Your Advocacy Is Needed! Final Debt Ceiling Agreement Could Harm Renters and People Experiencing Homelessness!
Judy Kay Frieder, CEAC, CSA, ECHMP, CLIPP
Living & Aging In Place Specialist, Home Accessibility Consultant. Advocate for the Vulnerable (2 legs and 4 legs). Health is Plant Based. 2G Holocaust Family #AnimalRights #TraumaInformedCare #DiversityandInclusion
Your Advocacy Is Needed! Final Debt Ceiling Agreement Could Harm Renters and People Experiencing Homelessness!?
President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) reached an agreement to lift the debt ceiling in exchange for essentially a two-year freeze on spending for important domestic programs and increased work requirements for certain recipients of food and cash assistance programs, among other things.
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Because some HUD programs require additional funding to keep up with inflation, higher rents, and interest rate hikes, the debt ceiling agreement?acts as a significant cut to affordable housing and homelessness assistance. In Fiscal Year (FY)?2024 alone, HUD needs an estimated $13 billion to $16 billion in additional funding just to maintain current levels of assistance. Unless further action is taken by Congress, tens of thousands of households will be at risk of losing rental assistance.
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NLIHC President and CEO Diane Yentel said in a?statement, “House Republicans held our nation’s lowest-income and most marginalized people hostage in exchange for lifting the debt ceiling. By preventing necessary inflationary cost increases for critical HUD programs, this debt ceiling deal could lead to tens of thousands of families losing rental assistance during an already deepening housing and homelessness crisis. Expanding ineffective work requirements and adding time limits for food assistance adds salt to the wound, further harming some of the lowest income and most marginalized people in our country.”
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Under the debt ceiling agreement, FY 2024 spending for domestic programs would essentially be capped at FY 2023 levels, and spending increases in FY 2025 would be limited to just one percent. Unobligated COVID-19 relief resources would be rescinded, although critical Emergency Housing Vouchers and Emergency Rental Assistance funds are spared. The House and Senate will now work quickly to enact the agreement before the nation defaults on its debts on June 5.
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Your effective advocacy helped prevent some of the most extreme House Republican proposals from being enacted. Our collective efforts increased public pressure to prevent HUD’s budget being cut by 30 percent, which could have put nearly 1 million households at risk of losing their rental assistance and denied services to 120,000 fewer people experiencing homelessness.
But this final debt ceiling agreement will cause significant harm to households with the greatest needs. Once the agreement is enacted, Congress will turn its attention to divvying up the available funds among various departments and programs and begin drafting and voting to approve final spending bills.
Your continued advocacy will be needed over the coming weeks and months to ensure the highest level of funding possible within these tight budget caps for affordable housing and homelessness programs, and to protect thousands of our nation’s lowest-income and most marginalized households from losing their rental assistance.
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NLIHC will share a more detailed analysis of the debt ceiling deal and next steps for advocacy in the coming days and weeks.
Join us, and?stay involved.