Arc News: New study highlights housing crisis
Published 10:21 am Monday, June 15, 2015
This past week, the Technical Assistance Collaborative (TAC) and the Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities (CCD) Housing Task Force released a study, Priced Out in 2014.
This publication is released every two years. The 2014 results show that the national average rent for a modestly priced one-bedroom apartment is greater than the entire average Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefit for a person with a disability.
Priced Out in 2014 highlights an ongoing barrier to community living for people with disabilities — the lack of accessible, affordable housing. People with disabilities deserve the opportunity to live independently in the community, though as highlighted by Priced Out in 2014, many who rely on SSI face severe obstacles to that opportunity.
While progress has been made over the last several years with a new, integrated housing model under the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Section 811 program, our nation still has a long way to go.
Having a place to call home is a basic human right. The Arc is advocating for Congress to adequately fund the Section 811 project rental assistance program to help address the housing crisis for people with disabilities.
SSI provides basic income to people with significant and long-term disabilities who have extremely low incomes and savings. According to Priced Out in 2014:
• In 2014, the average annual income of a single, non-institutionalized adult with a disability receiving SSI was $8,995, about 23 percent below the federal poverty level for the year.
• As a national average, a person receiving SSI needed to pay 104 percent of his or her monthly income in order to rent a modest one-bedroom unit. In four states and the District of Columbia, every single housing market area in the state had one-bedroom rents that exceeded 100 percent of SSI.
• In 162 housing market areas across 33 states, one-bedroom rents exceeded 100 percent of monthly SSI. Rents for modest rental units in 15 of these areas exceeded 150 percent of SSI.
• People with disabilities receiving SSI were also priced out of smaller studio/efficiency rental units, which on a national basis cost 90percent of SSI. In eight states and in the District of Columbia, the average rent for a studio/efficiency unit exceeded 100 percent of the income of an SSI recipient.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Section 811 Project Rental Assistance (PRA) program is an innovative new model that allows states to effectively target rental assistance to enable people with significant disabilities to live in the community. Section 811 is the only HUD program dedicated to creating inclusive housing for extremely low-income people with severe disabilities, including SSI recipients.