The Metropolitan Milwaukee Fair Housing Council is offering free in-person fair housing training seminars for owners and managers of rental housing in the City of Milwaukee:
Saturday, September 21, 2024
Friday, September 27, 2024
Monday, September 30, 2024
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
To register for any of these seminars, visit THIS LINK or call 414-278-1240.
These seminars will include information about the protected classes and prohibited practices delineated by local, state, and federal fair housing laws, as well as reasonable accommodations and modifications for tenants with disabilities.
By Attorney Heiner Giese, RPA Legal Counsel
Link to Article from the New York Times
Our next president could do much to unwind America’s housing shortage, which has its roots in regulations enacted by innumerable municipalities. But “not in my backyard” towns won’t start building out of the goodness of their hearts. To unleash enough new building to bring affordability, we need to dust off our history books and remember how this country raised the legal alcohol drinking age. The National Minimum Drinking Age Act of 1984 demanded states raise the minimum age to buy or publicly possess alcohol to 21 — or face a reduction in federal highway funds. The threat of losing such funds is a big stick.
Not all of the NIMBY crowd are mid-to-upper class suburbanites seeking to "preserve and protect" their leafy, single family neighborhoods from an influx of noisy tenants who'd be moving into the newly-built (thanks to zoning changes) 12-family on the corner.
Recent example from Milwaukee's inner city: A typical block might have been built 80 years ago with 10 single family houses on one side of the street. Now perhaps half the houses are gone (maybe all of them if this were Detroit) due to urban blight and housing crash foreclosures. Affordable housing advocates have proposed putting a 12-family on one of the corners where two duplexes used to stand. It would be by a non-profit developer using some govt grants.
Waaait a minute!! Say the owners of the remaining houses next to that vacant site. Go gentrify somewhere else! The local alderman is now also opposed. The story hits the news.
The sad truth is that new RENTERS are often not welcomed by existing HOMEOWNERS. Another example of that is the proposal to prevent investors from buying single families to rent out. They're destroying the American dream of home ownership! Let the renter who otherwise might occupy one of Blackrock's investment single families move in to a nice, new 12 family -- the one on a bus line being built on the vacant lot behind the new Walmart.
Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae have announced new tenant protections for residents in multifamily properties with mortgages backed by the two Government-Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs), according to a release from the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA).
The new multifamily lease standards policy requirement starting February 28, 2025 will require borrowers with new Enterprise-backed financing to provide residential tenants the following three minimum standards which will be included in all residential leases at properties for which applications for new loans are signed on or after the effective date.
The new multifamily least standards are:
Read the Full Article Here
FAQ
Topic: Fair Housing & Mobility: Expanding Housing Options
When: Tuesday, August 27, 2024 at 10:00am
Learn more about the benefits of mobility programs. Presentation by the Milwaukee Metropolitan Fair Housing Council
Microsoft Teams
Meeting ID: 214 491 780 272
Passcode: PTfnnW
Dial in by phone
+1 414-436-3530,,711142758# United States, Milwaukee
Phone conference ID: 711 142 758#
Posting a Property
We direct all voucher families and potential housing providers to visit:
https://www.affordablehousing.com/
Please consider listing your available units here. You have to register an account, but you are able to list your units for free.
Rent Increases
Rent Increase Form
The tenant portion of the rent is proportionate to the tenant’s reported income. When the tenant’s reported income goes up or down , the tenant’s portion goes up or down. If a tenant income goes up $100, tenant’s portion of the rent is going to go up $30, even if the landlord were to lower the rent.
Should the tenant not want to sign rent increase form, you can decide to keep tenant at current rate or give the tenant and HACM a 60 day notice that you will not renew the lease.
Submit rent increases to section8leasing@hacm.org. We are now acknowledging receipt of all documents sent to section8leasing@hacm.org. We will call you if the rent is too high. In the case you don’t hear from us and you do not see new amount reflected in the lease renewal, forward to Stephen.fendt@hacm.org the Rent increase email you previously sent in.
New Contracts
After a unit passes inspection, the file gets sent to a HACM lease and contract specialist to draw up lease amendment and HAP contract. Normally this should take no more than two weeks. However, if a tenant's income has not been verified within the last 120 days, the contract will be held until we are able to obtain the tenant's current income verifications.
Tenant Accountability
If a tenant is violating the lease agreement or not paying their portion of the rent, provide section8leasing@hacm.org a copy of the 30 day notice you give to tenant to and we will send the tenant a Warning letter.
Landlord Portal
Through the Landlord Portal you are able to access real time information from our system regarding inspections, payments and lease information. Please register if you have not yet done so. You will need a registration code to register, send Stephen.fendt@hacm.org your name and the last four of your tax id, and we will get the code to you.
Wednesday, August 14, 2024
10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
Microsoft Teams meeting
Join on your computer, mobile app or room device
Click here to join the meeting
Or call in (audio only)
Due to the extremely limited availability of general rental assistance, Community Advocates will pause accepting new direct-aid rental assistance applications effective August 8, 2024.
Tenants will still be able to apply if they are facing:
The Milwaukee Rental Housing Resource Center will continue to offer assessment and eviction prevention resources, including referrals for mediation, conditions issues and case management.
The Supreme Court decision was amended. The change appears to better support open access.
The revision is the red text as shown below:
(c) 10 years from date of entry of final order or judgment for all eviction cases where a writ of restitution was granted against the defendant and no money judgment was entered;
The Housing Authority of the City of Milwaukee (HACM) will close its Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher and Public Housing waiting lists on August 1, 2024 at 4:00 pm CDT. Applications will be accepted at waitlist.hacm.org through August 1, 2024 at 3:59 pm CDT.
HACM will continue to accept applications for its Project-Based Voucher program and its unsubsidized properties.
The demand for housing assistance far exceeds the funding provided by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. As a result, there are currently thousands of people on HACM’s Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher and Public Housing waiting lists. Closing these waiting lists will help make the lists more manageable and give applicants more realistic expectations about how long they might wait before being selected.
Applicants on HACM’s waiting lists must keep their information current so HACM can reach them when they are selected. If HACM is not able to reach an applicant, they will be removed from the waiting list.
An announcement will be made when the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher and Public Housing waiting lists reopen. HACM announces waitlist openings via a public notice, its website hacm.org, social media, and press releases.
By Ryan Bourne and Sophia Bagley, CATO Institute
We recently examined a damning meta-analysis of the effects of rent control laws. Last week, we warned that Joe Biden’s proposal to cap rent increases of corporate landlords at 5 percent per year would have some of these deleterious consequences.
Well, a new survey for the Kent A. Clark Center for Global Markets confirms this is all received wisdom among academics. We don’t need to analyze the results in detail here because the aggregated responses of the 45 economists are crystal clear in their conclusions.
Economists overwhelmingly think the Biden-Harris plan wouldn’t make Americans better off or reduce inequality, but would substantially reduce the supply of properties available for rent.
Read Full Article Here
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