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PAGE TWO/COMMENTARY
NO PLACE TO LAY MY HEAD
There was an old woman,
who lived in a shoe;
With the price of apartments,
"Twas all she could do.
Last August, Fairfield County Mutual Housing opened six new apartments in
Norwalk. God bless 'em. They fixed up an old rat trap I thought would come
down in the next storm. Six families got a new start. It happens every few
years.
The problem is what happens in between. Last week I drove along one of our
main drags and noticed an old house was missing. It had long ago been carved
up into apartments. Now it was gone, sacrificed to make room for Norwalk's
fifth or sixth Dunkin' Donuts. That's important, I guess. It's over a mile to
the next one.
Where did the tenants go? Who knows? We don't keep track. Looking at the
classifieds, I'd guess they had a little easier time than before the 1988 real
estate collapse. But not much. Apartments are being torn down and burned up
every day. Very few get replaced, especially if they are in a business zone.
There's just no profit in building new ones. Consequently, 53 percent of
Connecticut residents cannot afford to rent a two-bedroom unit.
Some can't afford to rent anything at all.
No one knows just how many. We do know that in 1995, 16,000 people swallowed
their pride enough to use a homeless shelter. The average stay was 28 nights.
Total visits were up five percent over the year before. Of that 16,000, 20
percent were children.
Bridgeport reports hosting 1,700 of those guests, and having to turn away
another 1,700. There is no way to count those who chose not to come at all.
In addition to this suffering, there was a notice in our church bulletin. The
local shelter had just been hit with a 40 percent budget cut from the state.
Could we please attend a gospel concert at a nearby black church to help raise
money? Or, just mail in a check? Well, I suppose so, but frankly I'd rather
pay it through my taxes, to be sure everyone else is ponying up too.
As you can imagine, not everyone is. Just the reverse, in fact. By far the
biggest government housing subsidy goes to people who are not poor at all.
That subsidy is the mortgage interest deduction in our federal and state
income taxes. Ironically, the bigger your house, the bigger your subsidy. The
only limit is on that part of your mortgage over $1 million.
Angels from heaven might suggest we trim some of that largess and use it to
fund a bit more housing for the indigent. Maybe so, but congressmen and
legislators aren't angels. They rarely whisper about cutting the mortgage
interest deduction, but they often shout, successfully, to cut housing
assistance. And public housing, of course, is being torn down faster than it
is being built.
If, by magic, a state administration should materialize which concerned itself
with housing, it could whip up an action plan in no time. The first step would
be to provide enough shelters to bring everyone in from the cold. Second would
be enough housing certificates so all poor families could afford to rent.
Third would be subsidies to housing co-ops, like that one in Norwalk, so poor
families who get their act together can earn a share of ownership. (Statewide,
there are only 6,000 such units). Fourth would be special subsidies to
Hartford landlords making it worth while to fix up their abandoned apartments.
Fifth would be quotas of subsidized units for each town to construct, as they
do in New Jersey and Massachusetts. Sixth would be the staffing to make it all
work.
Is it pointless to mention many other countries do this? I suppose so. And
after all, who cares about angels? Do you suppose we could just do it out of
the goodness of our own hearts?
(Bill Collins, a former mayor of Norwalk, is a syndicated columnist.)
