were there because they didn’t go to work because they were scared, they were down there swimming in the pool and having their margaritas and Bloody Marys. But as you looked out over the city, you could see the smoke plumes coming up. There’s so much more. You should really check it out here. more

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    “Housing Gets People’s Interest Today”: State of the Nation’s Housing Press Conference

    Yesterday, the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard released its 2011 State of the Nation’s Housing report in an event at the Ford Foundation. George McCarthy, director of Ford’s Metropolitan Opportunity Unit, opened the event by saying he thought…

  • Can’t Offer Housing Counseling Without the Funding

    One of the highlights of this year’s National Community Reinvestment Coalition conference was the luncheon on Day 2, which took place in the Hart Senate building after NCRC members broke off into their respective delegations to meet with their representatives.…

  • “The Fight Continues.”

    Michael De Los Santos, community organizer and outreach and project coordinator with the Community Reinvestment Association of North Carolina talks about working within communities served by his organization, spoke with us at the 2011 National Community Reinvestment Coalition conference about…

  • “Better Ideas to Help Our Community”

    Dolores Swartworth, an at-large member of the Pittsburgh Community Reinvestment Group, spoke with us at this year’s National Community Reinvestment Coalition conference on the value of the event and what, at 80 years old and “20-some” NCRC conferences in her…

  • NCRC: Why Were You There?

    We had a great opportunity to interview several attendees of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition’s 2011 annual conference on what they hoped to achieve, some of the issues they planned to raise with their legislators, and what tips they wanted to bring back to their communities and organizations. One of those attendees was Joby Thoyalil, a program associate at the New York City–based Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project (NEDAP). This was his first time attending, though NEDAP has had a presence at NCRC in past years. We spoke to him at the outset of the conference, and here’s what he had to say. We’ll have more videos featuring insights and commentary from conference attendees posted shortly. Check back here at Rooflines, or follow us on Facebook and Twitter for daily updates. more

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    A Steep Climb Up The Hill

    We’ve been interviewing attendees at this year’s National Community Reinvestment Coalition’s annual conference, and we plan on posting individual interviews shortly. Those attendees who were kind enough to take time to speak with us, told us of the tools and…

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    Nonprofit Chamber of Commerce?

    When you see a conference plenary session described as “positioning your organization for growth,” you probably expect some descriptions of grant writing strategies or succession planning. That is distinctly not what Robert Eggers, founder of DC Central Kitchen and author…

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    Rent Regulation in the Great Recession

    Over at the Gotham Gazette, David King walks us through the latest round of politics over New York City’s rent regulation laws, which have to be renewed by the state legislature. The regs expire on June 15, and the usual…

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    The Spring Issue of Shelterforce Is Here!

    Fair Housing: The Work Continues and the Vision Expands is the theme of our cover package in our Spring 2011 issue as we explore the continued fight for equity in the 21st century and recall that the civil rights movement, which birthed the community development movement, recognizes that separate is not equal. As April is Fair Housing Month, it’s only appropriate that this new issue features an interview with HUD Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity John Trasvina as he discusses updates to the Fair Housing Act, a changing definition of “family,” changes to Section 3 and affirmatively furthering fair housing. This is the latest in our housing policy interview series that includes interviews with HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan and Rep. Barney Frank. PolicyLink’s Angela Glover Blackwell, in Equity Is Not Optional, addresses racial and economic disparities saying that focusing on the most vulnerable communities and people and addressing racial and economic disparities is not only the right thing to do — it’s the only way we can succeed. Next, Philip Tegeler of the Poverty and Race Research Action Council and Scott Bernstein of the Center for Neighborhood Technology examine CNT’s Housing + Transportation Index that measures neighborhood affordability. Here, Bernstein argues the index provides a fair calculation in siting affordable housing in areas that are truly affordable in terms of transportation costs. Tegeler, however, remains concerned about segregated, higher poverty neighborhoods. Rounding out our fair housing package is Heather Schwartz, who writes based on a report she penned for The Century Foundation, that inclusionary zoning and economic integration in suburban neighborhoods not only reduces concentration of poverty, it directly improves low-income children’s academic achievement. Predatory Equity In New York City, we’ve seen many cases where predatory equity investors speculate on multifamily housing and the tenants are the ones that ultimately suffer due to harassment or a lack of building maintenance. Dina Levy of the Urban Homesteading Assistance Board writes that while there have been some victories, we’re seeing many buildings re-enter the cycle of speculation. In the summer of 1973, Clive Campbell, more commonly known as DJ Kool Herc, began his now famous house concerts in the rec room at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, an 102-unit apartment building in the Morris Heights section of the Bronx. There, hip-hop was born, and has been recognized as such by the city. But, as James Fergusson reports, it’s also emblematic of the threat predatory equity poses to affordable multifamily housing. Shrinking Cities Deborah E. Popper and Frank J. Popper examine the zeitgeist of shrinking cities in Planning on Shrinking and that as cities like Detroit consider industrial contraction, the same consideration must apply to rural, suburban, and newly-emerging metro areas. The Poppers argue that we need to plan for the reality that many localities will not look like they once did. Alan Mallach, an NHI senior fellow, looks at the roles community development corporations are playing — and how they are rethinking their traditional roles — in high abandonment areas in cities that are now considering shrinkage as policy. This issue of Shelterforce also includes a review by Jan Breidenbach of Contesting Community: The Limits and Potential of Local Organizing by James DeFilippis, Robert Fisher, and Eric Shragge, our regular columns, Shelter Shorts, Industry News and Access, as well as correspondence from our regular readers. As you’re reading, we want to hear your take. You can comment online at the bottom of any article, or you can send your thoughts to: letters@nhi.org more

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