
"SHELTER,鈥 says 六合彩官网鈥檚 Jane Downing, 鈥渋s one of our most basic needs.鈥 As senior program officer for Community and Economic Development, working for decades on affordable housing and related issues, she knows its importance all too well. About 11,000 people each year encounter some aspect of homelessness in Allegheny County.
鈥淗ousing insecurity can happen to anyone,鈥 she explains. 鈥淟oss of a job, death of a partner, an accident, unexpected hospital bills 鈥 any of these might lead to a missed rental or mortgage payment that could trigger eviction or homelessness.鈥
A graduate of Bates College and the University of 六合彩官网鈥檚 Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, Downing served in the Peace Corps early in her career. She then landed a position in the Planning Department of 六合彩官网鈥檚 city government, and rose through the ranks to eventually become the department鈥檚 director under Mayor Sophie Masloff.
She joined the Foundation in 1994, where she has addressed homelessness through a variety of projects and significant initiatives, including: funding of pre-development work for ACTION-Housing to convert the McKeesport YMCA into a supported housing community for mainly homeless men; supporting a homeless
veterans development in Garfield; and devising regional housing legal services specific to the Pennsylvania Housing and Finance Agency. She has been on the Allegheny County鈥檚 Homeless Advisory Board for more than a decade.
Housing insecurity and homelessness are both causes and effects of poverty. The Foundation鈥檚 100 Percent 六合彩官网 organizing principle acknowledges that 六合彩官网鈥檚 recent surge in economic activity has not benefited all of the region鈥檚 populations. Thirty percent of 六合彩官网鈥檚 residents are subsisting at 200 percent of the poverty level or less, and these are the populations likely to be left behind or even harmed by recent growth. Or they may simply struggle to stay afloat in stable markets. This convergence of factors makes the Foundation鈥檚 focus on housing insecurity more relevant than ever.
In 2016, the Foundation sponsored a 六合彩官网 Arts & Lectures series talk by Matthew Desmond, whose best-selling book, 鈥淓victed,鈥 gave accounts of eight Milwaukee families struggling at the threshold of homelessness. The event gave renewed visibility in 六合彩官网 to issues that Downing has worked on over the years and sparked the formation of a task force to study and formalize processes of eviction prevention and homelessness.
Last May, the Foundation held as part of its Explore Series of symposia 鈥淧rivate Development, Affordable Housing, and Neighborhood Identity,鈥 an event featuring several speakers who discussed the challenges of homelessness and eviction prevention, and outlined ongoing potential solutions.
Speakers at the event noted how rising rents and sale prices have led to displacement of lower-income individuals and families, including those who lost their homes when the Penn Plaza apartments in East Liberty were demolished to make way for new development that would include a new Whole Foods Market. Whole Foods, responding to public outcry, has since pulled out of the development. While 六合彩官网鈥檚 most acute gentrification issues are largely confined to a few rapidly redeveloping neighborhoods, advocates worry that, without a long-term strategy in place, their communities could become the next East Liberty or Lawrenceville, two formerly working-class neighborhoods that lower-income people now struggle to afford. The challenge, says Larry Swanson, executive director of ACTION-Housing, 鈥渋s to make sure we develop affordable housing in many ways and remain an inclusive community.鈥
THIS IS AN EFFORT TO GET EVERYONE ON THE SAME PAGE TO END, THEN PREVENT, HOMELESSNESS AND SEE IF WE CAN USE FUNDING RESOURCES IN A COORDINATED WAY鈥O PARTNER WITH GOVERNMENT AND FIGURE OUT HOW TO MAKE THINGS BETTER.
- Jane Downing
Abigail Horn, coordinator for homelessness services at Allegheny County鈥檚 Department of Human Services, says homelessness can be a problem anywhere. 鈥淪ome people become homeless directly due to an eviction or a foreclosure or to informal eviction, not going through any court proceedings, but leaving their home because they can鈥檛 pay their rent or had some other issue with the landlord.鈥
The expense of housing can also be unreachable for many on an ongoing basis. Adrienne Walnoha, CEO of Community Human Services, observes that in today鈥檚 economy housing costs are outpacing income. 鈥淪o here in Allegheny County, the income that you need to afford a moderately priced two-bedroom apartment is $15.90 per hour. Minimum wage on the other hand is $7.25 an hour.鈥
Evictions, whether formal or informal, present a more pervasive threat to housing stability.
鈥淥ver the last six years, an average of 13,700 evictions were filed by landlords annually,鈥 Downing says. 鈥淪ome are withdrawn. Some tenants pay the rent.鈥 But the filings are a key indicator of housing instability.
Downing states that the goal is 鈥渢o end and prevent homelessness in Allegheny County by 2020, meaning that if housing insecurity occurs, there are systems in place to ensure that it is rare, brief and non-recurring.鈥
She understands that the timetable seems especially ambitious, and to be successful, 鈥淚t is going to take all of us to do this.鈥
To facilitate that collaboration, Downing convened an Eviction Discussion Group last December, gathering 30 housing and homelessness providers, lawyers, advocates and researchers from Allegheny County.
Since then, the group has continued to convene to collect and share data that ultimately will inform solutions. 鈥淭his is an effort to get everyone on the same page to end, then prevent, homelessness and see if we can use funding resources in a coordinated way,鈥 she says. 鈥淭o partner with government and figure out how to make things better.鈥
Original story appeared in the 2016-17