HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES PROJECT FOR EXCELLENCE, INC'

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HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES PROJECT FOR EXCELLENCE, INC'

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Title: HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES PROJECT FOR EXCELLENCE, INC'


1
HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES PROJECT FOR EXCELLENCE, INC.
H.O.P.E., INC.
  • BILL THOMPSON
  • 305-651-4763
  • E-mail bill_thompson_at_bellsouth.net

2
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
  • Where you live makes a difference in the quality
    of your life, what kind of school your children
    attend and the opportunities they will have, the
    kinds of jobs which will be open to you, and
    whether or not your investment in housing will
    grow.
  • There are many barriers which limit housing
    choices for residents of Lee County. The shortage
    of Affordable Housing is the area in need of
    special attention.

3
DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE
  • Updated information from Lee Countys
    Consolidated Plan report that the Countys
    population has more than doubled from 205,266
    people in 1980 to 475,073 people in 2003 and is
    expected to reach 547,000 by 2010.

4
DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILEBonita Springs
Data Set Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF 1)
100-Percent DataGeographic Area Bonita Springs,
Florida
5
DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILEFort Myers Beach, Florida
Data Set Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF 1)
100-Percent DataGeographic Area Fort Myers
Beach, Florida
6
DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILESanibel, Florida
Data Set Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF 1)
100-Percent DataGeographic Area Sanibel,
Florida
7
CHANGES IN RACIAL COMPOSITION
The most significant population increase in the
Lee County is the increase in the Hispanic
population which increased by 178.5 from 15,094
to 42,042 from 1990 to 2000.
8
INCOME
9
INCOME
10
INCOME
11
POVERTY PUBLIC ASSITANCE
  • Within Lee County there are over 50 Federal,
    State, local, and private programs currently
    providing services to the community.
  • The Lee County Board of Commissioners has
    designated five blighted neighborhoods within the
    County as Neighborhood Districts (ND). The five
    neighborhoods of Page Park, Pine Manor, Harlem
    Heights, Charleston Park, and Dunbar have
    demonstrated a need for community redevelopment,
    affordable housing, increased economic
    development opportunities, and enhancement of
    direct social services delivery. These
    neighborhoods are the primary focus of county
    CDBG and HOME federal funds.

12
NEEDS
  • HOUSING
  • ECONOMIC SELF-SUFFICENCY
  • DECENT LIVING ENVIRONMENT
  • HOMELESSNESS
  • HEALTHCARE
  • YOUTH

13
HOUSING TENURE AND COST
  • Housing Needs A key term used by U.S. HUD for
    assessing housing need is cost burden. U.S. HUD
    defines as cost-burdened a household that pays
    more than 30 of its income for housing costs.

14
HOUSING TENURE AND COST
15
HOUSING TENURE AND COST
  • Impediment
  • 1. There is a great shortage of affordable
    housing and supportive housing units. In 2002
    there were 51,410 cost-burdened households in Lee
    County paying more than 30 of their income for
    housing. Lower income residents are particularly
    affected by the estimated shortage of over 21,000
    affordable owner units and nearly 6,100
    affordable rental units in unincorporated Lee
    County this year.
  • 2. Blighted neighborhoods affect the lives and
    livelihoods of residents and the stability and
    economic well being of the county. The physical
    and human assets of these neighborhoods need to
    be identified and focused on revitalization.

16
HOUSING TENURE AND COST
  • Recommendations
  • Establish an area-wide task force that includes
    representatives from jurisdictions service
    providers and the homeless to identify areas
    which might be appropriate sites for transitional
    housing and to create a plan to create the
    necessary zoning, and service delivery.
  • Support an intensive effort to educate housing
    providers, advocates and consumers about their
    rights and responsibilities under fair housing
    laws.
  • Require strong affirmative marketing programs for
    all affordable housing developments using County
    administered Federal funds.

17
HOUSING TENURE AND COST
  • Recommendations
  • Encourage housing providers to participate in
    Section 8 program
  •  
  • Encourage mixed-income and mixed tenure (rental
    and homeownership) developments, especially when
    tax credits or other subsidies are used.
  • Support pre-purchase counseling and down payment
    assistance programs to improve home ownership
    opportunities for low and moderate-income
    homebuyers.

18
EMPLOYMENT
  • The location of the job sites and the
    availability and affordability of housing
    surrounding the job sites can foster integration
    when promoted positively or can result in
    racially motivate violence when racial or ethnic
    minorities attempt to move into the neighborhoods
    where the jobs have become available. Local
    jurisdictions should take into account the fair
    housing implications when creating employment
    opportunities.

19
EMPLOYMENT
20
STRUCTURE OF GOVERNMENT
  • The governing board for Lee County Government is
    the Board of Lee County Commissioners.  The five
    commissioners are elected by all voters, but also
    represent the districts in which they live.
  • IMPEDIMENT
  • County officials may not be sufficiently familiar
    with the fair housing laws and how those laws
    affect (or should affect) the performance of
    their duties.

21
STRUCTURE OF GOVERNMENT
  • Follow the Fair Housing Performance Standards for
    Acceptance of Consolidated Plan Certifications
    and Compliance with Community Development Block
    Grant Performance Review Criteria and Submissions
    for Community Planning and Development Programs
    to establish a standard for determining if the
    jurisdiction's certification regarding
    affirmatively furthering fair housing is
    inaccurate, outlined in 24 CFR Parts 91 and 570.
    Docket No. FR-4133-P-01 RIN No. 2529-AA81.
  • Identify and provide fair housing training for
    all County employees who are involved in housing
    related activities
  • Provide optional fair housing training for all
    County employees

22
AREA FAIR HOUSING PROFILE
  • The National Fair Housing Alliance 2003 Fair
    Housing Trends Report announced that a total of
    25,246 fair housing complaints were filed in
    2002.1 According to Shanna Smith, President of
    the National Fair Housing Alliance, this number
    is less than one percent of the estimated
    incidence of illegal housing discrimination that
    occurs each year in the United States. This
    reflects an increase of more than 3,000
    complaints since 1999. The 2003 report reveals
    that the highest levels of housing discrimination
    complaints filed in 2002 were from African
    Americans and people with disabilities. Race
    accounted for, thirty percent of all complaints,
    followed by disability (twenty-seven percent),
    familial status (fifteen percent), and national
    origin (twelve percent). 1 National Fair
    Housing Alliance 2003 Fair Housing Trends
    Report is based on 2002 complaint data compiled
    from 91 private, nonprofit fair housing agencies,
    the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
    Development, the U.S. Department of Justice and
    95 Fair Housing Assistance Program agencies which
    are state and local government agencies whose
    laws are substantially equivalent to the federal
    Fair Housing Act.

23
TESTING EVIDENCE
  • WHAT IS IT?
  • WHO CAN CONDUCT TESTING?
  • EXAMPLE OF TESTING

24
ENFORCEMENT AND LITIGATION
  • Fair Housing Complaint Profile From 2001 to
    present, the Lee County Office of Equal
    Opportunity has investigated housing
    discrimination complaints in Lee County on behalf
    of HUD. From 2001 until June 2004, twenty-five
    (25) housing discrimination cases were
    investigated and closed by the Office of Equal
    Opportunity.

25
ENFORCEMENT AND LITIGATION
26
RACE AND HOUSING CHOICE
  • Throughout the country, neighborhood integration
    has remained a goal of public policy and popular
    opinion because it is seen as proof of the
    American ideal of equal opportunity.
    Unfortunately, the 2000 Census shows that growing
    ethnic diversity in Lee County is accompanied by
    an increase of residential separation.

27
RACE AND HOUSING CHOICE
28
SEGREGATED HOUSING AND DEVELOPMENT
  • There is still a White-Hispanic-Asian-Black
    divide in Lee County, an analysis of the 2000
    Census data reveals that while Hispanics, Asians
    and non-Hispanic Whites were mostly integrated,
    non-Hispanic Blacks are more segregated. The
    Countys non-Hispanic Black population
    experienced an increase in the segregation of one
    group from another since the 1990 census As a
    result non-Hispanic Blacks continue to live in
    isolated settings and housing in the County is as
    segregated as ever and increasing.

29
INCREASING RACIAL DIVERSITY
  • The U. S. level of segregation (the Index of
    Dissimilarity) foreign-born group members,
    compared with U.S.-born residents, was 18.8 in
    1990 and 25.5 in 2000. The table on the next page
    shows segregation statistics for persons in
    different racial/ethnic groups classified by
    nativity in Lee County. If nativity differences
    were a major cause of residential segregation, we
    would see that segregation is much lower when we
    compare natives to natives and immigrants to
    immigrants. It would be much higher for the
    groups as a whole, not taking into account
    people's nativity.

30
INCREASING RACIAL DIVERSITY
31
RACE AND HOUSING CHOICE IMPEDIMENTS
  • 1.11.Existence of a strongly segregated housing
    market in the County creates barriers to housing
    choice, regardless of whether discrimination is
    occurring, because it requires home-seekers to
    overcome powerful personal and community
    expectations that they live in a neighborhood
    with people like themselves.
  •  
  • 2. Discrimination on the basis of Race, Color,
    National Origin, Familial Status and Disability.

32
RACE AND HOUSING CHOICE RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Increase fair housing education and training to
    housing providers to ensure compliance with fair
    housing laws Increase the fair housing
    education/outreach presentations for the
    community to help consumers identify and
    challenge housing discrimination.
  • Acknowledge the need for county-wide cooperation
    to eliminate barriers to fair housing choice, and
    actively support the development of specific
    inter-jurisdictional cooperative mechanisms to
    make fair and equal access to housing a reality.
  • Increase and enhance the availability of
    comprehensive fair housing enforcement and
    education outreach services to address
    discrimination in all forms of housing and
    housing related activities.

33
ROLE OF THE MEDIA
  • The local media (newspaper, TV and radio
    industry) is continually perpetuates negative
    stereotypes and attitudes about the African
    American/Hispanic community, highlighting the
    negative and minimizing the positive
    contributions/relationships in the community. The
    use of human models in Real Estate advertising
    fails to show diverse groups that reflect the
    make-up of the population. There are a number of
    weekly newspapers that offer different
    racial/ethnic viewpoints and perspectives in
    different languages, which also contribute to the
    racial/ethnic stereotypes and attitudes. Since
    many of the barriers to housing choice are a
    result of racism and attitudes the media can be a
    contributing factor in healing the racial/ethnic
    divisions in the community.

34
ROLE OF THE MEDIA IMPEDIMENT
  • IMPEDIMENT
  • The local media contributes to and promotes
    racial/ethnic division and hinders community
    cooperation. The local media (newspaper, TV and
    radio industry) continues to perpetuate negative
    stereotypes and attitudes about the African
    American and Hispanic communities by highlighting
    the negative and minimizing the positive
    contributions and relationships in the
    communities Advertising practices in Lee County
    fail to emphasize the availability of housing on
    an equal basis and to encourage housing choice.

35
ROLE OF MEDIARECOMMENDATIONS
  • Disseminate a fair housing media campaign
    utilizing PSA in local TV/newspapers, local
    municipal TV channels highlighting national,
    statewide, and local fair housing
    news/information.
  • Ensure that the Countys own advertising reflect
    and appeal to a diverse community.
  • Institute an annual award, to be given jointly by
    the entitlement jurisdictions within Lee County,
    for the advertisement that most successfully
    market the strengths of a diverse community.
  • Appoint a committee to interact with the media to
    discuss racial/ethnic issues and monitor the
    release of information that would increase race
    and ethnic based tensions.
  • Facilitate access to the Countys cable
    television channels as a source of fair housing
    information.

36
BARRIERS TO HOME OWNERSHIP
  • Why Do Low-Income Homeowners Get Into Trouble?
    There are a number of factors that can turn the
    American dream of homeownership into a nightmare
    for low-income households
  • Loss of Household Income
  • Home Maintenance, Repair, and Utility Costs
  • Increases in Property Taxes
  • Increases in non housing Expenses
  • Poor Financial Management Skills
  • Increases in Homeowners Insurance

37
AFFORDABLE HOUSING NEEDS
Homeownership by Race and Ethnicity Within Lee
County
38
BARRIERS TO AFFORDABLE HOUSING
  • The barriers to affordable housing fall into two
    categories (a) barriers effecting new housing
    construction and (b) barriers effecting existing
    housing. Due to the vast and rapid growth of the
    area, both new and rehabilitation construction
    face shortages of materials and particularly
    skilled labor, this pressure forces up unit
    prices and reduces affordability. Housing
    discrimination is also seen as a barrier in both
    of these areas.

39
AFFORDABLE HOUSING IMPEDIMENT
  • IMPEDIMENT
  • There is no area-wide corporative effort to
    provide affordable housing because the majority
    of housing choices for low and moderate income
    families are limited to the urban city.

40
AFFORDABLE HOUSING RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Implement mixed income affordable housing
    projects dispersed throughout the county,
    utilizing consolidated plan process, rather than
    in concentrating the developments in certain
    areas
  • Support continued fair housing education to
    ensure that housing providers using public funds
    for development understand their
    responsibilities.
  • Require all developers utilizing public funds to
    develop and implement affirmative marketing plans
    which reach and appeal to all segments of the
    community.

41
AFFORDABLE HOUSING RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Continue to support pre-purchase counseling and
    down payment assistance programs designed to
    improve home ownership opportunities for low and
    moderate income buyers.
  • Emphasize mixed income housing in all
    neighborhoods being targeted for redevelopment
    (including the downtown urban areas), to create
    racially, ethnic and economically diverse
    neighborhoods.
  • Provide financial incentives for low-income
    homebuyers who make pro-integrative moves.

42
LENDING
  • HOME MORTGAGE DISCLOSURE (HMDA) DATA ANALYSIS

43
ISSUES AFFECTING FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN
NUMBER
PERCENT
44
ISSUES AFFECTING PERSONS WITH DISABLITIES
Data Set Census 2000 Summary File 3 (SF 3) -
Sample DataGeographic Area Lee County, Florida
http//factfinder.census.gov/home/en/datanotes/exp
sf3.htm.
45
ISSUES AFFECTING PERSONS WITH DISABLITIES
  • Reasonable accommodations and modifications
  • Disability and income
  • Group homes and other congregate living needs

46
PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES IMPEDIMENTS
  • An insufficient number of accessible housing
    units are available which meets the needs of
    persons with disabilities in the County.
  • People with disabilities are denied housing
    because of their disability, and do not take full
    advantage of the protection of the law. These
    special needs populations are being turned away
    from over-loaded treatment and shelter facilities
    with no local recourse.
  • There is a crisis level shortage of supportive
    housing and services for the mentally ill,
    substance-addicted and other special populations.

47
PERSONS WITH DISABILITES RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Make the County a leader in the effort to
    increase housing accessibility by making a highly
    visible public commitment to enhancing
    accessibility in housing.
  • Provide financial support for education and
    enforcement of fair housing laws (including
    testing) to ensure that people with disabilities
    have access to housing.
  • Support an intensive effort to educate and
    encourage housing providers using County funds
    (including the Housing Authority) to use
    universal design features in new construction and
    rehabilitation whenever possible.

48
ISSUES AFFECTING THE HOMELESS
  • Lee Countys homeless population is visible in
    the City of Fort Myers and relatively invisible
    in small camps hidden from the general public and
    dispersed throughout the county.

49
ISSUES AFFECTING THE HOMELESS IMPEDIMENTS
  • Over 1,900 residents are homeless. An
    insufficient number of housing units for the
    homeless in the County severely limits the
    housing choices for this segment of the
    population. Homelessness undermines the well
    being of entire County along with that of the
    homeless individual and family.
  • Reduce homelessness by increasing emergency
    assistance and the Continuum of Care which
    provides temporary housing, treatment and
    training of individuals and families and for
    permanent housing.

50
ISSUES AFFECTING THE HOMELESS RECOMMENDATION
  • Establish an area-wide task force which includes
    representatives from jurisdictions service
    providers and the homeless to identify areas
    which might be appropriate sites for transitional
    housing and to create a plan to create the
    necessary zoning, and service delivery.

51
TRANSPORTATION
QT-P23. Journey to Work  2000 Geographic
Area Lee County, FloridaData Set Census 2000
Summary File 3 (SF 3) - Sample Data
http//factfinder.census.gov/home/en/datanotes/exp
sf3.htm.
52
TRANSPORTATION IMPEDIMENT
  • The area transportation system is inadequate to
    service the needs of the working class. Increased
    housing costs are forcing families to move
    farther away from jobs in order to find housing
    they can afford which increases their
    transportation expenses.

53
TRANSPORTATION RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Support a regional transportation system that
    provides services to low and moderate income
    households through the tri-county area.
  • Expand public transportation service to meet the
    needs of employers not currently served
    Geographically and for employers with second and
    third shifts, and employers with weekend shifts
    examine use of car and van pools coordination
    programs.

54
PUBLIC AND ASSISTED HOUSING
  • The major components of federally supported
    public housing in Lee County are the Fort Myers
    Housing Authority (FMHA), Lee County Housing
    Authority (LCHA) and the Section 8 rental
    vouchers administered by the Fort Myers Community
    Redevelopment Agency (FMCRA).

55
PUBLIC AND ASSISTED HOUSING IMPEDIMENTS
  • Public and assisted housing tends to segregate
    residents by race/ethnicity/income, depriving
    lower income families the access to the
    opportunities available in more diverse
    neighborhoods. Historically, public and assisted
    housing available in Lee County is segregated by
    race and ethnicity.
  • Crime, delinquency and other problems of youth
    are a universal concern in the county. School
    dropouts, teenage pregnancy, delinquency, crime
    and substance abuse undermine the future of the
    individuals and the county.

56
PUBLIC AND ASSISTED HOUSING RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Review zoning ordinances to ensure that
    multi-family developments are approved for use
    in a variety of neighborhoods throughout the
    metropolitan area.
  • Encourage mixed-income and mixed tenure
    (Homeownership and rental) developments,
    especially when tax credits or other public
    subsidies are used.
  • Support the establishment of a consolidated
    regional waiting list for assisted housing, in
    which applications could be made to one central
    repository and encourage applicants to consider a
    variety of options in diverse neighborhoods.

57
PUBLIC AND ASSISTED HOUSING RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Provide information and counseling to current
    certificate and voucher holders about the full
    range of their housing options and encourage
    diversity.
  • Require all developers using public funds to
    market their housing stock to a diverse
    population of potential tenants/homeowners.

58
THE ROLE OF ADVERTISING
  • The Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in
    advertising for housing. This includes all
    advertisements for sale or rental of a dwelling
    be they in print, online, or verbal, in which,
    they contain statements indicating a preference,
    limitation, or discrimination based on race,
    color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status,
    or national origin or the intent to make such.

59
ADVERTISING IMPEDIMENTS
  • The local media contributes to and promotes
    racial/ethnic division and hinders community
    cooperation. The local media (newspaper, TV and
    radio industry) continues to perpetuate negative
    stereotypes and attitudes about the African
    American and Hispanic communities by highlighting
    the negative and minimizing the positive
    contributions and relationships in the
    communities.
  • Advertising practices in Lee County do little to
    emphasize that housing is available on an equal
    basis and to encourage housing choice.

60
ADVERTISING RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Provide continued support for enforcement and
    education to ensure compliance with fair housing
    laws
  • Provide continued support for enforcement and
    education to ensure compliance with fair housing
    laws
  • Ensure that the Countys own advertising reflects
    and appeals to a diverse community

61
ADVERTISING RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Institute an annual award, to be given jointly by
    the entitlement jurisdictions within Lee County,
    for the advertisement which most successfully
    market the strengths of a diverse community.
  • Appoint a committee to interact with the media to
    discuss racial/ethnic issues and monitor the
    release of information that would increase race
    and ethnic based tensions.

62
FAIR HOUSING SERVICES
  • Local Government support
  • IMPEDIMENT
  • Fair Housing Program Initiatives staffing and
    support are inadequate to meet the responsibility
    to affirmatively further fair housing throughout
    Lee County. Lee County employs one individual who
    has the responsibility for both employment and
    fair housing enforcement and education/outreach
    program areas for the entire county.

63
FAIR HOUSING SERVICES
  • RECOMMENDATION
  • Lee Countys three entitlement jurisdictions
    should form a fair housing partnership utilizing
    CDBG funding as either a public service under CFR
    Section 570.201 (e) (activities cited
    education, fair housing counseling") or as an
    administrative cost under CFR Section 570.206 (c)
    Fair Housing Activities." To adequately fund fair
    housing cost eligible activities under the CDBG
    program, including fair housing services designed
    to further fair housing enforcement, education
    and outreach throughout the county

64
PUBLIC PERCEPTION
  • FAIR HOUSING SURVEY

65
FAIR HOUSING PLAN
  • WHAT IS IT?

66
HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES PROJECT FOR EXCELLENCE, INC.
H.O.P.E., INC.
  • BILL THOMPSON
  • 305-615-4763
  • E-mail bill_thompson_at_bellsouth.net
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