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A Progress Report on the Baltimore Housing Mobility Program

A Progress Report on the Baltimore Housing Mobility Program

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New Homes,New Neighborhoods,New Schools:A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>By Lora EngdahlOctober 2009Published byPoverty and Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council (PRRAC) andThe <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> CampaignThe <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign (BRHC) is a coaliti<strong>on</strong> of local and nati<strong>on</strong>alcivil rights and housing policy organizati<strong>on</strong>s that works to ensure that public policies andprivate investments are aligned to overcome historic divisi<strong>on</strong>s by race and class.To learn more about <strong>the</strong> BRHC, visit: www.cphabaltimore.orgFor additi<strong>on</strong>al copies, please c<strong>on</strong>tact PRRAC at 202-906-8023 or visit:www.prrac.org/projects/baltimore.phpPublicati<strong>on</strong> costs supported by Quadel, Inc.


AcknowledgmentsWe are grateful for <strong>the</strong> hard work of <strong>the</strong> author of this report, Lora Engdahl, who, for <strong>the</strong> first time, pulled toge<strong>the</strong>ra wide array of different source materials and interviews <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> program.O<strong>the</strong>r key c<strong>on</strong>tributors to this process include Jim Evans of Metropolitan <strong>Baltimore</strong> Quadel, Philip Tegeler of <strong>the</strong>Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council, Amy DeHuff of Citizens Planning and <strong>Housing</strong> Associati<strong>on</strong>, BarbaraSamuels of <strong>the</strong> ACLU of Maryland, and Stefanie DeLuca of <strong>the</strong> Sociology Department at Johns Hopkins University.Thanks are also owed to ACLU paralegals Laura Corcoran and Niambi Murray, and intern Linda Cole, whoc<strong>on</strong>ducted <strong>the</strong> annual participant surveys; operati<strong>on</strong>s manager, Alis<strong>on</strong> James, who helped develop <strong>the</strong> ACLUsurvey database and analysis; law student volunteer Rachel Simm<strong>on</strong>s<strong>on</strong> who helped write up <strong>the</strong> survey reports;Peter Rosenblatt, a PhD candidate and colleague of Professor DeLuca at Johns Hopkins; and PRRACLaw & Policy Fellow Ca<strong>the</strong>rine Vel. Many thanks as well to our copy editor, Kelley Ray, of Citizens Planning and<strong>Housing</strong> Associati<strong>on</strong> and Andy Cook, for his photography of <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> participants.This report would not have been possible without <strong>the</strong> more than 500 <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> participantswho have taken <strong>the</strong> time to resp<strong>on</strong>d to surveys administered by <strong>the</strong> ACLU of Maryland. All were willingto share <strong>the</strong>ir pers<strong>on</strong>al experiences and to provide thoughtful comments in <strong>the</strong> hope that doing so would improve<strong>the</strong> program and enable more families to benefit from it. A special thanks is owed to <strong>the</strong> participants whoopened up <strong>the</strong>ir homes to interviewers and photographers. While all of <strong>the</strong> participant stories in this report arereal, ficti<strong>on</strong>al names are used to protect <strong>the</strong> privacy of <strong>the</strong> participants and c<strong>on</strong>fidentiality of <strong>the</strong> sources.Our gratitude also extends to <strong>the</strong> U.S. Department of <strong>Housing</strong> and Urban Development and to <strong>the</strong> <strong>Housing</strong>Authority of <strong>Baltimore</strong> City for funding and supporting this important program. We are also indebted to <strong>the</strong>many organizati<strong>on</strong>s that have invested in program enhancements through <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong>Campaign. Their support of pilot efforts and program-wide services helped ensure <strong>the</strong> success of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong><strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>.The <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign is a coaliti<strong>on</strong> of local and nati<strong>on</strong>al civil rights and housing policy organizati<strong>on</strong>sthat works to ensure that public policies and private investments are aligned to overcome historicdivisi<strong>on</strong>s by race and class. The BRHC envisi<strong>on</strong>s a <strong>Baltimore</strong> regi<strong>on</strong> where all families have <strong>the</strong> right and <strong>the</strong>means to live in high opportunity communities with excellent schools, ec<strong>on</strong>omic prosperity, and low rates ofpoverty.Support for <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign has come from a wide range of sources, including <strong>the</strong>Annie E. Casey Foundati<strong>on</strong>, <strong>the</strong> Open Society Institute, <strong>the</strong> Abell Foundati<strong>on</strong>, <strong>the</strong> Mort<strong>on</strong> K. and Jane BlausteinFoundati<strong>on</strong>, <strong>the</strong> Krieger Fund, <strong>the</strong> William G. Baker Jr. Memorial Fund, <strong>the</strong> Ford Foundati<strong>on</strong>, and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong>Community Foundati<strong>on</strong>.~ <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign:Citizens Planning and <strong>Housing</strong> Associati<strong>on</strong>BRIDGEGreater <strong>Baltimore</strong> Urban LeagueInnovative <strong>Housing</strong> InstitutePoverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> CouncilACLU of MarylandMetropolitan <strong>Baltimore</strong> QuadelCover Photo Credits: Top, MBQ participant, by Andy Cook. Sec<strong>on</strong>d from top, High opportunity home, by BarbaraSamuels. Third from top: Children of participating family in new neighborhood, by Andy Cook. Bottom, Suburbanshopping plaza, by Barbara Samuels.


<strong>Program</strong> participant. Photo: Barbara Samuels.Table of C<strong>on</strong>tentsExecutive Summary...............................................................................................................1Introducti<strong>on</strong>: A New Chance for Striving <strong>Baltimore</strong> Families...............................................7The Origins of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> ....................................................10Keys to <strong>Program</strong> Success ..................................................................................................13Outcomes: Improved Quality of Life for Children and Families .......................................22Next Steps for Enhancing <strong>Program</strong> Administrati<strong>on</strong> ............................................................37<strong>Baltimore</strong> and Bey<strong>on</strong>d: <strong>the</strong> Future of <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> Policy...........................................42Appendix..............................................................................................................................46Endnotes..............................................................................................................................48New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>iii


ivNew Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Children of participating family. Photo: Andy Cook.Executive SummaryNew Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools:Offering New Life Opportunities through <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>In <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> regi<strong>on</strong>, a successful housingmobility program is providing families living invery disadvantaged inner city communities with anew home and a chance for a new life. Minorityvoucher holders in <strong>the</strong> federal <strong>Housing</strong> ChoiceVoucher <strong>Program</strong> (formerly titled Secti<strong>on</strong> 8) haveoften been limited to living in “voucher submarkets”where racial and ec<strong>on</strong>omic segregati<strong>on</strong> ishigh and opportunities are limited. The <strong>Baltimore</strong><strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>, a specialized regi<strong>on</strong>alvoucher program operating with deliberate attenti<strong>on</strong>to expanding fair housing choice, has overcomesome of <strong>the</strong> biggest barriers to usingvouchers in suburban and city neighborhoodswhere opportunities are abundant. The program’sresults-oriented approach has produced a replicableset of best practices for mobility programswhile presenting an important model for reform of<strong>the</strong> nati<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher <strong>Program</strong>.This report, New Homes, New Neighborhoods, NewSchools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong><strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>, provides <strong>the</strong> first-ever comprehensivedescripti<strong>on</strong> of <strong>the</strong> program.The Origins of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong><strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong><strong>Housing</strong> mobility emerged decades ago as a legaland policy resp<strong>on</strong>se to <strong>the</strong> recogniti<strong>on</strong> that <strong>the</strong>nati<strong>on</strong>’s deeply segregated housing markets deprivelow-income African American families of <strong>the</strong> samelevel of opportunity available to whites. Beginningin <strong>the</strong> 1960s, public housing desegregati<strong>on</strong> lawsuitsfiled <strong>on</strong> behalf of public housing residents soughtto end <strong>the</strong> historical c<strong>on</strong>finement of AfricanAmericans to high-poverty central city neighborhoodsand public housing projects. The <strong>Baltimore</strong><strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> originated as a partialsettlement of Thomps<strong>on</strong> v. HUD, a public housingdesegregati<strong>on</strong> case filed in 1995. The program wasNew Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>1


fully launched in 2003. Initially, two organizati<strong>on</strong>swere resp<strong>on</strong>sible for different facets of <strong>the</strong> settlement.Metropolitan <strong>Baltimore</strong> Quadel (MBQ)administered all of <strong>the</strong> vouchers in <strong>the</strong> programand provided mobility counselingto families receiving tenant-basedvouchers. Innovative <strong>Housing</strong>Institute (IHI) handled mobilitycounseling for <strong>the</strong> smaller project-basedvoucher program and ahomeownership comp<strong>on</strong>ent. In2007, all facets of <strong>the</strong> programwere c<strong>on</strong>solidated under MBQ’sadministrati<strong>on</strong>.Metropolitan <strong>Baltimore</strong> Quadel(MBQ) currently administers <strong>the</strong>program under c<strong>on</strong>tract with <strong>the</strong><strong>Housing</strong> Authority of <strong>Baltimore</strong>City (HABC) and under <strong>the</strong>oversight of HABC, <strong>the</strong> U.S.Department of <strong>Housing</strong> andUrban Development, and <strong>the</strong>Maryland ACLU. MBQ has acritical partner in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong>Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign(BRHC), a coaliti<strong>on</strong> of local andnati<strong>on</strong>al civil rights and housingpolicy organizati<strong>on</strong>s formed in<strong>the</strong> wake of Thomps<strong>on</strong> to ensurethat public policies and privateinvestments are aligned to overcomehistoric divisi<strong>on</strong>s by raceand class. Since 2005, <strong>the</strong> BRHChas supported innovative strategiesto increase housing choice;promoted inclusive, mobilityfriendlypolicies throughout <strong>the</strong>regi<strong>on</strong>; and attracted philanthropic investment inenhancements of <strong>the</strong> mobility program.Keys to <strong>Program</strong> SuccessThe <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> helpscurrent and former public housing families andfamilies <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> waiting list for public housing or<strong>Housing</strong> Choice Vouchers gain access to privateRacial segregati<strong>on</strong>separates lower incomeAfrican-American and Latinofamilies from opportunity inmetropolitan areas, whichpredictably leads todepressed outcomes ineducati<strong>on</strong>, employment,health, and o<strong>the</strong>r measures.“The Future of Fair <strong>Housing</strong>:<str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> of <strong>the</strong> Nati<strong>on</strong>al Commissi<strong>on</strong><strong>on</strong> Fair <strong>Housing</strong> and Equal Opportunity”former HUD SecretariesHenry Cisneros and Jack Kemp,Co-Chairs, December 2008.This is <strong>the</strong> best housing programI’ve ever experienced.When I have any c<strong>on</strong>cernabout <strong>the</strong> smallest thing myhousing counselor is right <strong>on</strong>it. I appreciate her and all<strong>the</strong> effort she put into makingmy transiti<strong>on</strong> go so smoothly.—<strong>Program</strong> participantmarket housing in low poverty and predominantlywhite neighborhoods. Applicants who pass backgroundchecks and meet o<strong>the</strong>r eligibility criteriaenroll in MBQ’s counseling program, where <strong>the</strong>yare prepared to succeed as tenantsin more competitive housingmarkets.Participants are taken throughbudgeting and financial educati<strong>on</strong>and are guided by counselors whoserve as motivati<strong>on</strong>al coaches.Bus tours introduce participantsto <strong>the</strong> myriad of employment,educati<strong>on</strong>, and health-relatedamenities in high-opportunityneighborhoods. Participants savefor a security deposit and, when<strong>the</strong>y are ready to move, workwith <strong>the</strong>ir counselor to find ahouse or apartment that suits<strong>the</strong>ir needs. A federal <strong>Housing</strong>Choice Voucher covers a porti<strong>on</strong>of <strong>the</strong>ir rent. While <strong>the</strong> voucherscan be used throughout <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> regi<strong>on</strong>, <strong>the</strong>y are specificallytargeted to housing units inneighborhoods where less than10 percent of <strong>the</strong> residents are inpoverty, less than 30 percent of<strong>the</strong> residents are minority, andless than five percent of all housingunits are public housing or inHUD-assisted housingcomplexes.Families receive two-plus yearsof post-move counseling to help<strong>the</strong>m adjust to <strong>the</strong>ir new homes and communitiesand sec<strong>on</strong>d-move counseling to minimize disruptiveand unwanted moves out of opportunity neighborhoodsdue to market barriers. They also receiveemployment and transportati<strong>on</strong> assistance to access<strong>the</strong> rich employment resources of suburbanareas—access that could o<strong>the</strong>rwise be limited by<strong>the</strong> regi<strong>on</strong>’s relatively weak public transit systems.2New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


A SUMMARY OF PROGRAM ACHIEVEMENTSMany Families and Children Helped• 1,522 families moved to low-poverty, racially integrated suburban and city neighborhoods.• 88 percent of families moved from <strong>the</strong> inner city to suburban counties.• 1,277 children are now living in suburban school districts.Dramatic Changes in Envir<strong>on</strong>ment• Neighborhoods moved from were 80 percent black and 33 percent poor; those moved to were 21percent black and 7.5 percent poor.• Median household income in old neighborhoods was $24,182 and in new was $48,318.• Eighty-three percent of settled participants (those who have been in <strong>the</strong>ir homes for at least 14m<strong>on</strong>ths) say <strong>the</strong>ir neighborhood is better or much better than <strong>the</strong>ir old neighborhood.• Upwards of 70 percent of settled participants say schools; safety and less crime and drugs; friendlyneighbors and people; and a mix of different races and cultures; are <strong>the</strong> most positive features of <strong>the</strong>irnew neighborhood.Significant Improvements in School Quality• In schools in <strong>the</strong> new neighborhoods an average of 33 percent of students are eligible for free andreduced lunch compared with 83 percent in original neighborhoods’ schools.• Almost a quarter of participating families moved to neighborhoods served by elementary schools withless than 10 percent of students eligible for <strong>the</strong> free and reduced lunch program.• In <strong>the</strong> new neighborhoods’ elementary schools, 69 and 76 percent of students scored proficient orhigher <strong>on</strong> state math and reading tests, compared with 44 percent and 54 percent in <strong>the</strong> original cityschools.• 88 percent of settled participants say <strong>the</strong>y are satisfied or very satisfied with <strong>the</strong> schools in <strong>the</strong>ir newcommunity.• 89 percent of settled parents say <strong>the</strong>ir children appear to be learning better or much better in <strong>the</strong>irnew schools.Enhanced Quality of Life• Nearly 80 percent of participants, surveyed after <strong>the</strong>y moved, say <strong>the</strong>y feel safer, more peaceful, andless stressed.• Sixty percent of participants say <strong>the</strong>y feel more motivated.• Nearly 40 percent of participants say <strong>the</strong>y feel healthier.<strong>Housing</strong> Stability• Most families (62 percent) stayed in <strong>the</strong>ir original unit instead of moving when <strong>the</strong>y became eligible tomove from <strong>the</strong>ir initial unit.• Only 19 percent of families who became eligible to leave <strong>the</strong>ir original unit moved from <strong>the</strong> suburbsback to <strong>the</strong> city.• Families who made a sec<strong>on</strong>d move went to neighborhoods that were less segregated and significantlyless poor than <strong>the</strong> neighborhoods in which <strong>the</strong>y lived before <strong>the</strong>y joined <strong>the</strong> program.Sources: MBQ administrative data (families affected); articles in preparati<strong>on</strong> using MBQ and demographic data by Stefanie DeLucaand Peter Rosenblatt of Johns Hopkins University (Data for changes in neighborhood c<strong>on</strong>diti<strong>on</strong>s, test scores in elementary schools,and housing stability, is as of 2007 and does not include families who were forced to move when apartment complexes were sold; seeDeLuca and Rosenblatt 2009a and 2009b, endnote 4), a 2007 ACLU of Maryland survey of participants who lived in <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhoodsfor at least 14 m<strong>on</strong>ths (families percepti<strong>on</strong>s of <strong>the</strong>ir neighborhoods and improvement in children’s performance in school);and a 2008 ACLU of Maryland survey of families who recently moved for <strong>the</strong> first time under <strong>the</strong> program (quality of life percepti<strong>on</strong>s).Full details <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> source documents and findings are provided later in this report.Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign3


Children Dream of a New FutureWhen Tamika Edwards, who grew up in <strong>Baltimore</strong>’s now-demolished Flag House Courts publichousing high-rise, arrived at <strong>the</strong> top of <strong>the</strong> waiting list for a slot in <strong>on</strong>e of <strong>Baltimore</strong>’s public housingprojects, she turned <strong>the</strong> opportunity down. Though she disliked her distressed Upt<strong>on</strong> neighborhood,she didn’t want to jump “from <strong>the</strong> frying pan to <strong>the</strong> fire,” she said. But when her oldests<strong>on</strong>, now 16, entered his early teens, she feared that he was starting to c<strong>on</strong>form to <strong>the</strong> negativeinfluence of peers in <strong>the</strong>ir troubled inner-city neighborhood. So she applied for <strong>the</strong> mobility programand moved her family to Elkridge, Md., even though <strong>the</strong> commute to her job as a medicaltechnician in <strong>the</strong> city would be difficult.“It did not bo<strong>the</strong>r me at all to move out here” she says. “I just wanted better and was willing to gojust about anywhere. I was not sure what to expect but it has been all good.”She loves her family’s new home and <strong>the</strong> diverse community of whites, blacks, Asians and Hispanicsin which <strong>the</strong>y live. Now with a car, work is just a 20 minute drive away. And at <strong>the</strong> suggesti<strong>on</strong>of her closest neighbor, a nurse, she has enrolled in Howard Community College to pursue anursing degree. Her children, now 16, 12, 10, and 5, have made friends in <strong>the</strong> neighborhood andat school. The curriculum in Howard County schools was challenging for <strong>the</strong>m, Edwards says,but <strong>the</strong>y have improved <strong>the</strong>ir grades from “C” to “A” and “B” averages and expanded <strong>the</strong>ir vocabulary,and now dream about <strong>the</strong>ir future. One child wants to be a teacher, ano<strong>the</strong>r a nurse, ano<strong>the</strong>ra lawyer. “Their schools and neighborhoods have shown <strong>the</strong>m a different life and now <strong>the</strong>yare different,” says Edwards, adding that she too now wants more for herself.“[The program] has given me a chance of a lifetime … I am motivated to finish school … and Iwant to buy a house like <strong>the</strong> <strong>on</strong>e I have. I got a taste of something good and I want more.” ■MBQ not <strong>on</strong>ly provides counseling to families participatingin <strong>the</strong> program, it administers <strong>the</strong> vouchersmetropolitan-wide. To ensure <strong>the</strong> program’ssuccess <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> ground, MBQ c<strong>on</strong>tinually markets<strong>the</strong> program to landlords and m<strong>on</strong>itors <strong>the</strong> placementof voucher holders to avoid “clustering” tenants.Because participati<strong>on</strong> in <strong>the</strong> program isvoluntary, assisted, and gradual, families are movingwhen <strong>the</strong>y are ready and eager for a better life,and successfully transiti<strong>on</strong>ing into stable communitiesthroughout <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> regi<strong>on</strong>.Outcomes: Improved Quality ofLife for Children and FamiliesThrough <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong>, more than 1,500 poor African Americanfamilies have voluntarily moved from racially isolatedhigh-poverty neighborhoods in <strong>Baltimore</strong> tolow-poverty racially integrated suburban and cityneighborhoods with lower unemployment, fewerrecipients of public assistance, a lower percentageof high school drop outs, and better resourced andhigher performing schools.Families seeking a new beginning find a dramaticchange in envir<strong>on</strong>ment. The most comm<strong>on</strong>reas<strong>on</strong> why participants volunteer for <strong>the</strong>program is to escape crime and to find a better andsafer neighborhood, as cited by 86 percent ofrecent movers surveyed in 2007. A significantnumber of recent movers also cited “better andsafer schools” as motivating factors in <strong>the</strong>ir moves.Overwhelmingly, participants reported finding<strong>the</strong>se desired envir<strong>on</strong>ments in <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhood(summarized in <strong>the</strong> chart <strong>on</strong> p.5). This islargely due to <strong>the</strong> fact that almost nine out of 10families have used <strong>the</strong>ir initial voucher to move tosuburban counties. More than 95 percent of newmovers surveyed in 2008 said <strong>the</strong>ir new neighbor-4New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


hood is better or much better than<strong>the</strong>ir old neighborhood and familiesc<strong>on</strong>sistently report high levels of satisfacti<strong>on</strong>with both <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhoodand <strong>the</strong>ir home. Counter tosome fears, <strong>the</strong> suburbs have not beena hostile envir<strong>on</strong>ment. A high percentageof new movers describe <strong>the</strong>irneighborhood as friendly, and l<strong>on</strong>gertermmovers cite <strong>the</strong> mix of people ofdifferent backgrounds, race, and ethnicityas <strong>the</strong> most positive aspect of<strong>the</strong>ir neighborhood.The benefits of <strong>the</strong> program gobey<strong>on</strong>d <strong>the</strong> basic goal of accessingbetter housing in a safe envir<strong>on</strong>ment.Positive outcomes for participantsinclude an increase in quality oflife, health, and educati<strong>on</strong>al opportunities,and potentially, employment. In <strong>the</strong>irnew, high-opportunity neighborhoods,participants say <strong>the</strong>y feel safer, healthier,less stressed, more motivated, andmore c<strong>on</strong>fident in <strong>the</strong> future facing<strong>the</strong>ir children. Parents also report that<strong>the</strong>ir children are doing better inschool. Ninety-three percent of recentmovers resp<strong>on</strong>ding to a 2007 surveysaid that <strong>the</strong>y were satisfied or verysatisfied with <strong>the</strong> schools in <strong>the</strong>ir newcommunity. Nearly as many l<strong>on</strong>gertermresidents (89 percent) said that<strong>the</strong>ir children appeared to be learningbetter or much better in <strong>the</strong>ir newschools.Suburban elementary school. Photo: Barbara Samuels.2007 New Mover SurveyReas<strong>on</strong>s Signed Up for <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>0 20 40 60 80 100Number of Resp<strong>on</strong>dentsStability and retenti<strong>on</strong> are providing <strong>the</strong> foundati<strong>on</strong>for success. By helping adults and childrenremain in opportunity neighborhoods, <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> is positi<strong>on</strong>ingfamilies for l<strong>on</strong>g-term gains in educati<strong>on</strong>alattainment, health, and self-sufficiency. As ofSeptember 2007—four and a half years after <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> mobility program’s incepti<strong>on</strong> and before<strong>the</strong> implementati<strong>on</strong> of program-wide “sec<strong>on</strong>dmove”counseling—most families (62 percent) whohad been in <strong>the</strong>ir initial unit for a year and wereeligible to make a sec<strong>on</strong>d move were still in <strong>the</strong>irinitial unit. Most of <strong>the</strong> families who left <strong>the</strong>ir originalunits were not moving back to <strong>the</strong>ir old neighborhoods1 . According to this research, performedby Stefanie DeLuca and Peter Rosenblatt of JohnsHopkins University, <strong>on</strong>ly 19 percent of all of <strong>the</strong>families who could have moved at some point after<strong>the</strong> end of <strong>the</strong>ir first lease moved from <strong>the</strong> suburbsPoverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 5


FMBFKFQuality of Life Improvement (2008 New Mover Survey)MFKBFFO0 20 40 60 80 100Number of Resp<strong>on</strong>dentsback to <strong>Baltimore</strong>. When families do move froman initial suburban placement back to <strong>the</strong> city, surveysindicate that <strong>the</strong> primary reas<strong>on</strong> is <strong>the</strong> need ordesire for a larger unit–to “move up” from anapartment to a house.Next Steps for <strong>the</strong> <strong>Program</strong> and<strong>Mobility</strong> Policy Nati<strong>on</strong>wideAfter six years, MBQ is still working to create abetter program. Next steps for enhancing programadministrati<strong>on</strong> include reducinglarge caseloads; expanding andstreng<strong>the</strong>ning post-move supportsfor families; streamliningprocesses for landlords; enhancingeducati<strong>on</strong>, health, employmentand transportati<strong>on</strong>supports; and increasing developmentof housing units receivingproject-based subsidies.At <strong>the</strong> same time, MBQ’s partners and fair housingadvocates are hoping to use <strong>the</strong> early and promisingresults of <strong>the</strong> program to expand housingmobility programs in <strong>the</strong> regi<strong>on</strong> and in <strong>the</strong> nati<strong>on</strong>.I am grateful and so happyto be a part of <strong>the</strong> program.It has truly made a bigdifference in my life as wellas my children.—<strong>Program</strong> participantThe <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong><strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> is provingthat poor African Americanfamilies are able and willingto make it bey<strong>on</strong>d <strong>the</strong> c<strong>on</strong>finesof traditi<strong>on</strong>al publichousing neighborhoods andthat low poverty and predominantlywhite neighborhoodsare able and willing toenfold <strong>the</strong> new families into<strong>the</strong> fabric of <strong>the</strong> community.Bringing <strong>the</strong> benefits tomore families and neighborhoodsrequires broadermobility reforms pushed byfair housing advocatesincluding those promoted by<strong>the</strong> coaliti<strong>on</strong> members of <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong>Campaign. BRHC is workingto eliminate local barriers to affirmatively fur<strong>the</strong>rfair housing, such as Maryland’s stringentpolicy requiring local approval of housing developmentsfinanced through <strong>the</strong> Low Income <strong>Housing</strong>Tax Credit program.On a nati<strong>on</strong>al level, <strong>the</strong> less<strong>on</strong>s learned through<strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> arguefor extending mobility more broadly in <strong>the</strong> federal<strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher <strong>Program</strong>. The programprovides a blueprint for usingvouchers as a tool for streng<strong>the</strong>ningdisadvantaged minority familiesby c<strong>on</strong>necting <strong>the</strong>m to <strong>the</strong>educati<strong>on</strong>al and ec<strong>on</strong>omic vitalityof low-poverty, high-opportunityneighborhoods. When familiesmove out of distressed neighborhoodsand children do better inschool and break out of <strong>the</strong> cycleof poverty, <strong>the</strong> benefits are significant and accrueto <strong>the</strong> whole of society.6New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Child of participating family. Photo: Maurice Gadsden.“Only a very small percentage of white children live in high poverty neighborhoodsthroughout childhood, while a majority of black children do.”Pew Charitable Trust, Neighborhoods and <strong>the</strong> Black-White <strong>Mobility</strong> Gap (2009)Introducti<strong>on</strong>A New Chance for Striving <strong>Baltimore</strong> FamiliesIn <strong>the</strong> nati<strong>on</strong>’s imaginati<strong>on</strong>, <strong>Baltimore</strong> City representsquintessential urban America — itsglossy tourist and business districts shadowed bygritty neighborhoods where families struggle tosurvive, raise <strong>the</strong>ir children, and maybe even getahead. But in <strong>the</strong> real <strong>Baltimore</strong>, an effort that ishelping disadvantaged families change <strong>the</strong>ir lifecircumstances has a storyline as compelling as anyficti<strong>on</strong>al narrative.This true-life story is populated with people likeTamika Edwards. She and her four children livedin subsidized housing in <strong>Baltimore</strong>’s Upt<strong>on</strong> neighborhoodbefore joining a program that helped<strong>the</strong>m move to Elkridge in Howard County.Edwards didn’t uproot her family to move merely10 miles out of <strong>the</strong> inner city in order to change<strong>the</strong> world. She just wanted to give her children abetter place to grow up than a neighborhood withhigh rates of poverty, crime, and failing schools.Edwards spent her youth in <strong>Baltimore</strong>’s nowdemolishedFlag House Courts public housingcomplex. She knew instinctively what social scienceresearch has proven — to decrease her children’schances of becoming teenage parents or victims ofcrime, and increase <strong>the</strong>ir chances of completinghigh school, maybe college, and getting decentpayingjobs, she needed to raise <strong>the</strong>m somewhereelse. 2 She needed a safe place to live with goodschools, decent and affordable grocery stores, andemployment opportunities for her family. Shehoped change would come to her city neighborhood,but sensed it would not come so<strong>on</strong> enoughto benefit her children, particularly her eldest s<strong>on</strong>,who was becoming a teenager.“I did not want him to become a statistic,” she said.The <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> 3 providesfamilies like Edwards’s with a federallyNew Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>7


funded voucher and counseling assistance to renthomes or apartments in suburban and city neighborhoodsthat differ dramatically from where <strong>the</strong>ylived. Through <strong>the</strong> program, 1,522 poor AfricanAmerican families have voluntarily moved fromracially isolated high-poverty neighborhoods in<strong>Baltimore</strong> to low-poverty racially integrated suburbanand city neighborhoods with lower unemployment,less use of public assistance, fewer highschool drop outs, and better resourced and higherperforming schools. 4Most families are stayingin <strong>the</strong>ir new more opportunity-affordingneighborhoods,where <strong>the</strong>y say<strong>the</strong>y feel safer, healthier,less stressed, more motivatedand more c<strong>on</strong>fidentin <strong>the</strong> future facing <strong>the</strong>irchildren. Parents alsoreport that <strong>the</strong>ir childrenare doing better inschool. 5The average family thathas moved under <strong>the</strong> programis headed by a 29year old female with anannual income of just over $15,000 prior to <strong>the</strong>irfirst move. 6 More than three-fourths of participatingfamilies have children, usually <strong>on</strong>e or two children,although almost a quarter have three or morekids. 7 C<strong>on</strong>trary to <strong>the</strong> public percepti<strong>on</strong> thatvoucher households are welfare recipients, <strong>on</strong>lyabout <strong>on</strong>e-third of <strong>the</strong> mobility program heads ofhousehold were receiving welfare income when<strong>the</strong>y moved. Just under half were earning someincome from employment. 8<strong>Program</strong> participant. Photo: Andy Cook.than a mile from her new home in Bel Air, HarfordCounty, were not working before moving and nowhave jobs. O<strong>the</strong>rs, such as Lenora J<strong>on</strong>es, also foundnew jobs close to <strong>the</strong>ir new homes. J<strong>on</strong>es, whodrives a bus for <strong>the</strong> Howard County school district,lives in <strong>the</strong> county, giving her two daughters <strong>the</strong>chance to live in <strong>the</strong> same community where <strong>the</strong>irmom works.Still o<strong>the</strong>rs are working <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir educati<strong>on</strong>, withpaths similar to CandiceNels<strong>on</strong>, who moved fromUpt<strong>on</strong> in West <strong>Baltimore</strong>to Perry Hall in<strong>Baltimore</strong> County andsubsequently toColumbia in HowardCounty. Ending a 10-yearbreak from school,Nels<strong>on</strong> received herGED and <strong>the</strong>n enrolledin <strong>Baltimore</strong> CityCommunity Collegewhere she is currentlypursuing an associatedegree in nursing. Sheplans to work full time ata local hospital whileusing a scholarship from <strong>the</strong> Maryland Associati<strong>on</strong>of <strong>Housing</strong> and Redevelopment Agencies to completeher bachelor’s in pediatric nursing at CoppinState University. Many of Nels<strong>on</strong>’s peers in <strong>the</strong>program have also pursued GED, nursing, cosmetology,phlebotomy and o<strong>the</strong>r certificati<strong>on</strong>s.O<strong>the</strong>rs are taking more preliminary steps to betterhealth or self-sufficiency, like going to <strong>the</strong> libraryand using <strong>the</strong> Internet, learning to drive, joining<strong>the</strong> PTA or exercising at a local fitness center.While it is too early for a l<strong>on</strong>gitudinal analysis ofimprovements in educati<strong>on</strong>al attainment and o<strong>the</strong>routcomes for <strong>the</strong>se families, Edwards and <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>rparticipants surveyed by <strong>the</strong> ACLU of Marylandover <strong>the</strong> last three years report <strong>the</strong>ir lives arechanging. Some, like Michelle Starks, who is nowworking as a cashier in a “big box” retail store lessAs parents’ lives are changing, so are <strong>the</strong> lives of<strong>the</strong>ir children. Under <strong>the</strong> program, 1,277 childrenhave relocated to suburban school districts, where,according to <strong>the</strong>ir parents, <strong>the</strong>y are doing better inschool. Some, including nine-year old Antw<strong>on</strong>eBrown and his older bro<strong>the</strong>r Anth<strong>on</strong>y, 15, leftbehind specific troubles. Antw<strong>on</strong>e had difficulties8New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


in his city school, complaining that teachers singledhim out and treated him differently. Now he’sin <strong>the</strong> 4th grade in Howard County, doing well inmore rigorous classes and singing in <strong>the</strong> schoolchoir. In <strong>the</strong>ir old neighborhood, Anth<strong>on</strong>y wasbeginning to exhibit behavioral problems and wasstarting to hang out with “<strong>the</strong> wr<strong>on</strong>g type of kids.”Now he is adjusting to his new high school, says<strong>the</strong>ir mo<strong>the</strong>r. O<strong>the</strong>r children, such as Edwards’sthree eldest, 10, 12, and 16, struggled when <strong>the</strong>yfirst transferred to <strong>the</strong>ir new schools because <strong>the</strong>irpeers grew up with a more demanding curriculum.The new schools worked with <strong>the</strong> Edwards childrenand <strong>the</strong>ir grades steadily improved from Caverages to A’s and B’s. Equally impressive, <strong>the</strong>y arealready talking about <strong>the</strong> professi<strong>on</strong>al careers <strong>the</strong>ywant to pursue after high school.Though <strong>the</strong>se parents and <strong>the</strong>ir children each havedifferent experiences, <strong>the</strong>y are all benefitting from<strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>’s comprehensiveapproach to housing mobility.The early but promising results from <strong>the</strong> programcould pave <strong>the</strong> way for expanding mobilitythroughout <strong>the</strong> regi<strong>on</strong> and extending mobilitymore broadly in <strong>the</strong> federal <strong>Housing</strong> ChoiceVoucher (formerly Secti<strong>on</strong> 8) program, which subsidizesrental costs for approximately 1.4 milli<strong>on</strong>families nati<strong>on</strong>wide. 9 While <strong>the</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> ChoiceVoucher program has been shown to be a costeffectivemeans of providing stable housing forlow-income families, it has been criticized forfalling far short of <strong>the</strong> promise with which it waslaunched in <strong>the</strong> 1970s—to provide true housingchoice.School Bus Driver Gets to RaiseHer Kids in <strong>the</strong> Community WhereShe WorksLenora J<strong>on</strong>es is enthusiastic about hernew neighborhood in Columbia and <strong>the</strong>promise it brings. When J<strong>on</strong>es learnedabout <strong>the</strong> housing mobility program, shewas living in a west <strong>Baltimore</strong> neighborhoodshe describes as “nothing butboarded up houses” and “drug addictspartying every night”—not <strong>the</strong> setting shewanted for her daughters, <strong>on</strong>e of whomhas special needs. She moved her familyto a house in Columbia in HowardCounty, in a neighborhood with a pool,playgrounds, a lake, and a skate park.She resp<strong>on</strong>ded to an ad seeking bus driversfor Howard County schools. Theytrained her, helped her get a commercialdriver’s license, and hired her as a schoolbus driver, a positi<strong>on</strong> which works wellwith her daughters’ school schedules andgives <strong>the</strong>m more time toge<strong>the</strong>r. Although<strong>the</strong> “life changing” move was at first difficultfor her younger daughter, who hadd<strong>on</strong>e well in her city school but was havingtrouble keeping up with her peers in<strong>the</strong> more challenging suburban school,she moved fast so her daughter wouldnot have to repeat a grade. J<strong>on</strong>es enrolledher in summer school math classesand worked with her at home. ■Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 9


Child in public housing, <strong>Baltimore</strong> City.Photo: Barbara Samuels.“Today, we have a better understanding of <strong>the</strong> relati<strong>on</strong>ship between poverty and housingpolicy in <strong>the</strong> United States, and <strong>the</strong> neighborhoods of c<strong>on</strong>centrated poverty that resultednot in spite of government policies — but in many cases because of <strong>the</strong>m.”HUD Secretary Shaun D<strong>on</strong>ovan and former HUD Secretary Henry Cisneros, “Giving Families a Choice,” Huffingt<strong>on</strong> Post, July 22, 2009.The Origins of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong><strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>Historically, it has been difficult if not impossiblefor disadvantaged inner city familiesreceiving housing assistance to locate in <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> metropolitan area’s more affluent, predominantlywhite neighborhoods, many of whichwere officially off-limits to African Americansbefore <strong>the</strong> advent of fair housing laws. 10 While <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> regi<strong>on</strong> is highly segregated (14th in <strong>the</strong>nati<strong>on</strong> am<strong>on</strong>g large metro areas 11 ) generally, whatgoes for <strong>Baltimore</strong> goes for <strong>the</strong> nati<strong>on</strong>. 12Understanding how Tamika Edwards and o<strong>the</strong>rmobility program participants made an improbablejourney to life in suburbia requires a quick tripthrough <strong>the</strong> history of public housing desegregati<strong>on</strong>lawsuits.<strong>Housing</strong> mobility emerged decades ago as a legaland policy resp<strong>on</strong>se to <strong>the</strong> recogniti<strong>on</strong> that <strong>the</strong>nati<strong>on</strong>’s deeply segregated housing markets depriveAfrican Americans of <strong>the</strong> same level of opportunityavailable to whites. Where a family lives goes a l<strong>on</strong>gway toward determining whe<strong>the</strong>r children will benefitfrom high performing schools and have accessto well stocked libraries and recreati<strong>on</strong> programs,whe<strong>the</strong>r parents will be able to access <strong>the</strong> jobs thatdecentralized to <strong>the</strong> suburban malls and businessparks, and whe<strong>the</strong>r fresh food and fresh air will beavailable to sustain health and well being.In a nati<strong>on</strong> where African Americans have historicallybeen c<strong>on</strong>fined to high poverty inner cityneighborhoods and housing projects, residentialsegregati<strong>on</strong> means being segregated away fromsociety’s opportunity structures. Life outcomes canoften be projected <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> basis of zip codes, and<strong>the</strong> lowest-income African Americans suffer fromspatial disadvantages acute enough to lock manyinto poverty for generati<strong>on</strong>s.10Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign


When President Kennedy’s 1962 Executive Orderand <strong>the</strong> Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed “separatebut equal” instituti<strong>on</strong>s for blacks and whites,civil rights attorneys working <strong>on</strong> behalf of bravetenants took aim at <strong>the</strong> extremely segregated publichousing system. For decades, official policies ofracial segregati<strong>on</strong> and efforts to keep black publichousing residents out of white neighborhoods hadcreated inner city black public housing ghettos incities across <strong>the</strong> country. The first major publichousing desegregati<strong>on</strong>lawsuit was filed during<strong>the</strong> Chicago “FreedomMovement” in 1966 andreached <strong>the</strong> SupremeCourt in 1976. Hills v.Gautreaux “established<strong>the</strong> propositi<strong>on</strong> thatHUD shared resp<strong>on</strong>sibilitywith local defendantsfor intenti<strong>on</strong>al housingsegregati<strong>on</strong>, and could berequired to promoteregi<strong>on</strong>al housing integrati<strong>on</strong>as part of a comprehensivecourt remedy.” 13The court-ordered remedy in Gautreaux was a 20-year HUD-funded program that gave more than7,000 low-income black families counseling andfinancial assistance to rent privately owned housingin neighborhoods that were no more than 30 percentblack. More than half moved to predominantlywhite, middle-class suburbs, where <strong>the</strong>yflourished compared with <strong>the</strong> families who alsomoved but stayed within <strong>the</strong> city. 14Gautreaux’s template of HUD liability, to be remediedwith metropolitan-wide housing desegregati<strong>on</strong>efforts, was followed in a number of housingdesegregati<strong>on</strong> lawsuits filed in <strong>the</strong> 1980s and1990s, spawning many more mobility programsusing <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Vouchers (<strong>the</strong>n calledSecti<strong>on</strong> 8 vouchers) as a mobility vehicle. 15 Whilethis rental subsidy voucher program was created in<strong>the</strong> 1970s in part to provide an alternative to highlysegregated public housing complexes, barriers in<strong>Baltimore</strong> City public housing. Photo: T<strong>on</strong>ika Garibaldi.<strong>the</strong> program and in suburban rental markets hadeffectively limited minority voucher holders to“voucher submarkets”. The racial and ec<strong>on</strong>omicsegregati<strong>on</strong> in <strong>the</strong>se submarkets was <strong>on</strong>ly somewhatless intense than in public housing neighborhoods.16 However, <strong>the</strong> court-decreed status ofsome mobility programs required HUD and publichousing authorities to use <strong>the</strong> discreti<strong>on</strong> alreadyavailable under <strong>the</strong> rental voucher program—rarely used in a deliberate way—to open or expandhousing opportunities forminorities bey<strong>on</strong>d <strong>the</strong>traditi<strong>on</strong>al inner cityneighborhoods.At <strong>the</strong> same time, <strong>the</strong>growing body of researchdocumenting <strong>the</strong> detrimentsof living in distressed,high-povertyneighborhoods and <strong>the</strong>benefits experienced byGautreaux families escapingthose neighborhoodsprompted C<strong>on</strong>gress in<strong>the</strong> early 1990s to enactMoving To Opportunity,a dem<strong>on</strong>strati<strong>on</strong> program operating in five citiesthat aimed to test <strong>the</strong> impact of neighborhoodenvir<strong>on</strong>ment <strong>on</strong> family outcomes. 17 Also in <strong>the</strong>1990s, HUD launched <strong>the</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al OpportunityCounseling <strong>Program</strong>, a five-year program providing16 metro regi<strong>on</strong>s with grants for mobilitycounseling for <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher holders.While <strong>the</strong>se federally funded efforts were expanding,private foundati<strong>on</strong>s and local and state governmentsalso increased support of mobility efforts. At<strong>on</strong>e point, government and private activity producedmore than 30 housing mobility programsaround <strong>the</strong> country. 18In 1995, amid this era of expanding focus <strong>on</strong>mobility, <strong>the</strong> ACLU of Maryland filed a publichousing desegregati<strong>on</strong> lawsuit <strong>on</strong> behalf of morethan 14,000 former and current African Americanpublic housing families in <strong>Baltimore</strong>. Thomps<strong>on</strong> v.HUD was larger than most such cases and had aPoverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 11


Assisted <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>sGAUTREAUX MTO THOMPSONSite Chicago, 1970s-1980s Chicago, NY, Bost<strong>on</strong>, <strong>Baltimore</strong>, 2000sLA, <strong>Baltimore</strong>, 1990sOrigin Lawsuit Federally funded Lawsuitdem<strong>on</strong>strati<strong>on</strong>Number 7000 1729 Experimental; 2000 vouchers1209 Secti<strong>on</strong> 8; 13000 applicants1310 C<strong>on</strong>trols=4248 1000 moves to dateCriteria and Moves


Suburban county homes. Photo: Barbara Samuels.“Many households make <strong>the</strong>ir residential choices based <strong>on</strong> very limited informati<strong>on</strong>and c<strong>on</strong>sider <strong>on</strong>ly a small set of alternatives...Experience in o<strong>the</strong>r policy areas suggests thatchanging <strong>the</strong> default opti<strong>on</strong> for choices can lead to profoundly different outcomes.Thus, why not reform <strong>the</strong> Secti<strong>on</strong> 8 voucher program so it is administered at a regi<strong>on</strong>al level?Why not introduce more widespread counseling? And why not incorporate a defaultopti<strong>on</strong> that voucher holders use <strong>the</strong>ir vouchers in low-poverty neighborhoods?”Ingrid Gould Ellen, “Supporting Integrative Choices,” in Poverty & Race (Sept-Oct 2008)Keys to <strong>Program</strong> SuccessThe <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> isan outcomes oriented, results-driven interventi<strong>on</strong>that uses <strong>the</strong> less<strong>on</strong>s of <strong>the</strong> past as a startingpoint for fur<strong>the</strong>r, c<strong>on</strong>tinuous improvements.Staff at Metropolitan <strong>Baltimore</strong> Quadel (MBQ)c<strong>on</strong>stantly m<strong>on</strong>itor <strong>the</strong> program through administrativedata, maps of participant locati<strong>on</strong> andneighborhood demographics, periodic special datareviews (such as comparative school performance)and, of course, formal and informal staff feedback.The plaintiffs’ counsel at <strong>the</strong> ACLU of Marylandaugment this m<strong>on</strong>itoring with regular client surveysand interviews, with those who have recentlymoved and l<strong>on</strong>ger-term participants; client focusgroups; and a Client Advisory Council. This <strong>on</strong>goingscrutiny allows MBQ and parties to <strong>the</strong>Thomps<strong>on</strong> case to identify and address any weaknessesin <strong>the</strong> program.Additi<strong>on</strong>ally, MBQ has a critical partner in <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign (BRHC), acoaliti<strong>on</strong> of local and nati<strong>on</strong>al civil rights and housingpolicy organizati<strong>on</strong>s which formed in <strong>the</strong> wakeof Thomps<strong>on</strong> to support <strong>the</strong> mobility program andpromote principles of housing mobility and racialand ec<strong>on</strong>omic integrati<strong>on</strong>. In <strong>the</strong>ir refinement of<strong>the</strong> mobility program, <strong>the</strong> BRHC has helped bringin critical philanthropic investment. Foundati<strong>on</strong>sincluding <strong>the</strong> Annie E. Casey Foundati<strong>on</strong>, <strong>the</strong>Abell Foundati<strong>on</strong>, and <strong>the</strong> Krieger Fund have c<strong>on</strong>tributedfunds for enhanced counseling, employment,educati<strong>on</strong>, and transportati<strong>on</strong> services forNew Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> 13


program families. 20 The Annie E. CaseyFoundati<strong>on</strong> also provided funding for <strong>the</strong> independentstudy of <strong>the</strong> outcomesof <strong>the</strong> Thomps<strong>on</strong> families, c<strong>on</strong>ductedby Stefanie DeLuca atJohns Hopkins University.By c<strong>on</strong>tinuously m<strong>on</strong>itoring andfeeding results back into <strong>the</strong> systemal<strong>on</strong>g with outside ideas andphilanthropic resources, <strong>the</strong>partners have produced a modelof best practices for mobilityprograms. Following are detaileddescripti<strong>on</strong>s of <strong>the</strong> elements criticalto <strong>the</strong> program’s success.Creating fair housing opportunitieswith race- andpoverty-based geographictargeting. Ra<strong>the</strong>r than taking<strong>the</strong> path of least resistance andreferring clients to landlords in<strong>the</strong> high-poverty, predominantlyAfrican American housing“voucher submarkets”, <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong> fur<strong>the</strong>rs fair housinggoals through an “opportunityapproach” to placing families.While joining <strong>the</strong> program isvoluntary, <strong>the</strong> pool of Thomps<strong>on</strong> vouchers arespecifically targeted to rent units in neighborhoodswhere less than 10 percent of <strong>the</strong> residents are inpoverty, less than 30 percent of <strong>the</strong> residents areminority, and less than five percent of all housingunits are public housing or in HUD-assisted housingcomplexes. Eligible areas are spread throughouta six-county area, <strong>the</strong> center of which is<strong>Baltimore</strong> City. (See map p.15)The focus <strong>on</strong> targeting low-poverty, low-minorityneighborhoods throughout <strong>the</strong> regi<strong>on</strong> derives from<strong>the</strong> history and research showing that black communitiesare uniquely disadvantaged, with evenaffluent African American neighborhoods suffering“from significant deficits in both public and privateBest Practicesof <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong><strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>• Race- and poverty-basedgeographic targeting• Regi<strong>on</strong>al voucheradministrati<strong>on</strong>• Financial literacy, credit repairand life counseling to createcompetitive rental applicantsand successful tenants• <strong>Housing</strong> search assistanceand motivati<strong>on</strong>al support• Outreach to both owners ofindividual rental residencesand apartment managementcompanies• M<strong>on</strong>itored placements to avoidover-c<strong>on</strong>centrati<strong>on</strong>• Two-plus years of post-movecounseling• Sec<strong>on</strong>d-move counseling• Employment and transportati<strong>on</strong>assistanceinvestment” compared to similar white neighborhoods.21 Indeed, job growth has been highest in<strong>the</strong> suburbs, which have historicallybeen far less integratedthan <strong>the</strong> cities. Some expertseven say that disproporti<strong>on</strong>ateblack poverty is due in part to<strong>the</strong> fact that African Americansin highly segregated metropolitanareas such as <strong>Baltimore</strong> livefur<strong>the</strong>r from job rich areas thanany o<strong>the</strong>r racial group, partlybecause of “job sprawl” to <strong>the</strong>suburbs. 22 In c<strong>on</strong>trast, as a resultof <strong>the</strong> geographic accessibilityoffered under <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong><strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>,participating families not <strong>on</strong>lymove out of <strong>the</strong>ir neighborhoodbut often move to a new county,school system, and job market.The geographic targeting ofopportunity neighborhoods alsorecognizes <strong>the</strong> benefit of mobilitycounseling to sustainingstr<strong>on</strong>g neighborhoods.According to HUD-sp<strong>on</strong>soredresearch c<strong>on</strong>ducted in <strong>Baltimore</strong>County, voucher-leased homesincreased property values inhigher-valued, appreciating predominantly whiteneighborhoods (such as those sought by MBQ forits voucher families). 23 Reducti<strong>on</strong>s in property valueswere found <strong>on</strong>ly when voucher leased homeswere clustered in a small area, or were located inec<strong>on</strong>omically declining or minority areas—outcomes that geographic targeting and mobilitycounseling help to avoid. 24Regi<strong>on</strong>al voucher administrati<strong>on</strong>. Ra<strong>the</strong>r thanjust providing mobility counseling to familiesreceiving vouchers, MBQ essentially administers aregi<strong>on</strong>al voucher mobility program. As such itavoids <strong>the</strong> c<strong>on</strong>siderable barriers in <strong>the</strong> regular<strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher program that dissuadevoucher holders from moving from <strong>on</strong>e jurisdic-14New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Divorced Mom Seeks Safety and Good Schools For Her Talented DaughterAs so<strong>on</strong> as her daughter finished <strong>the</strong> 6th grade at a <strong>Baltimore</strong> City middle school, Nicole McD<strong>on</strong>aldmoved her from <strong>the</strong>ir apartment in <strong>the</strong> Gilmor Homes public housing development to a townhomein <strong>the</strong> College Parkway area of Arnold, Anne Arundel County. McD<strong>on</strong>ald had heard of <strong>the</strong> mobilityprogram even before moving into Gilmor Homes, but wasn’t sure she wanted to apply. Then <strong>on</strong>eday, she got a call from her daughter’s school saying she had been in a fight, started by some o<strong>the</strong>rgirls.“They picked <strong>on</strong> her and said she had to build up her ‘street cred.’ I knew right away I had to ge<strong>the</strong>r up out of <strong>the</strong>re,” McD<strong>on</strong>ald says.McD<strong>on</strong>ald, who has <strong>on</strong>ly been in her new home a short time, reports that <strong>the</strong> transiti<strong>on</strong> has beeneasy for her and her daughter. McD<strong>on</strong>ald, who was unemployed when she moved, has a job interviewin a retail store in Severna Park. Her daughter, an h<strong>on</strong>or roll student, quickly made friends in<strong>the</strong> neighborhood, and is attending <strong>on</strong>e of <strong>the</strong> best middle schools in Anne Arundel County, whereshe signed up for <strong>the</strong> band and o<strong>the</strong>r activities.McD<strong>on</strong>ald says she feels less safer, less stressed and healthier, mostly because she no l<strong>on</strong>ger hasto worry so much about her daughter’s safety. When <strong>the</strong>y lived in <strong>the</strong> city, Ms. McD<strong>on</strong>ald would notlet her daughter go outside to play.“I was stressed before—every day, all day. It is especially stressful when you have to c<strong>on</strong>fine yourchild to <strong>the</strong> house because you’re terrified. She’s <strong>the</strong> most important thing in my life….She didn’tunderstand why she had to be inside all day, everyday. She would say ‘You d<strong>on</strong>’t want me to be akid!’ When I told her she could go outside here, her face lit up. That was worth it right <strong>the</strong>re.” ■ti<strong>on</strong> to ano<strong>the</strong>r. Underc<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong>al voucher programs,such moves requirevoucher program administratorsin <strong>the</strong> “sending”and “accepting” jurisdicti<strong>on</strong>sto enter into a complicatedseries oftransacti<strong>on</strong>s that can alsoincrease outlays if <strong>the</strong> family movesto a more expensive area. For individualvoucher holders who want to moveout of <strong>the</strong>ir area, <strong>the</strong> requirements resultin multiple visits, often <strong>on</strong> public transportati<strong>on</strong>,to multiple city and countyvoucher offices to submit forms andapplicati<strong>on</strong>s that all differ; delays fromsnafus or lost paperwork; and frustrati<strong>on</strong>when desired units are leased to some<strong>on</strong>e elsebecause of <strong>the</strong> delays. Meanwhile <strong>the</strong> clock keepsticking <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> limited search time allotted voucherholders to ‘use or lose’ <strong>the</strong>irl<strong>on</strong>g awaited voucher. 25In c<strong>on</strong>trast, participantsin <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong><strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong> can scout unitsin many jurisdicti<strong>on</strong>s andwork with <strong>on</strong>e program, <strong>on</strong>eapplicati<strong>on</strong>, and <strong>on</strong>e set of eligibilitycriteria. Fur<strong>the</strong>r, <strong>the</strong>breadth of potential units extendsto higher rent areas because <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong> is permitted to leasesuburban units with rental ratesthat are higher than normallypermitted. 26Communicati<strong>on</strong> with county officials. Because<strong>the</strong> counties are still operating <strong>the</strong>ir own <strong>Housing</strong>Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 15


Choice Voucher programs, <strong>the</strong> mobility programworks to keep <strong>the</strong> lines of communicati<strong>on</strong> openwith <strong>the</strong> counties and synchr<strong>on</strong>ize <strong>the</strong>ir <strong>Housing</strong>Choice Voucher requirements not <strong>on</strong>ly with HUDbut local standards. For example, in alignment with<strong>the</strong> counties’ practices, MBQc<strong>on</strong>ducts criminal backgroundchecks and excludes any householdwith a live-in family memberwho has committed a violentor drug-related crime in <strong>the</strong> lastfive years. MBQ keeps localhousing offices informed of itsactivities but bey<strong>on</strong>d that, programofficials quietly go about<strong>the</strong>ir work.Tours and visi<strong>on</strong>ing workshopsto expand participants’ view of<strong>the</strong> possible. For many innercity families, <strong>the</strong> suburban counties and towns existbey<strong>on</strong>d <strong>the</strong> realm of c<strong>on</strong>sciousness. There is a goodchance <strong>the</strong>y’ve never visited suburban neighborhoodsand d<strong>on</strong>’t know firsthand that <strong>the</strong>se areashave plenty of shops and o<strong>the</strong>r amenities. Whenapplicants entering <strong>the</strong> program come to MBQ’soffice in downtown <strong>Baltimore</strong> for <strong>the</strong>ir orientati<strong>on</strong>,<strong>on</strong>e of <strong>the</strong> first things <strong>the</strong>y do is board a charter busfor a tour of some of <strong>the</strong>se communities.On <strong>the</strong>se tours, MBQ housing counselors ask ridersto notice how <strong>the</strong> streets with closely packedMBQ outreach meeting, <strong>Baltimore</strong> City. Photo: BarbaraSamuels.I would recommend thisprogram to any<strong>on</strong>e seekingbetter housing assistance. Thisprogram has been very helpfulto me with <strong>the</strong> informati<strong>on</strong>alworkshops and very helpfulhousing counselor. The moveto my new neighborhood hasbeen a great success!—<strong>Program</strong> participanthomes and small yards and corner grocers andliquor stores give way to strip malls with an arrayof stores and townhouses with bigger yards anddriveways not alleys. Guides also point out schools,doctor’s offices, businesses, bus and metro stops,and o<strong>the</strong>r notable amenities.“Well before <strong>the</strong> end of <strong>the</strong> tour,participants start asking how so<strong>on</strong><strong>the</strong>y can get <strong>the</strong>ir vouchers,” saysDarlene Brailsford, MBQ counselingteam leader.Nicole McD<strong>on</strong>ald, who recentlymoved from <strong>Baltimore</strong>’s GilmorHomes public housing developmentto Arnold in Anne ArundelCounty, says <strong>the</strong> tour helped todispel some of her prec<strong>on</strong>cepti<strong>on</strong>sand worries about living in<strong>the</strong> suburbs. “You think if youlive in <strong>the</strong> county nothing is near you, but wefound malls. They showed us where <strong>the</strong> shoppingwas, <strong>the</strong> schools. They pointed out ‘we have tenantsliving over here.’” McD<strong>on</strong>ald also found <strong>the</strong>tour to be motivati<strong>on</strong>al: “It was beautiful. Itencouraged me to get going through <strong>the</strong> process.”Pre-move credit counseling and o<strong>the</strong>r preparati<strong>on</strong>sfor successful tenancy. When participants<strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> initial tour see where <strong>the</strong>y canrelocate, many want to move right away. “Notquite so fast,” warn staff, who now must sustainthat excitement through what can be a l<strong>on</strong>g counselingand housing search process. Unlike <strong>the</strong> socalled“voucher submarkets” in <strong>the</strong> city andlower-income areas of <strong>the</strong> older suburbs, <strong>the</strong> rentalmarkets in <strong>the</strong>se suburban communities are muchmore competitive. Participants must be attractiveto landlords in <strong>the</strong>se areas, which often requirespatching up <strong>the</strong>ir credit and o<strong>the</strong>rwise working <strong>on</strong><strong>the</strong>ir presentati<strong>on</strong>. Staff c<strong>on</strong>duct home visits toidentify any housekeeping issues that could giverise to landlord complaints over c<strong>on</strong>diti<strong>on</strong>s inunits; hold “readiness workshops” <strong>on</strong> tenant rightsand good neighbor resp<strong>on</strong>sibilities; and providefinancial and credit counseling, including less<strong>on</strong>s<strong>on</strong> maintaining budgets.16New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Because <strong>the</strong> program seeks to create successful tenants,participants are counseled that <strong>the</strong>y shouldraise <strong>the</strong>ir credit score to at least 550 and saveapproximately $1,000 for a security deposit andmoving costs before <strong>the</strong>y get <strong>the</strong>ir voucher andbegin <strong>the</strong>ir housing search. To help <strong>the</strong>m reachthis goal, and because successful tenancy is seen asjust <strong>on</strong>e step in a broader journey to opportunity,each family works with <strong>the</strong>ir counselor to create anindividualized family plan. The plan encompassesacti<strong>on</strong>s such as sticking to a budget, paying downdebt, opening a savings account, enrolling in educati<strong>on</strong>alprograms, and pursuing employment.Although all families are very low-income, someare more ready than o<strong>the</strong>rs to make an “opportunitymove.” Families are not turned away if <strong>the</strong>yhave large debts and little income, health problems,and o<strong>the</strong>r barriers. Instead,<strong>the</strong>y move at <strong>the</strong>ir own pacethrough this process of getting“voucher-ready.” Once <strong>the</strong>y haveaddressed credit barriers andaccumulated savings, <strong>the</strong> programwill pay a porti<strong>on</strong> of <strong>the</strong> securitydeposit needed to rent a home inhigher rent suburban areas, up to$1,000. For some <strong>the</strong> process takes <strong>on</strong>ly a fewm<strong>on</strong>ths, while for o<strong>the</strong>rs it can take two years (<strong>the</strong>average is about 12 m<strong>on</strong>ths).The staff really wants you toachieve more and toaccomplish a happy move foryou and your family.—<strong>Program</strong> participantStill, even with <strong>the</strong> limitati<strong>on</strong>s imposed by highcaseloads, <strong>the</strong> program provides much more supportfor families than voucher holders typicallyexperience. “I had never seen or heard of a programthat helped so much,” says Tamika Edwardsof her experience moving with her four childrenfrom <strong>Baltimore</strong>’s Upt<strong>on</strong> neighborhood to Elkridgein Howard County. “I felt like my counselor caredabout me and my family. We were not just a number<strong>on</strong> a list.”<strong>Housing</strong> search assistance with escorted unitvisits. Once participants receive <strong>the</strong>ir voucher,apartment and house hunting begins in earnest.Counselors help participants think through suchissues as “What neighborhood has a bus stop so Ican get to my job?” or “Which area has a medicalclinic where I can transfer mykids’ records?” With its extensivelandlord outreach, <strong>the</strong> programhas a network of prescreenedrental units that participants areencouraged but not required toc<strong>on</strong>sider. Of course, all unitsmust meet <strong>the</strong> minimum housingquality and habitability standardsestablished by HUD regulati<strong>on</strong>s and rents must bereas<strong>on</strong>able and fit within <strong>the</strong> financial parametersof <strong>the</strong> program.The overwhelming resp<strong>on</strong>se to <strong>the</strong> program, and<strong>the</strong> large caseloads it generates, makes it difficultfor counselors to give each pers<strong>on</strong> as much individualizedcounseling as <strong>the</strong>y would like. As of August2009, 19,286 families have applied to <strong>the</strong> program.Of those, approximately 6,000 have been determinedThomps<strong>on</strong> eligible (i.e. <strong>the</strong>y are a present orformer resident of public housing or joined <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> Authority’s waiting list forhousing assistance before 2002), cleared a criminalbackground check, attended an initial workshopoutlining program requirements, and are enrolledin counseling. Currently, <strong>the</strong>re are 2,280 familiesin <strong>the</strong> pre-placement caseload, for an average caseloadof 190 families for each of <strong>the</strong> 12 programcounselors.Marketing to landlords and landlord educati<strong>on</strong>.HUD rules require all voucher programs toc<strong>on</strong>duct outreach to landlords with units in lowpoverty and n<strong>on</strong>-minority areas, but this is rarely afocus of <strong>the</strong> typical big city voucher program.Unfortunately, poorly run <strong>Housing</strong> ChoiceVoucher programs in some cities have given <strong>the</strong><strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher program a bad namewith landlords. Many property owners and managersdo not accept vouchers, and this discriminati<strong>on</strong>against voucher holders has been welldocumented. 27 To counter <strong>the</strong>se negative biases,MBQ’s homeownership and project developmentmanager, Tom Gunn, stresses <strong>the</strong> many positiveand unique aspects of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong><strong>Mobility</strong> program. Participating families volunteeringfor <strong>the</strong> program are highly motivated andPoverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 17


Settling Down HelpsMom Get JobAdele Ullman learned about <strong>the</strong> mobilityprogram from a neighbor at <strong>the</strong> PerkinsHomes public housing complex anddidn’t care that it might mean moving farfrom <strong>the</strong> neighborhood. In fact, “<strong>the</strong> fur<strong>the</strong>raway, <strong>the</strong> better,” Ullman says. Shemoved to an apartment in Bel Air beforesettling into a townhouse in Abingd<strong>on</strong> inHarford County. After taking classes in atraining program, she now works as amedical billing clerk. She says her neighborsare “fantastic” and that <strong>the</strong>y sometimesmow <strong>on</strong>e ano<strong>the</strong>r’s lawns. Her twochildren have made friends in <strong>the</strong> neighborhoodand are doing well in school. ■highly prepared to move; counselors provide twoyears of post-placement assistance, serving as avaluable c<strong>on</strong>tact for <strong>the</strong> landlord if problems arise;and MBQ’s landlords get <strong>the</strong> rental subsidy paymentslike clockwork.“The counseling aspect really sells <strong>the</strong> program,”Gunn says. “Landlords tell you that many problemsthat arise with tenants are bey<strong>on</strong>d <strong>the</strong> abilityor scope of <strong>the</strong> landlord to address or resolve.They like <strong>the</strong> security of knowing that if a problemcomes up, a counselor from MBQ can assist <strong>the</strong>tenant and landlord,” says Gunn.MBQ operates from <strong>the</strong> understanding that landlordparticipati<strong>on</strong> in <strong>the</strong> program is a businesspropositi<strong>on</strong>. This is <strong>the</strong> message Gunn c<strong>on</strong>veyswhen he talks to individual landlords, meets withrealtors who work with rental property owners,holds landlord outreach sessi<strong>on</strong>s, and gives presentati<strong>on</strong>sto real estate investment groups and rental andhomeownership associati<strong>on</strong>s. Landlords are assuredthat <strong>the</strong>y can screen and select program tenants justlike <strong>the</strong>y would screen any potential tenant; that<strong>the</strong>y can use, and enforce, <strong>the</strong>ir standard lease; andthat MBQ is not going to act as advocates for tenantswho violate <strong>the</strong> terms of <strong>the</strong>ir lease.Bey<strong>on</strong>d deflecting misc<strong>on</strong>cepti<strong>on</strong>s about operati<strong>on</strong>s,program officials must c<strong>on</strong>tend with <strong>on</strong>e of<strong>the</strong> major barriers to <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher usein low poverty suburban neighborhoods and a factorthat has hurt <strong>the</strong> voucher program—a lack ofaffordable apartments with three or more bedrooms.(It is a deficiency some housing expertsattribute to local z<strong>on</strong>ing laws aimed at excludingpoor minority families). This is why MBQ c<strong>on</strong>ductsextensive outreach to owners of single-familyproperties (including detached homes and attachedtownhomes). In fact, some “mom and pop” ownersof single-family properties are so satisfied with <strong>the</strong>program that <strong>the</strong>y have referred o<strong>the</strong>r landlords toMBQ. As in any rental program, late rental paymentsfrom tenants and o<strong>the</strong>r problems do occur<strong>on</strong> occasi<strong>on</strong> and <strong>the</strong> landlords, tenants, and counselorswork out <strong>the</strong> problem and moved forward.Setting aside existing units in <strong>the</strong> suburbs. Inadditi<strong>on</strong> to building a network of landlords, <strong>the</strong>program secures some units for program familiesby entering into c<strong>on</strong>tracts with property ownerswho commit federal voucher payments to <strong>the</strong> unitfor a set period of time. Most of <strong>the</strong>se projectbasedvoucher (PBV) units are existing units ra<strong>the</strong>rthan newly c<strong>on</strong>structed or rehabilitated units, and<strong>the</strong>refore do not physically expand <strong>the</strong> housingstock. They do guarantee access to units for a certainnumber of years and ameliorate some of <strong>the</strong>burden of finding willing landlords and affordableunits that meet quality standards. Families whofind it difficult to search <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir own, includingdisabled or elderly households, and families whowork l<strong>on</strong>g hours, can especially benefit from referralsto owners and units that are already underc<strong>on</strong>tract with <strong>the</strong> program. The program is alsoable to exert a greater degree of c<strong>on</strong>trol over <strong>the</strong>locati<strong>on</strong> of PBV units than is possible in a tenantbasedprogram, deliberately seeking areas withstr<strong>on</strong>ger schools or few county voucher holders.18New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Counselors serving as motivati<strong>on</strong>al coaches.Even with <strong>the</strong> removal of some structural barriersand with a mobility counseling agency to help pave<strong>the</strong> way, moving is still a big challenge for familieswho are pushing <strong>the</strong> boundaries of <strong>the</strong>ir comfortz<strong>on</strong>e. This is where <strong>the</strong> counselors c<strong>on</strong>tribute criticalalbeit incalculablevalue, coaching participantsthrough <strong>the</strong>irdoubts and fears.Participating families aremoving into areas where<strong>the</strong>y never envisi<strong>on</strong>ed livingand it helps to remind<strong>the</strong>m that it is possibleand o<strong>the</strong>rs have alreadyled <strong>the</strong> way. NicoleMcD<strong>on</strong>ald, who earlierspoke of her positiveexperiences with <strong>the</strong> bustour of <strong>the</strong> suburbs, saidshe doesn’t think shecould have succeeded infinding her unit in <strong>the</strong>suburbs without <strong>the</strong> helpof her counselor.Home in suburban county. Photo: Tom Gunn.“Without my counselor, I probably would havegiven up. When she thought I was getting discouraged,she said ‘It’s going to be okay. Call me everyday, that’s my job.’”Although success rates for mobility programs areexpected to be lower due to <strong>the</strong> difficulties ofsecuring housing in low poverty areas, 28 MBQ’s“success rate” in 2008 was 80 percent, above <strong>the</strong>nati<strong>on</strong>al average for regular voucher programs,which was 69 percent according to <strong>the</strong> most recentstudy. 29 MBQ’s 80 percent success rate is also wellabove <strong>the</strong> 58 percent rate posted by <strong>Baltimore</strong>MTO voucher holders in <strong>the</strong> mid-1990s. 30M<strong>on</strong>itoring placements to avoid “clustering”tenants in any <strong>on</strong>e neighborhood. While manypeople are likely to endorse <strong>the</strong> idea of welcomingin <strong>the</strong>ir midst a single mom who is working hard tomake life better for her kids, <strong>the</strong> presence of largenumbers of poor families moving into stable neighborhoodsmay spark a more fearful reacti<strong>on</strong>.Recognizing that, MBQ regularly reviews mapsand charts showing where program families aregoing. If certain areas start to receive a lot of participantsor already have alarge number of voucherfamilies from <strong>the</strong> regularlocal <strong>Housing</strong> ChoiceVoucher programs, <strong>the</strong>ystep up recruitment ino<strong>the</strong>r areas. This is inc<strong>on</strong>trast with <strong>the</strong> laissezfaire approach <strong>the</strong> regularvoucher program whichfrequently results in clustersof voucher holders inidentifiable “voucher submarkets.”Avoiding too manyplacements in any <strong>on</strong>edevelopment. In late2005 and early 2006, fivelarge apartment complexes,which had been housing mobility clientsunder short-term project-based voucher c<strong>on</strong>tracts,were sold. Roughly 200 families, most of whomhad lived in <strong>the</strong>ir units an average of 14 m<strong>on</strong>ths,were forced to relocate. MBQ counselors wereflooded with families needing new units all at <strong>on</strong>ce.As a result, many of <strong>the</strong>se families moved to<strong>Housing</strong> Choice “voucher submarkets” in <strong>the</strong> city.Learning from this experience, program officialstry to avoid having a significant number of clientslease units in any <strong>on</strong>e complex. They keep <strong>the</strong>number of project-based units leased in any singleapartment complex well below <strong>the</strong> 25 percent permittedby <strong>the</strong> PBV program and focus <strong>on</strong> recruitingowners of single-family properties for PBVfive-year c<strong>on</strong>tract minimums.Two-plus years of post-move counseling tohelp families adjust and c<strong>on</strong>nect. Learning from<strong>the</strong> past, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 19


does not “discharge” families from <strong>the</strong> program<strong>on</strong>ce <strong>the</strong>y have successfully found a new home.While MTO and o<strong>the</strong>r early mobility programsfocused <strong>on</strong> housing search and pre-placementcounseling, growing recogniti<strong>on</strong> that families oftenneed assistance adjusting to <strong>the</strong>ir new communitieshas given post-move counseling a much moreprominent role in today’s generati<strong>on</strong> of housingmobility programs. At <strong>the</strong> suggesti<strong>on</strong> of <strong>the</strong> suburbancounties, HUD added funds earmarked specificallyfor post-placement supports to <strong>the</strong> Thomps<strong>on</strong>partial c<strong>on</strong>sent decree. Within three weeks after afamily in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>moves into <strong>the</strong>ir new home, <strong>the</strong>ir counselor pays avisit to see how things are going and make sure <strong>the</strong>children are registered for school.Counselors follow up with at least four more visitsover <strong>the</strong> next two years and clients are encouragedto c<strong>on</strong>tact counselors if needs or problems arise,whe<strong>the</strong>r it involves transferring Medicaid benefits,filing taxes or resolving disputes with landlords. At<strong>the</strong> end of two years, counselors d<strong>on</strong>’t put <strong>the</strong> family’sfile away but ra<strong>the</strong>r encourage families to c<strong>on</strong>tinueusing <strong>the</strong>m as a resource.Before January 2008, <strong>the</strong> post-move assistancedescribed above lasted <strong>on</strong>ly <strong>on</strong>e year. 31 The extensi<strong>on</strong>of post-move assistance to two years was adirect outgrowth of a pilot program launched byMBQ with c<strong>on</strong>tributi<strong>on</strong>s from <strong>the</strong> Annie E. CaseyFoundati<strong>on</strong>. The Casey “enhanced mobility program”began in 2006 and initially involved 75 families(with an additi<strong>on</strong>al 35 families enrolled in2009 as o<strong>the</strong>r families cycled out of <strong>the</strong> program).The families received a sec<strong>on</strong>d year of post-movecounseling, which included specialized “sec<strong>on</strong>dmove” counseling for families c<strong>on</strong>sidering relocatingto a sec<strong>on</strong>d home, and employment services.The high stability of <strong>the</strong> “enhanced caseload”helped dem<strong>on</strong>strate <strong>the</strong> benefits of a sec<strong>on</strong>d year ofpost-move support, as well as sec<strong>on</strong>d-move assistanceto <strong>the</strong> entire caseload.Sec<strong>on</strong>d-move counseling. Generally, <strong>Housing</strong>Choice Voucher families sign an initial lease for <strong>on</strong>eyear and are not permitted to break <strong>the</strong> lease andmove during that first year. However, after <strong>the</strong> firstyear, in accordance with regular voucher programrules, families have <strong>the</strong> ability to move wherever<strong>the</strong>y can find a willing landlord and an affordableunit that meets inspecti<strong>on</strong> standards. <strong>Program</strong>administrators have observed that like o<strong>the</strong>rrenters, voucher holders tend to move frequently,perhaps as often as every three years and in somecases every year. 32 While moves are not necessarilybad―ie., families can move to better housing or toareas with better schools―researchers cauti<strong>on</strong> thatchildren who transfer schools too frequently cansuffer academically and that schools with a highnumber of transferring children (comm<strong>on</strong> in somecity schools) suffer declines in performance. 33Fur<strong>the</strong>rmore, frequent moves can be a special challengefor mobility programs because each moveraises <strong>the</strong> potential that a family can be drawn backinto a voucher submarket or o<strong>the</strong>r high povertyarea. Experience and data suggests that althoughfamily ties or obligati<strong>on</strong>s undoubtedly pull somefamilies closer to <strong>the</strong>ir original neighborhoods,sec<strong>on</strong>dary moves by mobility program participantsare most often prompted by landlord issues and <strong>the</strong>need or desire for a larger unit. 34 Unfortunately,sec<strong>on</strong>d-movers may find it difficult to find a unit in<strong>the</strong>ir new high opportunity community, whilelandlords in “voucher submarkets” actively seekvoucher holders. 35A couple of years ago, staff noticed that some familieswere moving after <strong>the</strong>ir initial lease year. Theydedicated resources to working with those familieswho expressed a desire to move again so that <strong>the</strong>irdecisi<strong>on</strong>s are as much as possible influenced by <strong>the</strong>family’s preferences, ra<strong>the</strong>r than by market limitati<strong>on</strong>sand o<strong>the</strong>r external factors. Now, a family’srequest for a new voucher to move automaticallytriggers a teleph<strong>on</strong>e call from <strong>the</strong>ir counselor. This“sec<strong>on</strong>d move counseling,” which had been successfullypiloted am<strong>on</strong>g a small group of programparticipants, includes counseling <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> pros andc<strong>on</strong>s of moving, help identifying neighborhoodsthat meet individuals’ needs, and referrals to hardto-findunits in high opportunity areas. As part of<strong>the</strong> process, counselors encourage families who still20New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


want to move to relocate during a break in <strong>the</strong>school year to minimize disrupti<strong>on</strong> to <strong>the</strong>ir children’seducati<strong>on</strong>.promoti<strong>on</strong>, merit pay increase or better job with anew employer. On average, employed clients in <strong>the</strong>enhanced caseload were earning $12 an hour.“We know that <strong>the</strong> average market renter stays in aunit two years, so we try to encourage our participantsto stay <strong>the</strong>re at least that l<strong>on</strong>g,” says JimEvans, managing director of MBQ. “When youlook at <strong>the</strong> data, it looks like we are getting stability.Now, even when families have made a sec<strong>on</strong>dmove, <strong>the</strong>y tend to stay nearby.”Employment counseling. <strong>Housing</strong> programs generallyare not expected to boostemployment or income, but housingmobility programs now areheld to a higher standard andevaluated for <strong>the</strong>ir employmentoutcomes. Not surprisingly,MTO, HOPE VI and o<strong>the</strong>rgoals.dem<strong>on</strong>strati<strong>on</strong> programs of <strong>the</strong>1990s, taught that better employmentoutcomes can be expected—<strong>Program</strong> participant<strong>on</strong>ly if services and incentives proven to yield betteremployment results are provided al<strong>on</strong>g with stablehousing. 36 The <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong>Campaign secured supplemental funding from <strong>the</strong>Annie E. Casey Foundati<strong>on</strong> for employment servicesfor <strong>the</strong> subset of families participating in <strong>the</strong>enhanced mobility program. 37 The employmentservices include updating customized family assessmentsand family spending plans to pursue andtrack career progress, offering referrals to educati<strong>on</strong>aland career development resources to increaseparticipants’ ability to compete in <strong>the</strong> job market,and providing transportati<strong>on</strong> assistance, includingassistance to travel to <strong>on</strong>e stop job centers.Additi<strong>on</strong>ally, <strong>the</strong> Greater <strong>Baltimore</strong> Urban Leaguerecruited “champi<strong>on</strong> employers” willing to c<strong>on</strong>sidermobility clients for job openings.The number of employed participants in <strong>the</strong>“Casey caseload” more than doubled, from 26 inlate 2006 to 52 in June 2008. Fur<strong>the</strong>rmore, by mid2008, 25 of <strong>the</strong> 26 clients who already had a jobwhen first participating in <strong>the</strong> program obtained aMBQ is definitely dedicatedprofessi<strong>on</strong>als helping…people not <strong>on</strong>ly to receivehousing but to achieve lifeThese outcomes led MBQ to incorporate some of<strong>the</strong> employment interventi<strong>on</strong>s deployed in <strong>the</strong>Casey caseload program-wide. Now when familiesentering <strong>the</strong> program meet with <strong>the</strong>ir counselor tocreate <strong>the</strong>ir family plans, <strong>the</strong>y complete an employmentassessment form that helps identify <strong>the</strong> kindof employment supports <strong>the</strong>y need, whe<strong>the</strong>r it isGED tutoring, job training, child care or transportati<strong>on</strong>.If appropriate, counselors make referralsto <strong>the</strong> <strong>on</strong>e stop career centers in<strong>the</strong>ir current and future neighborhoods.Employment issuesare also discussed when counselorsmake <strong>the</strong>ir site visits.Transportati<strong>on</strong> assistance.From <strong>the</strong> outset, <strong>the</strong> Thomps<strong>on</strong>decree anticipated that <strong>the</strong> relativelyweak public transit systemin <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> regi<strong>on</strong> would be a barrier to fairhousing choice for mobility families. To tackle thisbarrier, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>has c<strong>on</strong>nected with an existing n<strong>on</strong>profit car ownershipprogram serving Maryland and Virginiacommunities called “Vehicles for Change,” whichoffers low-cost financing to purchase used cars,with m<strong>on</strong>thly payments ranging from $70-$98 fora 15-m<strong>on</strong>th loan. (Vehicles for Change is <strong>on</strong>e ofmany such programs in <strong>the</strong> country.) The AbellFoundati<strong>on</strong> is providing funds, matched byThomps<strong>on</strong> decree funds, so that working families in<strong>the</strong> mobility program can obtain used cars throughVehicles for Change. Funding from <strong>the</strong> AbellFoundati<strong>on</strong> is also paying for 75 percent of <strong>the</strong>driving school tuiti<strong>on</strong> costs for mobility programparticipants who request assistance. Driving schoolassistance is critical in Maryland, because it is <strong>on</strong>eof <strong>the</strong> few states that requires adults to take a formaldrivers’ educati<strong>on</strong> course in order to obtain alicense. 38 Many families cannot spare <strong>the</strong> $300-$400 cost for drivers’ educati<strong>on</strong>.Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 21


Participating family playing in new neighborhood.Photo: Andy Cook.“When a family chooses a place to live, <strong>the</strong>y are choosing a foundati<strong>on</strong> from whichto build <strong>the</strong>ir lives. They are not just choosing a home, <strong>the</strong>y are choosing a schoolfor <strong>the</strong>ir kids, <strong>the</strong>y are choosing transportati<strong>on</strong> opti<strong>on</strong>s and public services.”HUD Secretary Shaun D<strong>on</strong>ovan, prepared remarks at <strong>the</strong> Urban Land Institute Annual Forum, April 23, 2009.Outcomes:Improved Quality of Life for Children and FamiliesThe <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> ishelping families from very disadvantagedcommunities seek a better future. More than1,500 families have experienced a dramaticchange in envir<strong>on</strong>ment, moving from highly segregated,poor city neighborhoods to low-povertyracially integrated suburban and city neighborhoods.More than a thousand children are nowliving in suburban school districts with significantlybetter schools. Their neighborhoods havelow unemployment, fewer people <strong>on</strong> public assistance,and fewer high school drop outs. The new,more opportunity-affording neighborhoods haveinstilled new c<strong>on</strong>fidence and motivati<strong>on</strong> inprogram participants whose former neighborhoodsleft <strong>the</strong>m feeling stressed, unsafe, andunhealthy.Families Seek and Finda Dramatic Change inEnvir<strong>on</strong>mentBefore receiving <strong>the</strong>ir vouchers and moving,mobility program participants were predominantlyliving in communities with public housing complexesor high c<strong>on</strong>centrati<strong>on</strong>s of o<strong>the</strong>r subsidizedhousing or vouchers, typically in East and West<strong>Baltimore</strong> and Cherry Hill. About <strong>on</strong>e quarter of<strong>the</strong> families were current or former public housingresidents while <strong>the</strong> remainder were <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> waitinglist for public housing and/or housing vouchers, 39including some who were in public housing previouslyand/or were living in o<strong>the</strong>r types of HUDsubsidized housing. 40 These families sought,achieved, and embraced dramatic changes in <strong>the</strong>irliving envir<strong>on</strong>ments with resiliency and optimism.22Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign


Families apply for <strong>the</strong> mobility vouchers insearch of better and safer neighborhoods andschools, not just to find affordable housing.Participating families―some of who were commutingl<strong>on</strong>g distances to jobs in <strong>the</strong> suburbs―share acomm<strong>on</strong> desire to move to a safer neighborhoodwith better schools. Surveys and interviews withprogram participants who recently moved, c<strong>on</strong>sistentlyreveal that safety and <strong>the</strong> desire to escapedrug-related criminal activity are <strong>the</strong> primary reas<strong>on</strong>sfamilies apply to <strong>the</strong> program. For example,86 percent of recent movers surveyed in 2007 said<strong>the</strong>y applied to <strong>the</strong> program to gain access to betterand safer neighborhoods. Families with childrenare also motivated by <strong>the</strong> desire to obtain educati<strong>on</strong>alopportunities for <strong>the</strong>ir children. In <strong>the</strong> samesurvey, two-thirds (67 percent) cited <strong>the</strong> desire forbetter and safer schools as a reas<strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong>y applied to<strong>the</strong> program (am<strong>on</strong>g resp<strong>on</strong>dents with children, aneven higher percentage sought better schools). 41<strong>Housing</strong> related reas<strong>on</strong>s are usually sec<strong>on</strong>dary to<strong>the</strong>se factors, although <strong>the</strong> need or desire for biggeror better housing ascended to first in importance,slightly eclipsing better schools, in <strong>the</strong> 2008survey of recent movers.Families move throughout <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> metropolitanarea. According to MBQ administrativedata as of June 2009, 11 percent of families whohad made initial moves under <strong>the</strong> program used<strong>the</strong>ir voucher to stay within <strong>Baltimore</strong> City, andmove to lower poverty, racially integrated neighborhoods.The remaining 89 percent moved tosuburban counties, almost evenly split between<strong>Baltimore</strong> County and <strong>the</strong> outer suburbs.<strong>Baltimore</strong> County, <strong>the</strong> metro regi<strong>on</strong>’s largestcounty, virtually surrounding <strong>the</strong> city, received 43percent of first-time movers. Howard County wasnext with 23 percent. Also receiving a significantporti<strong>on</strong> of moving families were Anne ArundelCounty (12 percent) and Harford County (11 percent).One family moved to exurban CarrollCounty.Families move to dramatically different neighborhoods.<strong>Mobility</strong> program participants do notSuburban county neighborhood. Photo: Barbara Samuels.Origin and First MoveNeighborhood CharacteristicsOrigin NHexperience small changes in a neighborhood envir<strong>on</strong>mentwith a move. They experience a dramaticchange across a whole host of indicators. In <strong>the</strong>FirstMove NH2000 Census%White*** 16.0 68.7% Black*** 80.0 21.1% w/ HS Diploma*** 61.3 85.2% w/ BA*** 6.3 19.1Median HH income*** $24,182.00 $48,318.00% HH with Public Assist.*** 11.9 1.6% individuals below poverty*** 32.8 7.5% Renter Occupied <strong>Housing</strong>*** 59.5 41.0Median Rent*** $532 $640% Unemployed*** 17.0 4.4% Jobless*** 55.0 32.2Means significantly different: * p


80706050403020100Baseline and Thomps<strong>on</strong> MoveNeighborhoodsBaseline% BlackDeLuca and Rosenblatt, 2009% WhiteThomps<strong>on</strong>% PoorParticipating families find <strong>the</strong> better and saferneighborhoods <strong>the</strong>y desired when <strong>the</strong>y signedup for <strong>the</strong> program. <strong>Program</strong> participants view<strong>the</strong> differences in <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhoods as amarked improvement. A 2007 survey of programparticipants who recently moved found that 86percent said <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhood is better ormuch better than <strong>the</strong> neighborhood from which<strong>the</strong>y moved, with 63 percent saying much better.More than 95 percent of new movers surveyed in2008 said <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhood is better ormuch better, with 72 percent saying much better.Sixty-three percent of resp<strong>on</strong>dents to this surveyrated <strong>the</strong>ir neighborhood as an excellent or verygood place to raise children. Fur<strong>the</strong>r, a 2007 surveyfound no appreciable decline in percepti<strong>on</strong> of envir<strong>on</strong>mentalimprovement am<strong>on</strong>g participants whohad been in <strong>the</strong>ir new communities for 14 m<strong>on</strong>thsor more. 43words of <strong>on</strong>e participant, <strong>the</strong> program “gives you<strong>the</strong> chance to see ano<strong>the</strong>r side of <strong>the</strong> world.”On average, <strong>the</strong> neighborhoodsthat <strong>the</strong>se families left weream<strong>on</strong>g <strong>the</strong> most highly segregatedand disadvantaged in <strong>the</strong>metropolitan area where <strong>on</strong> average,80 percent of residents wereAfrican American, 17 percentwere unemployed, 33 percentwere living in poverty, and <strong>the</strong> median householdincome was $24,182. More than <strong>on</strong>e in eight residents(12 percent) were <strong>on</strong> public assistance. Only61 percent of adults had a high school diploma and<strong>on</strong>ly 6.3 percent had a bachelor’s degree.The areas are nicer, cleanand you d<strong>on</strong>’t have to worryabout crimes being d<strong>on</strong>earound your children.—<strong>Program</strong> participantParticipants report that <strong>the</strong>y are satisfied with<strong>the</strong>ir new homes and neighborhoods.Traditi<strong>on</strong>ally, <strong>the</strong> successof any affordable housingprogram is determined bywhe<strong>the</strong>r it is providing decenthousing in a safe and healthyenvir<strong>on</strong>ment. From a fair housingperspective, it is also critical toask whe<strong>the</strong>r a housing programgoes bey<strong>on</strong>d that basic goal by enabling minorityclients to exercise <strong>the</strong> same breadth of housing2007 New Mover Survey Comparis<strong>on</strong> ofOld Neighborhood to New Neighborhood60When <strong>the</strong>y moved, mobility program participantswent to neighborhoods that, <strong>on</strong> average, were 21percent black and 69 percent white, had an unemploymentrate of just 4.4 percent, a poverty rate ofjust 7.5 percent, and a median household incomeof $48,318. Only 1.6 percent of <strong>the</strong> householdswere receiving public assistance. Eighty-five percentof <strong>the</strong> neighborhood’s residents graduatedfrom high school and 19 percent graduated fromcollege. 42N=9450403020100MuchBetterBetter Same WorseNumber of Resp<strong>on</strong>dentsMuchWorse24New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


choices and attain <strong>the</strong> same level of neighborhoodsatisfacti<strong>on</strong> as white assisted-households. 44 Inannual surveys and follow-up interviews,participants in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong>housing mobility program c<strong>on</strong>sistentlyreport high levels of satisfacti<strong>on</strong> with<strong>the</strong>ir new homes and neighborhoods.For example, surveys of program participantswho recently moved foundthat 85 percent of 2007 resp<strong>on</strong>dentsand 90 percent of 2008 resp<strong>on</strong>dentswere satisfied or very satisfied with<strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhood, with mostsaying very satisfied. Similarly 81 percentof 2007 resp<strong>on</strong>dents and 84 percentof 2008 resp<strong>on</strong>dents reported <strong>the</strong>ywere satisfied or very satisfied with<strong>the</strong>ir house or apartment.Participants value <strong>the</strong> diversity of<strong>the</strong>ir new neighbors and community.One might expect participants tobe satisfied with <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhoods becauseof <strong>the</strong> improved public safety, better schools, orricher array of amenities offered by more affluentcommunities. Indeed, when participants who werestill in <strong>the</strong>ir initial program placement for 14m<strong>on</strong>ths or more were asked in 2007 what aspectsof <strong>the</strong>ir neighborhood <strong>the</strong>y found to be positive,<strong>the</strong>se factors are cited by large majorities ofresp<strong>on</strong>dents. But perhaps surprisingly,neighborhood diversityranked <strong>the</strong> highest. Eighty percentof resp<strong>on</strong>dents cited a differentmix of races and cultures as apositive aspect of <strong>the</strong>ir neighborhood,slightly more than <strong>the</strong> percentageof resp<strong>on</strong>dents who citedneighborhood safety andschools. 45Even participants who subsequently moved valued<strong>the</strong> diversity of <strong>the</strong>ir initial program neighborhood.The mix of different backgrounds, races, andcultures was cited as a positive characteristic of <strong>the</strong>initial program neighborhood by 73 percent ofresp<strong>on</strong>dents to a 2007 survey of sec<strong>on</strong>d movers,Yes, it is much better thanregular public housing &secti<strong>on</strong> 8. They give you achoice to live in betterneighborhoods.—<strong>Program</strong> participantranking close behind safety, quiet and cleanlinesscited by 75 percent. 462007 Post Placement SurveyPositive Aspects of New NeighborhoodMix of DifferentBackground/Race/CultureSchoolsSafe/Less Crime and DrugsFriendly Neighbors/PeopleQuiet/Clean NeighborhoodEnvir<strong>on</strong>ment for ChildrenAccess to Shopping/ServicesGreen Space/Parks/Fresh AirAccess to JobsN=680 10 20 30 40 50 60Number of Resp<strong>on</strong>dentsAlthough this may have been <strong>the</strong> first time participantslived in a diverse community, <strong>the</strong> 2007 surveyresults suggest that participants may seek outdiversity in future moves. When asked to identifyimportant aspects of a neighborhood when choosinga place to live, 68 percent of l<strong>on</strong>ger-term stayersand 52 percent of sec<strong>on</strong>d movers cited a mix ofdifferent races and cultures. 47Only a small minority in eachgroup said it was important thatmost people in <strong>the</strong> neighborhoodbe of <strong>the</strong>ir same background, raceor culture.For <strong>the</strong> most part, <strong>the</strong> suburbshave not been <strong>the</strong> hostile envir<strong>on</strong>mentthat families fearedand opp<strong>on</strong>ents predicted. Most participantsdescribe <strong>the</strong>ir neighborhood as friendly and appreciatethis as <strong>on</strong>e of <strong>the</strong> most positive aspects of<strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhood. <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g>s of racial harassmenthave been isolated and rare. In 2007 surveys,nearly three-fourths (72 percent) of resp<strong>on</strong>dentswho had been in <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhoods for 14Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 25


m<strong>on</strong>ths or more, and more than a half (52 percent)of those who had made a sec<strong>on</strong>d move, cited <strong>the</strong>friendliness of people and neighbors as a positiveaspect of <strong>the</strong>ir initial placement neighborhood. 48Moreover, when asked todescribe what <strong>the</strong>y found difficultabout <strong>the</strong>ir initial program neighborhood,<strong>on</strong>ly six percent ofl<strong>on</strong>ger-term stayers and 26 percentof sec<strong>on</strong>d movers citedproblems with neighbors. Onlynine percent of stayers and 33percent of movers citedunfriendly or prejudicedpeople. 49Participants overcomechallenges of a newenvir<strong>on</strong>ment. Whileparticipants are satisfiedwith <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhoodsoverall, <strong>the</strong>irmoves to neighborhoodsthat are so dramaticallydifferent from familiarsurroundings, and distantfrom family and friends,inevitably present challenges.However, <strong>the</strong> survey data suggests that <strong>the</strong>resp<strong>on</strong>dents are more resilient, and that <strong>the</strong>ir transiti<strong>on</strong>less daunting, than predicted.When asked to describe <strong>the</strong> difficult aspects of<strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhood, 34 percent of l<strong>on</strong>gertermparticipants surveyed in 2007 failed toanswer <strong>the</strong> questi<strong>on</strong> or wrote in nothing.Distance from family and friends, <strong>the</strong> difficultymost often identified, was cited by <strong>on</strong>ly 35 percentof resp<strong>on</strong>dents. Similarly, less than <strong>on</strong>e-thirdof resp<strong>on</strong>dents (31 percent) said that being nearfamily and friends was important in choosing aplace to live. 50 The social networks of family andfriends maintained by low-income families areoften assumed to be unequivocally supportive andsustaining. But as noted by MIT professor XavierHoward County has so muchto offer. We love living here.The community andneighborhood is great andwe feel safe here.—<strong>Program</strong> participantde Souza Briggs, <strong>the</strong>se social networks can functi<strong>on</strong>in both positive and negative ways. 51 Thesurvey results seem to bear out Briggs’s morenuanced picture.The regi<strong>on</strong>’s transportati<strong>on</strong> systemwas expected to present asignificant structural challengefor people without cars. Justunder half of resp<strong>on</strong>dents to <strong>the</strong>ACLU’s 2007 new mover surveyreported owning a car, and overhalf said <strong>the</strong>y have a driver’slicense.As expected, surveyresp<strong>on</strong>dents also reportthat <strong>the</strong>y are leastsatisfied with <strong>the</strong> transportati<strong>on</strong>opti<strong>on</strong>s in <strong>the</strong>irnew neighborhoods. Forexample, 32 percent ofrecent movers surveyed in2007 said <strong>the</strong>y weredissatisfied or veryHigh school in suburban community. Photo: Barbara dissatisfied with <strong>the</strong> transportati<strong>on</strong>opti<strong>on</strong>s in <strong>the</strong>irSamuels.neighborhood, decliningto 23 percent in 2008. Unsurprisingly, those withcars register higher levels of satisfacti<strong>on</strong> with <strong>the</strong>irtransportati<strong>on</strong> opti<strong>on</strong>s than those without. Havinga driver’s license and living in a county with a moredeveloped local bus system also c<strong>on</strong>tributes tohigher satisfacti<strong>on</strong> with transportati<strong>on</strong> opti<strong>on</strong>s. 52This suggests that participants are resourceful insolving transportati<strong>on</strong> challenges, whe<strong>the</strong>r throughborrowing a car or taking <strong>the</strong> bus. Indeed, whenasked to identify <strong>the</strong> difficulties <strong>the</strong>y have experiencedin <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhood, <strong>on</strong>ly 25 percentof l<strong>on</strong>ger-term participants, and 28 percent ofsec<strong>on</strong>d movers, cited difficulties finding adequatepublic transportati<strong>on</strong>. Nineteen percent of l<strong>on</strong>gertermparticipants and 41 percent of sec<strong>on</strong>d moverscited <strong>the</strong> lack of a car or driver’s license as adifficulty.26New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Benefits Go Bey<strong>on</strong>d <strong>the</strong> BasicGoals of Better <strong>Housing</strong> in a SafeEnvir<strong>on</strong>mentFor participating families, <strong>the</strong>ir moves havenumerous, significant benefits. While it is too earlyfor l<strong>on</strong>gitudinal studies to track changes in outcomemeasures, participants report improvements,large and small, to <strong>the</strong>ir lives. These benefits gobey<strong>on</strong>d <strong>the</strong> basic goals of better housing in a safeenvir<strong>on</strong>ment to include o<strong>the</strong>r improvements infamilies’ quality of life, health, and educati<strong>on</strong>al andemployment opportunities.Participants report improvements in quality oflife. Eighty-five percent of recent movers surveyedin 2008 said that <strong>the</strong>ir quality of life improved following<strong>the</strong>ir move to a new neighborhood. Asexamples of such quality of life improvements, 86percent said <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhood offers a betterenvir<strong>on</strong>ment for children and 62 percent said itoffers more green space andfresh air. Nearly 80 percent said<strong>the</strong>y feel safer, more peaceful,and less stressed. Nearly 60 percentof program participants surveyedsaid <strong>the</strong>y feel moremotivated. Participants’ commentslink <strong>the</strong> change in envir<strong>on</strong>mentto this sense ofmotivati<strong>on</strong>. As described by <strong>on</strong>esurvey resp<strong>on</strong>dent, <strong>the</strong> program“gives you a great change to anew and better envir<strong>on</strong>ment andmore motivati<strong>on</strong> with a betterneighborhood.”Families report health gains. For many families,improved feelings of physical and mental healthare an important quality of life improvement.Families in disadvantaged neighborhoods are athigher risk for disease and earlier death likely dueto direct physical influences (such as exposure totoxins), <strong>the</strong> cumulative stress arising from living inunsafe neighborhoods with limited resources, and<strong>the</strong> difficulty of sustaining healthy habits with littleResearch increasinglysuggests that exposure tocrime and violence has farreaching c<strong>on</strong>sequences, suchas persistent anxiety andemoti<strong>on</strong>al trauma.Margery Austin Turner, Lynette A.Rawlings, “Promoting NeighborhoodDiversity: Benefits, Barriers, andStrategies,” Urban Institute (August2009) at p. 2.Participating family. Photo: Andy Cook.access to good grocery stores and few safe places toexercise. 53 In <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>the</strong> incidence of asthmaam<strong>on</strong>g children living in public housing and o<strong>the</strong>rpoor neighborhoods is very high. There are alsowide variati<strong>on</strong>s in life expectancy and health outcomesbetween <strong>Baltimore</strong>’s poorneighborhoods―including <strong>the</strong>origin neighborhoods of mostmobility participants―and <strong>the</strong>more affluent areas of <strong>the</strong> city.The <strong>Baltimore</strong> City HealthDepartment reports that for every$10,000 more in neighborhoodincome, residents live 3.4 yearsl<strong>on</strong>ger. 54 In <strong>the</strong> neighborhoodswith <strong>the</strong> shortest life expectancy,home to a large c<strong>on</strong>centrati<strong>on</strong> ofpublic and subsidized housing,residents died more than 20 yearsearlier than residents of <strong>the</strong> affluentwhite neighborhoods of North <strong>Baltimore</strong>. 55Research shows that health gains are an immediatebenefit of leaving disadvantaged neighborhoodsbehind. Although <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong>Campaign is planning a health improvement programfor <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> housing mobility programfamilies, many families are already reporting healthgains.Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 27


New Optimism for Her KidsMotivates Mom to Find WorkMichelle Starks doesn’t need a statisticianto tell her things have changed for herand her family since <strong>the</strong>y left <strong>the</strong>ir formerpublic housing complex in <strong>Baltimore</strong>’sCherry Hill Homes, a sprawling complexof more than 1,500 public housing units,for a home in Harford County’s Bel Aircommunity. She joined <strong>the</strong> mobility programbecause she “wanted more for mykids,” who are ages 9, 8, and 3 years old.Now that she has moved, she says shefeels more motivated, noting that althoughshe was unemployed when shelived in Cherry Hill, she has obtained a jobas a cashier in a “big box” retail store lessthan a mile from her new home. She is involvedin <strong>the</strong> PTA at her children’s newschool in Bel Air and says she is optimisticfor her children, who are doing betterin school.“Living in <strong>the</strong> projects you feel like you’restuck,” she explains. “You do what yougotta do for your kids regardless. Iwanted to get out so bad, I just couldn’tdo it by myself.” ■C<strong>on</strong>sistent with research findings, nearly 40 percentof recent movers resp<strong>on</strong>ding to surveys in2007 and 2008 said <strong>the</strong>y feel healthier. Am<strong>on</strong>g2007 survey resp<strong>on</strong>dents who had lived in <strong>the</strong>irnew homes for a l<strong>on</strong>ger period of time (14 m<strong>on</strong>thsto four years), 40 percent said <strong>the</strong>ir children’shealth was better or much better, with most sayingmuch better. 56 In interviews, parents frequently citea dramatic reducti<strong>on</strong> in <strong>the</strong>ir children’s asthmaattacks after moving to a suburban area with moreopen space and better air quality.The 2008 survey resp<strong>on</strong>ses describing improvementsto quality of life suggest improvements tomental health. Eighty percent of resp<strong>on</strong>dentsreported feeling more peaceful and less stressedand 78 percent said that <strong>the</strong>y feel safer and are lessworried about crime. In particular, parents pointedto <strong>the</strong> relief <strong>the</strong>y feel at moving <strong>the</strong>ir children to asafer envir<strong>on</strong>ment, in c<strong>on</strong>trast with <strong>the</strong> anxiety<strong>the</strong>y experienced trying to protect <strong>the</strong>ir childrenfrom <strong>the</strong> violence and negative peer influences in<strong>the</strong>ir former neighborhoods. “I was stressedbefore―every day, all day” says Nicole McD<strong>on</strong>ald.“It is especially stressful when you have to c<strong>on</strong>fineyour child to…<strong>the</strong> house because you’re terrified.”As cited earlier, more than half (58 percent) ofrecent movers resp<strong>on</strong>ding to <strong>the</strong> 2008 surveyreported feeling more motivated after moving towhat <strong>the</strong>y described as a new and better envir<strong>on</strong>ment.In <strong>the</strong> words of <strong>on</strong>e resp<strong>on</strong>dent, <strong>the</strong> program“motivates a pers<strong>on</strong> to want more out of lifeand do better.” These feelings of greater motivati<strong>on</strong>are c<strong>on</strong>sistent with findings of reduced depressi<strong>on</strong>am<strong>on</strong>g adults (and teenage girls) that movedto lower poverty neighborhoods under MTO. 57In additi<strong>on</strong> to enhancing quality of life, healthimprovements have been found to be a critical prerequisiteto increasing family self-sufficiency. Forexample, a nati<strong>on</strong>al study of families who wererelocated when <strong>the</strong>ir public housing complexeswere redeveloped under HOPE VI found thatpoor health (such as severe mobility problems,depressi<strong>on</strong>, and asthma) was <strong>the</strong> biggest obstacle toobtaining and keeping a job. 58Families are accessing better schools. Schoolimprovement is an important marker for <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>. Under <strong>the</strong>program, families are moving to better resourcedand higher performing suburban school districts;1,277 children of program families are now livingin suburban school districts. 59According to a Johns Hopkins analysis of familieswho first moved as of September 2007, elementaryschools in <strong>the</strong> new neighborhoods had 25 percentmore students who were scoring proficient orhigher in state achievement tests than <strong>the</strong> schoolsserving <strong>the</strong> families’ original city neighborhoods.28New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Free and Reduced Lunch Eligible Students in Local Elementary SchoolAverage Percent Free and Reduced Lunch Eligible students in <strong>the</strong> schoolAverage % FRLE studentsNOrigin Elementary School 83.7 1021First Move Elementary School 33.2 1037FRLE data from 2004. Differences in number of families due to inability to geocode some addresses.Distributi<strong>on</strong> of Families by Percent Poor Children in <strong>the</strong> SchoolPercent Free and Reduced Percent of All Percent of AllLunch Eligible Students in Families at Families at FirstLocal Elementary School Origin (n=1021) Move (n=1037)More than 80% 78.0 5.950-80% 20.3 27.730-50% 1.1 7.510-30% 0.7 34.8Less than 10% 0.0 24.1Total 100.1 100Percentages do not total to 100 due to rounding differences. Differences in number of families due to inabilityto geocode some addresses.DeLuca and Rosenblatt, 2009These suburban schools also had fewer poor studentseligible for <strong>the</strong> free or reduced lunch program;before moving, an average of 84 percent of<strong>the</strong> student body was eligible for free or reducedlunch; after moving, this average dropped to 33percent. 60Parents report high levels of satisfacti<strong>on</strong> with<strong>the</strong>ir childrens’ schools. As noted earlier, <strong>the</strong>quest for better and safer schools is <strong>on</strong>e of <strong>the</strong> primaryreas<strong>on</strong>s participants sign up for <strong>the</strong> mobilityprogram. Ninety-three percent of recent moversresp<strong>on</strong>ding to a 2007 survey, and 84 percent of2008 survey resp<strong>on</strong>dents, said that <strong>the</strong>y were satisfiedor very satisfied with <strong>the</strong> schools in <strong>the</strong>ir newcommunity. These high levels of school satisfacti<strong>on</strong>appear to endure over <strong>the</strong> l<strong>on</strong>g term. Eighty-ninepercent of parents surveyed in 2007, who had beenin <strong>the</strong>ir placement neighborhood for 14 or morem<strong>on</strong>ths, said <strong>the</strong>ir children appear to be learningbetter or much better in <strong>the</strong>ir new schools, with55 percent reporting much better schoolperformance. 61Children are reported to be doing better inschool. Research shows that attending lowerpoverty schools benefits low-income and minoritychildren, suggesting that children who attend suburbanschool districts under <strong>the</strong> mobility programcan do better in school, graduate at higher rates,and have better access to jobs than <strong>the</strong>ir inner citypeers. 62 While it is too early to trace changes inparticipating families’ educati<strong>on</strong>al attainment,<strong>Baltimore</strong>’s mobility families are already reportingthat <strong>the</strong>ir children are doing better in school. Nineout of ten parents surveyed in 2007, who had beenin <strong>the</strong>ir placement neighborhood for 14 or morem<strong>on</strong>ths, said <strong>the</strong>ir children appear to be learningbetter or much better in <strong>the</strong>ir new schools, and 55percent of surveyed parents, who had been in <strong>the</strong>irPoverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 29


Elementary School Reading and Math PerformanceMean Percent of student body scoring proficient or better in math and readingMath Reading NOrigin Elementary School 44.4% 53.6% 1021First Move Elementary School 68.6% 75.8% 1037Test score data from 2004. Differences in number of families due to inability to geocode some addresses.Distributi<strong>on</strong> of families by percent of math and reading proficient peersin <strong>the</strong> local elementary schoolPercent of All Families Percent of All Familiesat Origin (n=1021) at First Move (n=1037)% Student body proficient in MATHMore than 80% 1.2 32.960-80% 10.7 39.840-60% 48.5 26.320-40% 38.7 1.0Less than 20% 1.0 0.0Total 100.1 100% Student body proficient in READINGMore than 80% 2.8 44.760-80% 22.9 37.340-60% 62.4 17.920-40% 11.9 0.1Less than 20% 0.0 0.0Total 100 100Test score data from 2004. Percentages do not total to 100 due to rounding differences. Differences innumber of families due to inability to geocode some addresses.DeLuca and Rosenblatt, 2009placement neighborhood for at least 14 m<strong>on</strong>ths, mented evidence that many children moving toreported an increase in schoollower poverty, integrated schoolsI feel like <strong>the</strong>y have helpedperformance. Even those withneed time to adjust. 64adolescent children reported me give my kids a better life.that <strong>the</strong>ir teenagers seemed toFamilies are starting to tapbe adjusting to <strong>the</strong>ir new school This program has changed <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhoods’(72 percent) and neighborhoodmy life. My future is brighter,social resources. <strong>Baltimore</strong>’s(82 percent). 63 While <strong>the</strong>se gainsmobility families are also reportingincreasing engagement inare self-reported and based <strong>on</strong> my surroundings are<strong>the</strong> parent’s percepti<strong>on</strong> of how peaceful & beautiful. community amenities. As part of<strong>the</strong>ir children are faring, <strong>the</strong>y<strong>the</strong> initial and post-move follow—<strong>Program</strong> participantare still notable, given <strong>the</strong> docu-up visits, MBQ provides families30New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


with orientati<strong>on</strong> to <strong>the</strong>ir new communityand informati<strong>on</strong> and referralsto community resources.While 19 percent of recent moverssay <strong>the</strong>y are involved in communityactivities (most comm<strong>on</strong>ly volunteeringat <strong>the</strong>ir child’s school orjoining <strong>the</strong> PTA or a church), 27percent of resp<strong>on</strong>dents to a 2007survey of those who had lived in<strong>the</strong>ir community for 14 m<strong>on</strong>ths ormore reported involvement incommunity activities, usuallychurch or <strong>the</strong> PTA at <strong>the</strong>ir child’sschool, and 23 percent said <strong>the</strong>ywere involved in an adult educati<strong>on</strong>or training program. Fifty-threepercent of l<strong>on</strong>ger-term residentssurveyed in 2007 also said that <strong>the</strong>irteenage children were involved inafter school or community activities,most comm<strong>on</strong>ly sports orchurch. 65Very SatisfiedMuch BetterSatisfiedSomewhat SatisfiedUnsatisfiedVery UnsatisfiedN=68Better2007 New Mover SurveySatisfacti<strong>on</strong> with New Schools0 10 20 30 40 50Number of Resp<strong>on</strong>dents2007 Post Placement SurveyRate Children’s Learning in Current SchoolFamilies show preliminary signsof attaching to suburban jobmarkets. For years, jobs have beengrowing more rapidly in <strong>the</strong>nati<strong>on</strong>’s suburbs than its cities, withmany of those suburban jobs in <strong>the</strong>N=55service sector and unskilled categoriessuitable for people withouthigher educati<strong>on</strong>. 66 Some inner-cityfamilies had managed to find entryleveland service sector jobs in <strong>the</strong> suburbs but,prior to <strong>the</strong>ir move were forced to make l<strong>on</strong>g commutesbecause <strong>the</strong>y couldn’t afford to live where<strong>the</strong>y worked. O<strong>the</strong>rs never had access to <strong>the</strong> suburbanjob market. The <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong> is providing early evidence that as moverslive in opportunity areas <strong>the</strong>y are starting to access<strong>the</strong> suburban job market. Fifty-three percent ofrecent movers surveyed in 2007 said that <strong>the</strong>y wereemployed, with half of those employed reportingworking in <strong>the</strong> suburbs. In c<strong>on</strong>trast, 61 percent ofl<strong>on</strong>ger-term participants said <strong>the</strong>y were employed,SameWorseMuch Worse0 5 10 15 20 25 30Number of Resp<strong>on</strong>dentswith 61 percent of those identifying a suburban joblocati<strong>on</strong>. 67 Undoubtedly, <strong>the</strong> employmentprospects of program participants have sufferedduring <strong>the</strong> current recessi<strong>on</strong>. However, programofficials expect to build <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong>se early outcomes as<strong>the</strong> ec<strong>on</strong>omy improves and services broadenbey<strong>on</strong>d a focus <strong>on</strong> housing counseling to includenascent efforts to more deliberately c<strong>on</strong>nect familiesto <strong>the</strong> employment, educati<strong>on</strong>, transportati<strong>on</strong>and child care resources in <strong>the</strong>ir communities. Ashighlighted earlier, employment doubled am<strong>on</strong>g<strong>the</strong> small set of clients receiving employment servicesas part of a package of enhanced services.Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 31


Family of Four Boys Reach TheirPotential in Suburban SchoolsCandice Brown may have moved herfamily to Columbia in Howard County justin time. Brown’s sec<strong>on</strong>d eldest was doingwell academically in his city middleschool but had begun to misbehave andto hang out with “<strong>the</strong> wr<strong>on</strong>g type of kids,”she says. When <strong>the</strong>y moved and he hadto start high school in a new community,he had a hard time, but Brown found hima counselor and a tutor and now, age 15and in <strong>the</strong> 10th grade, he is doing well,she says. Her two youngest boys, <strong>on</strong>e ofwhom had problems in his city elementaryschool, are both doing well and inhigher level classes in <strong>the</strong>ir Columbia elementaryschool. Her youngest, who is 9,is in <strong>the</strong> school choir, and her o<strong>the</strong>r boy,10, plays drums in <strong>the</strong> band. Her oldests<strong>on</strong>, who failed 9th grade in a city highschool, is <strong>on</strong> track to graduate from highschool and wants to go to college.Brown, who works as a retail clerk at abig box store in Columbia did not attendcollege herself but is determined to helphim reach that goal. ■80706050403020100N=832007 New Mover SurveyPlan to Remain in New HomeYesNoNumber of Resp<strong>on</strong>dentsParticipants appreciate <strong>the</strong>ir opportunities.Participants resp<strong>on</strong>ding to <strong>the</strong> ACLU’s client surveysshow a deep appreciati<strong>on</strong> for <strong>the</strong> servicesoffered to help <strong>the</strong>m change <strong>the</strong>ir lives. “This programis <strong>on</strong>e of <strong>the</strong> best things that ever happenedto my family and me,” <strong>on</strong>e participant said. “Wecould be no happier… This was a blessing and Iappreciate <strong>the</strong> help.” 68 Ano<strong>the</strong>r explained, “I have abetter relati<strong>on</strong>ship with my children because I amproviding <strong>the</strong>m with a better life.” 69 One pers<strong>on</strong>said simply, “I am proof that this program works.”A quote from a participant surveyed recently perhapssums it up best: “This program … gives those[in] poverty a chance to see and experience ameasure of pride and dignity in self andenvir<strong>on</strong>ment.”Stability and Retenti<strong>on</strong> ProvideFoundati<strong>on</strong> for SuccessBy helping adults and children remain in opportunityneighborhoods, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong><strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> is helping set <strong>the</strong> foundati<strong>on</strong>for <strong>the</strong>ir l<strong>on</strong>g-term success. Families who are stablyhoused in high-opportunity neighborhoods forl<strong>on</strong>ger periods of time are more likely to attainl<strong>on</strong>g-term gains in educati<strong>on</strong>al attainment, health,and self-sufficiency.Most families are ei<strong>the</strong>r staying in <strong>the</strong>ir originalunits or moving to o<strong>the</strong>r opportunity areas.Given <strong>the</strong> high neighborhood satisfacti<strong>on</strong> and <strong>the</strong>growing array of post-placement services offeredunder <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>,it is not surprising that an increasing number offamilies are remaining stably housed in opportunitycommunities for l<strong>on</strong>ger periods of time.Renters in general and <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucherholders in particular are much more mobile, withas many as half moving every year, says MBQ’s JimEvans. 70 In comparis<strong>on</strong>, as of September2007―four and a half years after <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong><strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>’s incepti<strong>on</strong> and before <strong>the</strong>implementati<strong>on</strong> of “sec<strong>on</strong>d-move” counselingprogram-wide―62 percent of families that had32New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


initially moved more thana year previously werestill in <strong>the</strong>ir originalunit. 71 Of all of <strong>the</strong> familieswho could havemoved at some pointafter <strong>the</strong> end of <strong>the</strong>irfirst-year’s lease, <strong>on</strong>ly 19percent moved from <strong>the</strong>suburbs back to <strong>the</strong> city.Even <strong>the</strong>n, participantsweren’t moving back to<strong>the</strong>ir original city neighborhoods.On average,families who made a sec<strong>on</strong>dmove relocated t<strong>on</strong>eighborhoods withhigher African Americanpopulati<strong>on</strong>s than <strong>the</strong>irfirst move neighborhood.These sec<strong>on</strong>d move neighborhoodswere still less segregatedand significantly less poor than<strong>the</strong> neighborhoods in which <strong>the</strong>family lived before <strong>the</strong>y joined<strong>the</strong> program. 72 Even though<strong>the</strong>se sec<strong>on</strong>d move neighborhoodareas were slightly higher inpoverty and less integrated, <strong>the</strong>ywere just as safe as <strong>the</strong>ir initialprogram neighborhood. Theupshot is that even without sec<strong>on</strong>dmove counseling, participatingfamilies were still living inneighborhoods that look far different―farmore racially integrated, far lesspoor―than <strong>the</strong> neighborhood in which <strong>the</strong>y livedbefore <strong>the</strong>y began <strong>the</strong>ir journey. 73MBQ participant at home. Photo: Barbara Samuels.The launch of program-wide sec<strong>on</strong>d move counselingin January 2008 appears to be helping evenmore families stay in, or return to, high opportunityareas. According to MBQ administrative data,before January 2008, most sec<strong>on</strong>d (or third) moveswere from high opportunity to low opportunityareas. Between January and August 2009 thatThe quality of neighborhoodc<strong>on</strong>diti<strong>on</strong>s — and <strong>the</strong>ir role inaccessing or denyingopportunity — affects <strong>the</strong> lifechances of all families.john powell, et al. “Communities ofOpportunity: A Framework for a MoreEquitable and Sustainable Future forAll,” Kirwan Institute for <strong>the</strong> Studyof Race and Ethnicity, Ohio StateUniversity (2007).number dropped to lessthan a third of moveswere from high opportunityto low opportunityareas. 74 Indeed, <strong>the</strong> familiesmost pr<strong>on</strong>e to recurrentmoves are those thatpreviously made sec<strong>on</strong>dmoves to low opportunityareas of <strong>the</strong> city of<strong>Baltimore</strong>. <strong>Program</strong> officialsnow see increasingnumbers of <strong>the</strong>se familiestake advantage of sec<strong>on</strong>dmove counseling toreturn to higher opportunityareas, a trend <strong>the</strong>yhope will c<strong>on</strong>tinue. 75Sec<strong>on</strong>d moves areprompted by ordinary housingand landlord issues. Insight <strong>on</strong><strong>the</strong> reas<strong>on</strong>s behind sec<strong>on</strong>d movesis fueling optimism that sec<strong>on</strong>dmove counseling will c<strong>on</strong>tinue toincrease opportunity moves.Data from <strong>the</strong> Moving toOpportunity program of <strong>the</strong>1990s led some observers tospeculate that mobility programsw<strong>on</strong>’t have a lasting impactbecause some families are motivatedto move back to <strong>the</strong>ir originalneighborhoods to be closerto family, support networks, andfamiliar surroundings. But <strong>the</strong> noti<strong>on</strong> that participantsare fleeing suburban areas because <strong>the</strong>y feeluncomfortable or want to rejoin family and friendsis not supported by <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong><strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> administrative data or ACLUsurveys. Both sources indicate that <strong>the</strong> primaryreas<strong>on</strong> families decide to move is <strong>the</strong> need ordesire for a larger unit, or to move up from anapartment to a house. 76 Fifty-three percent ofordinary course sec<strong>on</strong>d movers (those who movedby choice ra<strong>the</strong>r than because <strong>the</strong>y were in build-Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 33


ings that were sold) surveyedcited wanting a better/biggerhouse or apartment as <strong>on</strong>e of<strong>the</strong>ir three main reas<strong>on</strong>s formoving. No o<strong>the</strong>r factor wascited by more than 30 percent ofsurvey resp<strong>on</strong>dents. This data,which is c<strong>on</strong>sistent with findingsfrom <strong>the</strong> interim report of <strong>the</strong>MTO program likely reflects inpart <strong>the</strong> dearth of affordableunits with two or more bedroomsin suburban areas. 77 Onlya small percentage of moversstated a desire to move due todiscomfort with <strong>the</strong> neighborhood,and anecdotal reportsfrom program officials suggestthat most of those were familiesliving in <strong>Baltimore</strong> City’s higheropportunityneighborhoods whosaid <strong>the</strong>y wanted to move awayfrom crime and drug activity.Child of MBQ participant at play.Photo: Andy Cook.As discussed earlier in thisreport, families who made sec<strong>on</strong>dmoves and those whostayed in <strong>the</strong>ir initial placementresidence expressed high levelsof satisfacti<strong>on</strong> with <strong>the</strong>ir initialprogram neighborhoods andsimilarly describe its positiveattributes. While sec<strong>on</strong>d moversare less likely to describe <strong>the</strong>irinitial neighborhood as friendly,and are more likely to reportproblems with neighbors; <strong>on</strong>ly14 percent of sec<strong>on</strong>d moverssurveyed said this was <strong>on</strong>e of <strong>the</strong>main reas<strong>on</strong>s for <strong>the</strong>ir move.While distance from family andfriends topped <strong>the</strong> list of <strong>the</strong>most difficult aspects of <strong>the</strong> new neighborhood,am<strong>on</strong>g both groups, it was cited by fewer than halfof resp<strong>on</strong>dents in each group. A few resp<strong>on</strong>dentsin both groups cite being “near to family andSegregated housing patternsnot <strong>on</strong>ly separate white andminority neighborhoods…[R]esidential segregati<strong>on</strong>distances minority jobseekers(particularly blacks) fromareas of employment growth.Margery Austin Turner and KarinFortuny, Residential Segregati<strong>on</strong> andLow-Income Working Families, UrbanInstitute, February 2009friends” as an important factor inchoosing a neighborhood. 78Sec<strong>on</strong>d moves away from highopportunity areas reflect marketchallenges and influences.Surveys and data <strong>on</strong> sec<strong>on</strong>dmovers and <strong>the</strong>ir attitudestowards <strong>the</strong>ir initial and currentneighborhoods, suggest thatmoves from initial suburbanplacements are more often drivenby housing-related factors, likeunit size. This issue can c<strong>on</strong>ceivablybe addressed, in c<strong>on</strong>trast toaddressing social factors bey<strong>on</strong>da mobility program’s c<strong>on</strong>trol.Once a family embarks <strong>on</strong> amove, <strong>the</strong>y are <strong>the</strong>n subject tomarket factors and o<strong>the</strong>r structuralc<strong>on</strong>straints that impact <strong>the</strong>irability to find a desirable unit in ahigher opportunity area, especiallyif <strong>the</strong>y do not have <strong>the</strong> benefitof housing search assistancewith <strong>the</strong> sec<strong>on</strong>d move.Therefore, <strong>the</strong> locati<strong>on</strong> of a sec<strong>on</strong>dmove may reflect less avoucher holder’s choice or preferencethan <strong>the</strong> trade-offs factoredin searching for housing.Indeed, in a 2007 survey, <strong>on</strong>ly 17percent of sec<strong>on</strong>d movers whomade a suburb-to-city movebefore sec<strong>on</strong>d move serviceswere offered program wide said<strong>the</strong>y moved to <strong>the</strong> neighborhoodthat was <strong>the</strong>ir first choice, comparedwith 67 percent of familieswho made a sec<strong>on</strong>d move to orwithin a suburban county. 79Compared to families moving to or within <strong>the</strong>suburbs, sec<strong>on</strong>d movers who moved from <strong>the</strong> suburbsto <strong>the</strong> city were much less likely to say that<strong>the</strong>y are very satisfied with <strong>the</strong>ir sec<strong>on</strong>d move34New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


2007 2nd Mover SurveySatisfacti<strong>on</strong> with Current Neighborhood by Directi<strong>on</strong> of Move504030County to Countyand City to CountyCity to CityCounty to City20100Very SatisfiedN=69SatisfiedSomewhatSatisfiedPercent of Resp<strong>on</strong>dentsUnsatisfiedVeryUnsatisfied2007 2nd Mover SurveyRate Neighborhood as a Place to Raise Children by Directi<strong>on</strong> of Move4035302520151050ExcellentVery GoodGoodFairPoorN=64County to Countyand City to CountyCity to CityPercent of Resp<strong>on</strong>dentsCounty to CityPoverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 35


neighborhood. 80 Fifty-two percent of suburb-tocitymovers said <strong>the</strong>y were satisfiedor very satisfied with <strong>the</strong>irsec<strong>on</strong>d move neighborhood,compared with 72 percent ofsuburb-to-suburb movers.Similarly, <strong>on</strong>ly 13 percent ofsuburb-to-city-movers say <strong>the</strong>ircurrent neighborhood is betterthan <strong>the</strong>ir initial program neighborhoodand 47 percent say it isworse or much worse. In c<strong>on</strong>trast,41 percent of suburb-tosuburbsec<strong>on</strong>d movers say <strong>the</strong>irsec<strong>on</strong>d neighborhood is betteror much better than <strong>the</strong>ir initialprogram neighborhood. 81 Surveyresp<strong>on</strong>dents who left <strong>the</strong> suburbsand made sec<strong>on</strong>d moves to<strong>Baltimore</strong> City (as well as participants whose initialplacement neighborhood was in <strong>the</strong> city)It is a challenge for lowincomefamilies to find affordablehousing outside neighborhoodsof c<strong>on</strong>centratedpoverty. If <strong>the</strong>y seek housingnear better jobs, betterschools, and a better livingenvir<strong>on</strong>ment, <strong>the</strong>y will be hardpressed to find it.Bart Harvey, John T. Dunlop Lecture,Joint Center for <strong>Housing</strong> Studies ofHarvard University, October 3, 2006,p. 20.express troubling views of <strong>the</strong>ir current neighborhoodas a place to raise children.Fifty-three percent of suburb-tocity(and 40 percent of city-tocity)sec<strong>on</strong>d movers rated <strong>the</strong>irneighborhood as a fair or poorplace to raise children. In c<strong>on</strong>trast,59 percent of resp<strong>on</strong>dentsmoving within <strong>the</strong> suburbs rate<strong>the</strong>ir neighborhood as excellentor very good for children, and<strong>on</strong>ly 23 percent rate it fair orpoor.Whe<strong>the</strong>r a sec<strong>on</strong>d move locati<strong>on</strong>reflects a participant’s choice ormarket factors, this survey datasuggests that many suburb-tocitysec<strong>on</strong>d movers are not satisfiedwith <strong>the</strong>ir current neighborhood.36New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Affordable units in North <strong>Baltimore</strong>. Photo: Barbara Samuels.“…Supply side strategies, which expand <strong>the</strong> stock of housing that remainsaffordable over time…are an important structural soluti<strong>on</strong>, especially sincemany suburbs have little or no history of developing affordable housing.”Margery Austin Turner and Xavier de Souza Briggs, “Assisted <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> and <strong>the</strong> Success of Low-Income MinorityFamilies: Less<strong>on</strong>s for Policy, Practice, and Future Research,” Urban Institute, (March 2008), p. 4.Next Steps for Enhancing<strong>Program</strong> Administrati<strong>on</strong>Developing <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong> has involved “a series of overcomings,”says Barbara Samuels of <strong>the</strong> ACLU ofMaryland. “The bureaucratic barriers and hassles ofportability were overcome with regi<strong>on</strong>al administrati<strong>on</strong>,<strong>the</strong> inadequacies of fair market rents wereovercome with excepti<strong>on</strong> payment standards …There is a whole series of tweaks, large and small,that are needed by <strong>the</strong> regular <strong>Housing</strong> ChoiceVoucher program in order to make it functi<strong>on</strong> assome people say it was always intended to functi<strong>on</strong>.”Applying <strong>the</strong>se “tweaks” to <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong><strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> has resulted in a program thatshowcases “what housing mobility is supposed tobe,” says Phil Tegeler, executive director of <strong>the</strong>Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council, a keypartner in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong>Campaign. “It gives families more informati<strong>on</strong>about <strong>the</strong>ir choices and encourages <strong>the</strong>m to take alittle bit of a leap of faith. And it provides hands-<strong>on</strong>help to get <strong>the</strong>m into a str<strong>on</strong>ger positi<strong>on</strong> to actuallyget into <strong>the</strong>se more selective markets.”The program works, in part because MBQ’s staffand <strong>the</strong>ir outside partners have viewed problems aslearning opportunities, not reas<strong>on</strong>s to quit, Tegeleradds. While obstacles faced and answered havespurred many of <strong>the</strong> program features discussedearlier, program officials still c<strong>on</strong>sider <strong>the</strong> programa work in progress that c<strong>on</strong>tinues to face new challengesand generate new less<strong>on</strong>s. Following aresome of <strong>the</strong> acti<strong>on</strong>s <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> agenda for programofficials.New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> 37


Reduce large caseloads. The huge number ofapplicants and large pre-placement caseloads (190families per counselor) are far from optimal, makingintensive <strong>on</strong>e-<strong>on</strong>-<strong>on</strong>e counseling for all impossible.Essentially, MBQ deals with this by giving<strong>the</strong> bulk of <strong>the</strong> counselors' timeand attenti<strong>on</strong> to families who arenearing readiness for a voucherand/or are engaged in housingsearch. The counselor may betalking daily with familiesinvolved in <strong>the</strong> housing search,providing those new to <strong>the</strong> programwith guidance in how toclear up credit, budget, and saveup for <strong>the</strong>ir security deposit, aswell as making assessments andreferrals. These interacti<strong>on</strong>s with<strong>the</strong> counselor are <strong>on</strong>ly every couple of m<strong>on</strong>ths (ormore frequently if <strong>the</strong> client initiates calls).<strong>Program</strong> partners are seeking to reduce caseloadswith additi<strong>on</strong>al funding support.Expand and streng<strong>the</strong>n post-move supportsfor families. Smaller pre-placement caseloadswould enable counselors to give more individualattenti<strong>on</strong> to help families transiti<strong>on</strong>ing to newcommunities get better access to resources andopportunities in those new communities. In additi<strong>on</strong>,MBQ plans to institute o<strong>the</strong>r enhancements,including establishing an 800 number so familiesgreat distances from MBQ’s office in downtown<strong>Baltimore</strong> can call counselors without incurringhigh ph<strong>on</strong>e bills. Still, budgeting issues are likely toc<strong>on</strong>tinue to be a challenge because, even wi<strong>the</strong>mployment, wages are low in service sector jobs,and almost 30 percent of whatever additi<strong>on</strong>alincome a family with a <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher isable to earn is “taxed” in <strong>the</strong> form of a rentincrease. <strong>Program</strong> partners are discussing <strong>the</strong> needfor client rental payment structures with workincentives (i.e., <strong>the</strong> Jobs Plus dem<strong>on</strong>strati<strong>on</strong>), al<strong>on</strong>gwith a greater emphasis <strong>on</strong> educati<strong>on</strong> programsthat will allow people to climb up a notch <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong>career ladder. 82Me and my children live in abeautiful house that is in amixed ethnic community.They have an opportunity tobecome productive citizens,a product of a goodenvir<strong>on</strong>ment.—<strong>Program</strong> participantHelp more families remain in, or return to,high opportunity communities. While <strong>the</strong> program’spost-move and sec<strong>on</strong>d-move services arehelping families remain in opportunity communities,<strong>the</strong>re are still a small number of families whomake subsequent moves to loweropportunity neighborhoods in<strong>the</strong> city (about <strong>on</strong>e in five families,as of September, 2007). 83While most of <strong>the</strong>se moves are tocommunities with lower povertyrates than <strong>the</strong> family’s originalcity neighborhood, <strong>the</strong>y usuallyinvolve a decline in ec<strong>on</strong>omicopportunity and a change ofschool district. <strong>Program</strong> partnersmust c<strong>on</strong>tinue to provide sec<strong>on</strong>dmove counseling to help familiesexplore <strong>the</strong> pros and c<strong>on</strong>s of moving, and to makesure that families who do move are able to findhousing in locati<strong>on</strong>s that will be good for <strong>the</strong>irfamilies, not just places where landlords are willingto rent to voucher holders.“The goal must be to ensure that, if families domove, <strong>the</strong>y are doing so willingly and not out offrustrati<strong>on</strong> when faced with barriers that can beaddressed,” says Tegeler.Find more ways to tackle <strong>the</strong> transportati<strong>on</strong>barrier. Survey data comparing transportati<strong>on</strong>frustrati<strong>on</strong>s of “stayers” versus “movers” suggeststhat access to a driver’s license and, or, car is <strong>on</strong>epotentially addressable factor in housing stabilityand retenti<strong>on</strong> of participants in higher opportunityareas. Only 19 percent of l<strong>on</strong>ger-term stayers surveyedin 2007 identified <strong>the</strong> lack of a car or licenseas a difficult aspect of <strong>the</strong>ir neighborhood (likelybecause 53 percent of those surveyed reported havinga car). In comparis<strong>on</strong>, sec<strong>on</strong>d movers surveyedwere less likely to have a car (32 percent) and morelikely to identify <strong>the</strong> lack of a driver’s license or caras a difficulty, not <strong>on</strong>ly in <strong>the</strong>ir initial programneighborhood (41 percent), but also in <strong>the</strong>ir current(i.e. sec<strong>on</strong>d move) neighborhood (35 percent).Participants with driver’s licenses, but not a car,38New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


were less likely to say <strong>the</strong>y were dissatisfied with<strong>the</strong>ir transportati<strong>on</strong> opti<strong>on</strong>s than those who hadnei<strong>the</strong>r a car nor a license. This may mean thatparticipants with a driver’s license are able to occasi<strong>on</strong>allyborrow a car or can plan to purchase a car.Whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>on</strong>e lives in <strong>Baltimore</strong> City or a suburb, itis hard to get to work, to carry out basic householdtasks such as grocery shopping or taking childrento childcare and extra-curricular activities if <strong>on</strong>edoes not have a car. 84 Therefore, in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong>regi<strong>on</strong>, <strong>the</strong> lack of a car or driver’s license is not<strong>on</strong>ly a barrier to housing mobility, but to ec<strong>on</strong>omicmobility as well. 85Streamline processes for landlords. MBQ isinstituting a number of changes to be moreresp<strong>on</strong>sive to landlords. In <strong>the</strong> last quarter of 2009,in c<strong>on</strong>formance with standard real estate practices,MBQ will begin offering direct deposit to landlords.MBQ is also revamping its website to allowlandlords to submit informati<strong>on</strong> about availableproperties <strong>on</strong>line. Additi<strong>on</strong>ally program officialsplan to c<strong>on</strong>duct a landlord satisfacti<strong>on</strong> survey.C<strong>on</strong>tinue employment services and enhanceeducati<strong>on</strong> and health supports. Recognizingthat taking <strong>the</strong> program to <strong>the</strong> next level requiresmore c<strong>on</strong>certed efforts to c<strong>on</strong>nect families to <strong>the</strong>“opportunity” in <strong>the</strong>ir opportunity communities,BRHC c<strong>on</strong>vened experts, funders, and advocates at<strong>the</strong> Annie E. Casey Foundati<strong>on</strong> to start designinginterventi<strong>on</strong>s for families experiencing educati<strong>on</strong>,health, and employment challenges.As cited earlier in <strong>the</strong> report, MBQ and its partnershave extended <strong>the</strong> employment services originally<strong>on</strong>ly offered to a subset of families, to families program-wide.Now, thanks to seed funding from <strong>the</strong>Krieger Fund, PRRAC and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong>Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign have launched a“housing mobility and educati<strong>on</strong> project.” It isbeing piloted in Howard and <strong>Baltimore</strong> counties,with hopes for expansi<strong>on</strong> to o<strong>the</strong>r counties.Driving program design are two c<strong>on</strong>clusi<strong>on</strong>s, welldocumentedby social science research, 1)that lowincomeinner-city parents often d<strong>on</strong>’t have <strong>the</strong>same informati<strong>on</strong> that enable middle-class parentsto choose <strong>the</strong> best schools for <strong>the</strong>ir children, and 2)that many children transiti<strong>on</strong>ing from lower tohigher opportunity schools benefit from extra supportto help <strong>the</strong>m catch up academically and adaptsocially. 86Stable <strong>Housing</strong> Paves Pathto Nursing SchoolAfter moving under <strong>the</strong> mobility program(from Upt<strong>on</strong> to Perry Hall in <strong>Baltimore</strong>County and subsequently to Columbia inHoward County), Candice Nels<strong>on</strong> endeda 10-year break from school. Shecompleted her high school educati<strong>on</strong> andenrolled in <strong>Baltimore</strong> City CommunityCollege, where she is pursuing an associatedegree in nursing. After she attainsher associate degree, she plans to workfull time at a local hospital while completinga bachelor’s program in nursing atCoppin State University, specializing inpediatrics. Nels<strong>on</strong>, who w<strong>on</strong> a $500scholarship from <strong>the</strong> Maryland Associati<strong>on</strong>of <strong>Housing</strong> and RedevelopmentAgencies toward her bachelor’s program,has fur<strong>the</strong>r ambiti<strong>on</strong>s: to work towardsbuying her first home. ■To overcome parental “informati<strong>on</strong> poverty,” projectc<strong>on</strong>sultants have developed a new intake referralsheet that MBQ counselors use to build an educati<strong>on</strong>comp<strong>on</strong>ent into each family’s individual planincluding a chart that breaks down <strong>the</strong> regi<strong>on</strong> byschool z<strong>on</strong>e so that counselors and parents candetermine which schools serve which residentialareas; profiles of all receiving schools in <strong>the</strong>counties, including informati<strong>on</strong> about racialcompositi<strong>on</strong>, test scores, free and reduced lunchparticipati<strong>on</strong>, and o<strong>the</strong>r data; and an inventory ofkey resources such as jobs programs, academicsupport programs, and scholarship opportunities.MBQ counselors are now training to recognizePoverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 39


MTA light rail stati<strong>on</strong> in high opportunity community. Photo: Andy Cook.students’ educati<strong>on</strong>al issues as <strong>the</strong>y arise andparticipating families will be trained to assess schoolperformance. The program will provide <strong>on</strong>goingeducati<strong>on</strong>al counseling, guidance to families and,over time, develop relati<strong>on</strong>ships with principals andguidance counselors. The program is currentlyseeking funding to c<strong>on</strong>tinue past 2009.In <strong>the</strong> area of health, some informal health counselingalready occurs during <strong>the</strong> natural course ofbusiness. For example, an MBQ counselor mayobserve a health issue such as asthma during intakeand provide advice <strong>on</strong> reducing home allergens.Counselors have also been trained to help familiestransfer <strong>the</strong>ir Medicaid and children’s health benefits.To build <strong>on</strong> this base, PRRAC and BRHC areseeking funding for a health interventi<strong>on</strong> programthat would incorporate more intensive health planningin <strong>the</strong> mobility program.Under this health mobility proposal, all familiesentering <strong>the</strong> program would complete a healthintake form that counselors could use to planimprovements. Health informati<strong>on</strong> would be providedin housekeeping and family budgeting sessi<strong>on</strong>s.Families who need help finding health carewould be c<strong>on</strong>nected to suburban primary careproviders. <strong>Program</strong> staff would actively recruitsuburban health providers, and counselors wouldget more training <strong>on</strong> Maryland Medicaid managedcare and S-Chip systems, including transferringbenefits between counties. For a small number ofuninsured families, alternative health insurancecoverage would be sought. This proposal derivesfrom extensive research <strong>on</strong> mobility and health.Studies suggest that <strong>the</strong> marked improvement inhealth exhibited by families who leave <strong>the</strong>, substandardhousing c<strong>on</strong>diti<strong>on</strong>s and o<strong>the</strong>r “health burdens”of segregated inner-city neighborhoods(improvements that include declines in obesity anddepressi<strong>on</strong>) could be even more significant withspecific health interventi<strong>on</strong>s. 8740New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Increase development of housing units receivingproject-based subsidies. The mobility program,like <strong>the</strong> voucher program more generally,has relied largely <strong>on</strong> short term c<strong>on</strong>tracts andleases with private profit-motivated owners. Tofuncti<strong>on</strong> effectively through various housing cycles<strong>the</strong> program must assure that participants will haveaccess to units even when housing markets are at<strong>the</strong>ir tightest and most competitive. The development(via acquisiti<strong>on</strong> or new c<strong>on</strong>structi<strong>on</strong>) ofaffordable housing units receiving project-basedsubsidies is necessary to assure that a stable pool ofunits, especially harder to find three bedroomunits, will remain available to participants through<strong>the</strong> ups and downs of market cycles. Developmentalso gives <strong>the</strong> program more c<strong>on</strong>trol over <strong>the</strong> locati<strong>on</strong>of units, preventing clusters and assuring awide distributi<strong>on</strong> of units, even in affluent areas.To date, <strong>the</strong> program has entered into c<strong>on</strong>tractsand leased just over 300 project-based voucher(PBV) units compared to <strong>the</strong> 646 units called forwithin <strong>the</strong> Thomps<strong>on</strong> decree. All were existinghousing units with short term (<strong>on</strong>e to five year)c<strong>on</strong>tracts. N<strong>on</strong>e of <strong>the</strong> units are new c<strong>on</strong>structi<strong>on</strong>or acquisiti<strong>on</strong>/rehabilitati<strong>on</strong> units, and <strong>on</strong>ly 103remain under c<strong>on</strong>tract. The development of PBVunits c<strong>on</strong>templated by <strong>the</strong> Thomps<strong>on</strong> decree hasbeen delayed and is <strong>on</strong>ly now beginning as MBQworks out financing issues comm<strong>on</strong> to affordablehousing development. Barriers to financing anddevelopment of affordable housing are always anWorking Mom Moves Her Boysout of <strong>the</strong> Shadow of <strong>the</strong> City JailFor seven years, Andrea Prest<strong>on</strong> livedwith her family in East <strong>Baltimore</strong>’s LatrobeHomes public housing complex, literallyin <strong>the</strong> shadow of <strong>the</strong> state penitentiaryand <strong>Baltimore</strong> City Jail. Prest<strong>on</strong>, whoworks as a shift supervisor, says shewanted better housing, but also a saferneighborhood for her two boys, now ages6 and 11.“I didn’t want to stay in public housingforever,” she says.Through <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong>, Prest<strong>on</strong> moved her family toHampden, a former industrial area ofnorth <strong>Baltimore</strong> that is being reborn as atrendy neighborhood with art galleries,shops and restaurants. She plans to stay.“I like <strong>the</strong> area and my boys are happiernow,” she says. “I believe every<strong>on</strong>edeserves a chance at a better livingenvir<strong>on</strong>ment.” ■issue; however, <strong>the</strong>se barriers are more formidablewhen operating in higher opportunity areas of <strong>the</strong>city and suburbs that have traditi<strong>on</strong>ally excludedaffordable housing.Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 41


HUD Deputy Secretary R<strong>on</strong> Sims and MBQ program staff and participants,2009. Photo: Amy DeHuff.“A key equitable development goal for <strong>Baltimore</strong> is to stimulate <strong>the</strong> real estate market in <strong>the</strong>central city in a manner that brings new investment but that also secures and stabilizes existingresidents…At <strong>the</strong> same time, <strong>Baltimore</strong> needs housing strategies that will create moreaffordable housing opti<strong>on</strong>s in more advantageous communities in <strong>the</strong> regi<strong>on</strong> so that lowerincomeresidents are better c<strong>on</strong>nected to a web of vital services and supports.”Angela Glover Blackwell and Judith Bell, “Equitable Development for a Str<strong>on</strong>ger Nati<strong>on</strong>: Less<strong>on</strong>s from <strong>the</strong> Field,”in The Geography of Opportunity, Xavier de Souza Briggs, editor, Brookings Instituti<strong>on</strong> Press 2005.<strong>Baltimore</strong> and Bey<strong>on</strong>d: <strong>the</strong>Future of <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> PolicyToday, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong> is proving that poor AfricanAmerican families are able and willing to make itbey<strong>on</strong>d <strong>the</strong> c<strong>on</strong>fines of <strong>the</strong> inner-city and that programsthat help families move from distressedareas to better neighborhoods do not inevitablyreshuffle pockets of poverty. Because participati<strong>on</strong>in <strong>the</strong> program is voluntary, assisted, and gradual,families are moving when <strong>the</strong>y are ready and eagerfor a better life. Because <strong>the</strong> program focuses <strong>on</strong>low poverty and predominantly white neighborhoods,operates regi<strong>on</strong>ally and is m<strong>on</strong>itored, familiesare not clustering in a few strugglingneighborhoods.The less<strong>on</strong>s of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong> come at an important time. While <strong>the</strong>housing mobility programs created in <strong>the</strong> 1990s toremedy systemic, government-sp<strong>on</strong>sored c<strong>on</strong>centrati<strong>on</strong>of poor black families in failing neighborhoodswere ended after 2000 or have largely beenscaled down, <strong>the</strong> experience gained through <strong>the</strong>seprograms has generated greater c<strong>on</strong>sensus around<strong>the</strong> elements of success. Building <strong>on</strong> that knowledgebase, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong> has overcome some of <strong>the</strong> issues thatbedeviled programs such as <strong>the</strong> federally sp<strong>on</strong>soredMoving to Opportunity program, whose wellpublicizedshortcomings overshadowed itssuccesses in <strong>the</strong> public eye.42Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign


Am<strong>on</strong>g o<strong>the</strong>r things, MTO’s failure to move familiesto racially integrated neighborhoods c<strong>on</strong>tributedto <strong>the</strong> false assumpti<strong>on</strong> that inner cityfamilies can’t or w<strong>on</strong>’t move to more affluent,white communities and that if <strong>the</strong>y do <strong>the</strong>y so<strong>on</strong>“give up” and flock back to <strong>the</strong>ir old neighborhoods.MTO, which focused solely <strong>on</strong> moves tolow-poverty areas, provided families with significantimprovements in neighborhood safety andmental and physical health (no small deal for <strong>the</strong>families involved). But most MTO families neverleft <strong>the</strong>ir original urban school district, and thuswere never provided access to higher performingsuburban school districts. 88 In c<strong>on</strong>trast, <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>’s use of bothpoverty and race-based criteria is getting childreninto new, higher performing school districts.<strong>Program</strong> participant and children. Photo: Andy CookAdvocates hope that <strong>the</strong> example of this well-runmobility program in <strong>Baltimore</strong> will encouragemore support for desegregati<strong>on</strong> as a co-equal strategywith revitalizati<strong>on</strong> of inner city neighborhoods.They point to <strong>the</strong> work of expertssuch as Bruce Katz and MargeryAustin Turner, who argue thatlarge disparities in access toopportunity, al<strong>on</strong>g with distressedneighborhoods with c<strong>on</strong>centratedpoverty, weaken <strong>the</strong>ec<strong>on</strong>omic competitiveness of <strong>the</strong>nati<strong>on</strong>’s metropolitan regi<strong>on</strong>s. 89MBQ’s partners and fair housingadvocates are working at <strong>the</strong>regi<strong>on</strong>al, state and federal level toadvance mobility policy.Following are some of <strong>the</strong> acti<strong>on</strong>s<strong>the</strong>y are pursuing.C<strong>on</strong>tinue coaliti<strong>on</strong> work in<strong>Baltimore</strong> regi<strong>on</strong> to increasesupply of affordable rental housing in highopportunity areas. There is a critical lack ofaffordable rental housing in low poverty areas.Nati<strong>on</strong>ally, low poverty neighborhoods c<strong>on</strong>tain<strong>on</strong>ly 39 percent of <strong>the</strong> rental housing in <strong>the</strong> nati<strong>on</strong>and <strong>on</strong>ly 28 percent of <strong>the</strong> rental units offered at orA new nati<strong>on</strong>al housingmobility voucher programshould be established for <strong>the</strong>express purpose of providingdesegregated housing opti<strong>on</strong>sto families in <strong>the</strong> most segregatedmetropolitan areas.“The Future of Fair <strong>Housing</strong>: <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> of<strong>the</strong> Nati<strong>on</strong>al Commissi<strong>on</strong> <strong>on</strong> Fair<strong>Housing</strong> and Equal Opportunity” formerHUD Secretaries Henry Cisnerosand Jack Kemp, Co-Chairs,December 2008.below HUD’s Fair Market Rent levels (and <strong>the</strong>reforeaccessible to voucher holders). 90 The<strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> cannot undodecades of government supported segregati<strong>on</strong>al<strong>on</strong>e or overnight. “All <strong>the</strong>regi<strong>on</strong>’s participants in housingdevelopment and finance, transportati<strong>on</strong>,planning, z<strong>on</strong>ing, andcommunity development need tobe working toge<strong>the</strong>r with residentsover a period of many yearstoward a comm<strong>on</strong> goal of anequitable and desegregatedregi<strong>on</strong>,” according to an articleby Phil Tegeler and MichaelSarbanes in The Next AmericanCity. 91 BRHC member organizati<strong>on</strong>ssuch as Citizens Planningand <strong>Housing</strong> Associati<strong>on</strong>(CPHA) are not <strong>on</strong>ly supportingenhancements to <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong><strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>; itviews <strong>the</strong> mobility program and <strong>the</strong> c<strong>on</strong>tinuing litigati<strong>on</strong>of Thomps<strong>on</strong> v. HUD as a catalyst for a comprehensivestrategy to promote housingopportunity, desegregati<strong>on</strong>, and equitable growththroughout <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> regi<strong>on</strong>. For example,toward <strong>the</strong> goal of increasing affordable housingPoverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 43


opportunities, CPHA spearheaded and BRHCsupported a successful effort to enact <strong>Baltimore</strong>city’s first “inclusi<strong>on</strong>ary z<strong>on</strong>inglaw,” a 2007 statute requiring newhousing developments to includea percentage of units for lowincomefamilies. BRHC c<strong>on</strong>tinuesto implement innovativestrategies to increase housingchoice and opportunity for lowincomefamilies in <strong>the</strong> regi<strong>on</strong>.Eliminate state and local barriersto affirmatively fur<strong>the</strong>ringfair housing. According to programpartners, <strong>on</strong>e of <strong>the</strong> mostvexing impediments to affordablehousing development in highopportunity areas is a requirementimposed by <strong>the</strong> State ofMaryland <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> allocati<strong>on</strong> ofstate housing funds and <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong>federal Low-Income <strong>Housing</strong>Tax Credit program (LIHTC).Maryland is <strong>on</strong>e of <strong>on</strong>ly six statesthat require developers to obtainlocal government approval ofLIHTC project applicati<strong>on</strong>s. 92The Maryland QualifiedAllocati<strong>on</strong> Plan, governing <strong>the</strong>award of tax credits, requiresthree levels of local governmentapproval before <strong>the</strong> LIHTCapplicati<strong>on</strong> will even be c<strong>on</strong>sideredfor funding, and is c<strong>on</strong>sidered <strong>the</strong>most burdensome in <strong>the</strong> nati<strong>on</strong>.Because it does not require localgovernments to articulate anylegitimate, n<strong>on</strong>-discriminatoryreas<strong>on</strong>s for withholding approval,<strong>the</strong> Maryland requirement giveslocal governments an absolute“pocket veto,” advocates say.Both n<strong>on</strong>profit and for-profit developers haverepeatedly informed MBQ and housing advocatesthat this is <strong>on</strong>e of <strong>the</strong> primary impediments to <strong>the</strong>development of affordable housing in Maryland,Federal [housing] producti<strong>on</strong>resources should also be allocatedso as to ensure thataffordable housing is built in<strong>the</strong> right places — in communitiesof choice and opportunitythat can boast of goodschools and quality jobs.Bruce Katz and Margery Austin Turner,“Rethinking U.S. Rental <strong>Housing</strong>Policy,” Joint Center for <strong>Housing</strong>Studies of Harvard University, at p. 33(November 2006)The federal government’sthree largest federal housingprograms ….do very little tofur<strong>the</strong>r fair housing and, insome cases, work to createand/or maintain segregatedhousing patterns. These programsmust be reoriented tofocus, in part, <strong>on</strong> helping familiesmove to less racially andec<strong>on</strong>omically segregatedcommunities.“The Future of Fair <strong>Housing</strong>: <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> of<strong>the</strong> Nati<strong>on</strong>al Commissi<strong>on</strong> <strong>on</strong> Fair<strong>Housing</strong> and Equal Opportunity” formerHUD Secretaries Henry Cisnerosand Jack Kemp, Co-Chairs,December 2008.and that <strong>the</strong>y do not even attempt to expend <strong>the</strong>resources necessary to develop family housing insuburban locati<strong>on</strong>s (especially<strong>Baltimore</strong> County), knowing thatit will be difficult or impossibleto secure a resoluti<strong>on</strong> of localapproval for LIHTC funding ifcommunity oppositi<strong>on</strong> arises (oreven if local officials merely fearcommunity oppositi<strong>on</strong>). Acti<strong>on</strong>to address this impediment to fairhousing is <strong>on</strong>e of <strong>the</strong> priorities of<strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong>Campaign and of affordable andfair housing advocates inMaryland. They are seeking toensure that state and local agenciesreceiving federal resourceslive up to <strong>the</strong> requirement toaffirmatively fur<strong>the</strong>r fair housing.Pursue reform of federal<strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucherpolicy. Minority families using<strong>Housing</strong> Choice Vouchers havehistorically been c<strong>on</strong>fined to areasthat are <strong>on</strong>ly somewhat moreracially and ec<strong>on</strong>omically integratedthan <strong>the</strong> highly segregatedpublic housing neighborhoods.As a sort of specialized <strong>Housing</strong>Choice Voucher program operatingwith deliberate attenti<strong>on</strong> toexpanding fair housing choice,<strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong> has found ways aroundsome of <strong>the</strong> biggest barriers tousing <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Vouchersin opportunity areas. Were thosesoluti<strong>on</strong>s applied more broadlywithin <strong>the</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> ChoiceVoucher program, experts say,vouchers could be a tool forstreng<strong>the</strong>ning disadvantaged families by c<strong>on</strong>necting<strong>the</strong>m to <strong>the</strong> educati<strong>on</strong>al and ec<strong>on</strong>omic vitalityof low-poverty suburban neighborhoods.44New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Advocates say <strong>the</strong> current, more favorable politicalclimate for housing voucher reform makes now agood time to apply <strong>the</strong>mobility practices usedsuccessfully in <strong>the</strong><strong>Baltimore</strong> program moregenerally to <strong>the</strong> <strong>Housing</strong>Choice Voucher program.According to advocates,<strong>the</strong> first order of businessis to reinstate <strong>the</strong> regulatoryenhancements madeto <strong>the</strong> housing voucherprogram in <strong>the</strong> 1990s butreversed or disc<strong>on</strong>tinuedafter 2001. 93<strong>Mobility</strong> prop<strong>on</strong>ents alsopropose a new nati<strong>on</strong>al“Opportunity Voucher” program that would setaside a minimum of 50,000 vouchers annually tohelp low-income families in high poverty, segregatedneighborhoods in <strong>the</strong> 30 most segregatedmetropolitan areas move to communities with lowpoverty and high performing schools. The voucherscould be administered by regi<strong>on</strong>al agenciesauthorized to provide excepti<strong>on</strong> rents up to at least120 percent of <strong>the</strong> FMR and come with a full complementof mobility counseling services similar tothose offered by mobility programs in <strong>Baltimore</strong>,Chicago, and Dallas. Opportunity vouchers wouldbe targeted for use in receiving communities withschools that have low rates of student poverty andare below <strong>the</strong> regi<strong>on</strong>al average minority populati<strong>on</strong>.Assuming a carve-out of existing voucherappropriati<strong>on</strong>s, <strong>the</strong> program would cost about$248 milli<strong>on</strong> annually, which includes start-upcosts. 94High school in suburban community. Photo: BarbaraSamuels.According to Tegeler, <strong>the</strong> return <strong>on</strong> investmentfrom mobility counseling―at a marginal additi<strong>on</strong>alcost of $4,000 to $5,000per family making anopportunity move―can’tbe calculated by a simpleformula measuring <strong>on</strong>ly<strong>the</strong> costs and benefits toHUD or housing authorities.95 If more people likeMichelle Starks becomeemployed, <strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong>amount HUD pays outper voucher goes down.But more importantly, ifStarks’ three children dobetter in school, and youmultiply that by <strong>the</strong> numberof families who successfullymove out of distressed neighborhoodsthose benefits accrue to society as a whole.■The author visited MBQ’s office in <strong>Baltimore</strong> inJuly 2009 to interview MBQ and BRHC representatives,and review program outreach,marketing, planning and evaluati<strong>on</strong> documents.This report is based <strong>on</strong> that visit, additi<strong>on</strong>alph<strong>on</strong>e interviews with program partners, and<strong>on</strong>line research. The stories in this report arereal and come from surveys and interviews c<strong>on</strong>ductedby <strong>the</strong> ACLU of Maryland during <strong>the</strong>period 2005- 2009, but <strong>the</strong> names of <strong>the</strong> participantshave been changed to protect <strong>the</strong>ir privacyand <strong>the</strong> c<strong>on</strong>fidentiality of <strong>the</strong> sources.Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 45


Child of program participants in new neighborhood.Photo: Barbara Samuels.Appendix:A Note <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> ACLU Client Feedback Project andSurvey MethodologyThis report makes use of data ga<strong>the</strong>red by <strong>the</strong>ACLU of Maryland, counsel for <strong>the</strong> plaintiffsin Thomps<strong>on</strong> v. HUD. During <strong>the</strong> course of <strong>the</strong>Thomps<strong>on</strong> case, <strong>the</strong> ACLU of Maryland c<strong>on</strong>ductedsurveys to communicate with and ga<strong>the</strong>r informati<strong>on</strong>from members of <strong>the</strong> Thomps<strong>on</strong> class about<strong>the</strong>ir experiences in public housing. The challengesof communicating with a class c<strong>on</strong>sisting of morethan 14,000 families are formidable, and were <strong>on</strong>lymagnified as clients began moving from relativelysmall geographic enclaves to new homes spreadover a large metropolitan area.To meet this challenge, <strong>the</strong> ACLU of Marylanddeveloped a multi-faceted system for obtainingclient feedback using a variety of methods, includingsurveys, teleph<strong>on</strong>e interviews, in-home interviewsand focus groups. As implementati<strong>on</strong> of <strong>the</strong>Thomps<strong>on</strong> remedial programs began, <strong>the</strong>sebecame a important tool to m<strong>on</strong>itor <strong>the</strong> servicesbeing provided to families and how families werefaring.The surveys administered by <strong>the</strong> ACLU are in <strong>the</strong>nature of “customer satisfacti<strong>on</strong> surveys” used togage client satisfacti<strong>on</strong> with program services andwith participants’ homes and neighborhoods. Theyare also designed to engage <strong>the</strong> clients in evaluatingand improving <strong>the</strong> program. The surveys arenot intended as a social science research project, orto serve as a substitute for a l<strong>on</strong>gitudinal analysis ofoutcomes for <strong>the</strong> families that participate in <strong>the</strong>mobility program. For that purpose, Metropolitan<strong>Baltimore</strong> Quadel is providing administrative datathat is ga<strong>the</strong>red and maintained in <strong>the</strong> ordinarycourse of operati<strong>on</strong> of <strong>the</strong> program to StefanieDeLuca, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Sociology atJohns Hopkins University.46Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign


The survey data referenced in this report is takenfrom four surveys administered by <strong>the</strong> ACLU,three in 2007 and <strong>on</strong>e in 2008. For c<strong>on</strong>sistency, <strong>the</strong>graphs used in <strong>the</strong> report, with <strong>on</strong>e excepti<strong>on</strong>, portrayresp<strong>on</strong>ses to <strong>the</strong> 2007 surveys.2007 and 2008 New Mover Survey: The ACLUhas administered “New Mover” surveys every summersince 2005. Each year, all families who havereceived a voucher and moved through <strong>the</strong> Special<strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher <strong>Program</strong> during<strong>the</strong> preceding twelve m<strong>on</strong>ths receive a NewMover survey. These surveys c<strong>on</strong>tain questi<strong>on</strong>sasking participants to evaluate <strong>the</strong>ir satisfacti<strong>on</strong>with <strong>the</strong>ir new home and neighborhood and with<strong>the</strong> services <strong>the</strong>y received from <strong>the</strong> mobility counselingagency, Metropolitan <strong>Baltimore</strong> Quadel.The 2007 New Mover survey was administered to183 pers<strong>on</strong>s and 96 resp<strong>on</strong>ses were received, a53% resp<strong>on</strong>se rate. In 2008, a New Mover surveywas sent to 215 pers<strong>on</strong>s, with 106 resp<strong>on</strong>ses, a 49%resp<strong>on</strong>se rate.2007 Post-Placement Survey: To gain a deeperunderstanding of participant experiences, fromtime to time <strong>the</strong> ACLU supplements <strong>the</strong> NewMover surveys with more in-depth surveys of particularsubsets of participants in <strong>the</strong> Special<strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher <strong>Program</strong>. In2007, a “Post-Placement Survey” was administeredto a randomly selected sample of 150 participantswho had stayed in <strong>the</strong>ir initial program unit for aperiod ranging from 14 m<strong>on</strong>ths to four years.Sixty-eight resp<strong>on</strong>ses were received, a 45%resp<strong>on</strong>se rate.2007 Sec<strong>on</strong>d Mover Survey: Participants whomoved from <strong>the</strong>ir initial program unit were alsosurveyed in 2007. This “Sec<strong>on</strong>d Mover” surveywas sent to 204 Sec<strong>on</strong>d Movers, evenly dividedbetween a sample of involuntary movers who wereforced to move when <strong>the</strong>ir apartment complexeswere sold to new owners, and a sample of 104 participantswho had moved in <strong>the</strong> “ordinary course,”(i.e. due to an individual lease terminati<strong>on</strong> initiatedby a landlord or by <strong>the</strong> participant during <strong>the</strong> ordinarycourse of a tenancy). The samples were randomlyselected, except that suburb-to- suburbmovers were slightly overrepresented in <strong>the</strong> sampleto ensure an adequate number and geographic distributi<strong>on</strong>of resp<strong>on</strong>ses from this subgroup to analyze<strong>the</strong>ir experiences.Survey Methodology: Although <strong>the</strong> surveys arenot intended as social science, <strong>the</strong> survey instrumentshave been reviewed by Professors PamBennett PhD, and/or Stefanie DeLuca, PhD bothof <strong>the</strong> Johns Hopkins Department of Sociology,who have submitted useful guidance which wasincorporated into <strong>the</strong> design where possible. Thesurveys all include an open-ended questi<strong>on</strong> thatasks participants to comment <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir move and<strong>the</strong> services <strong>the</strong>y received, and to explain why <strong>the</strong>ywould or would not recommend <strong>the</strong> program to afriend.Dr. DeLuca has c<strong>on</strong>firmed that <strong>the</strong> survey resp<strong>on</strong>dentsare representative of program participantsgenerally, with few statistically significant differencesacross a host of neighborhood and individualcharacteristics. Participants who resp<strong>on</strong>ded to <strong>the</strong>surveys did tend to be slightly older and less likelyto have been in public housing at origin than familieswho did not participate in <strong>the</strong> surveys. Theirprogram neighborhoods were not significantly different<strong>on</strong> any of <strong>the</strong> census characteristics Dr.DeLuca has measured.The surveys were mailed first class with a returnstamped envelope enclosed. Resp<strong>on</strong>dents wereassured that <strong>the</strong> surveys are c<strong>on</strong>fidential and thatresp<strong>on</strong>ses will not be linked to individual participants.As an incentive to return <strong>the</strong> survey, participantswere offered <strong>the</strong> chance to be included in adrawing for <strong>on</strong>e or two gift certificates to a homefurnishing store, but <strong>the</strong>y were not o<strong>the</strong>rwiseoffered any compensati<strong>on</strong> for completing andreturning <strong>the</strong> survey. ACLU staff compiled <strong>the</strong>resp<strong>on</strong>ses and entered <strong>the</strong>m into separate FileMaker Pro databases that also c<strong>on</strong>tain certainadministrative informati<strong>on</strong> maintained by MBQ.Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 47


Endnotes1 Data excludes families who were forced to move whenfour apartment complexes were sold and new propertyowners ceased participati<strong>on</strong> in <strong>the</strong> program.2 A vast body of research has c<strong>on</strong>firmed <strong>the</strong> effects ofneighborhood c<strong>on</strong>diti<strong>on</strong>s <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> life chances of childrenand adults. For a summary of key research <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong>se findings,see Margery Austin Turner and Dolores Acevedo-Garcia, “The Benefits of <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong>: A Review of<strong>the</strong> Research Evidence,” in Philip Tegeler, Mary Cunningham,and Margery Austin Turner, eds., Keeping <strong>the</strong>Promise: Preserving and Enhancing <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> in <strong>the</strong>Secti<strong>on</strong> 8 <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher <strong>Program</strong> (Poverty & RaceResearch Acti<strong>on</strong> Council 2005), pp. 9-24; Retrieved <strong>on</strong>October 20, 2009 from: www.prrac.org/pdf/Keeping-Promise.pdf.3 Metropolitan <strong>Baltimore</strong> Quadel has also used <strong>the</strong> programtitle “Special <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher<strong>Program</strong>”.4 According to MBQ, as of August 31, 2009, 1,522 familieshad successfully moved into areas of opportunity with<strong>the</strong> assistance offered through <strong>the</strong> mobility program (<strong>the</strong>total includes 27 families who had bought homes withprogram assistance). The characteristics of <strong>the</strong> neighborhoodsto which <strong>the</strong>se families moved comes from two articlesusing MBQ administrative data and public recordsand written by Stefanie DeLuca and Peter Rosenblatt ofJohns Hopkins University. These are: Stefanie DeLucaand Peter Rosenblatt (2009a), “Walking Away From TheWire: Residential <strong>Mobility</strong> and Opportunity in <strong>Baltimore</strong>”(Paper presented at <strong>the</strong> American Sociological Associati<strong>on</strong>,San Francisco 2009); and Stefanie DeLuca andPeter Rosenblatt (2009b), “Changing Neighborhoods,Changing Opportunities: A First Look at <strong>Baltimore</strong>’sThomps<strong>on</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>” (Paper inprogress for publicati<strong>on</strong>).5 In 2007, 2008 and 2009, <strong>the</strong> ACLU of Maryland c<strong>on</strong>ductedwritten and teleph<strong>on</strong>e surveys of mobility programclients who had recently moved under <strong>the</strong>program. 2007 surveys include those who had firstmoved 14 m<strong>on</strong>ths or more before.6 An analysis of families just after <strong>the</strong>y moved (with familieswho moved as of September 2007 c<strong>on</strong>stituting <strong>the</strong>analyzed populati<strong>on</strong>) found that almost all heads-ofhouseholdwere African American (98.8 percent) andfemale (97.7 percent). See DeLuca and Rosenblatt,2009a and 2009b, cited in endnote 4, for details.7 According to <strong>the</strong> DeLuca and Rosenblatt analysis citedabove, 76.4 percent of families had children, and 23.3percent had three or more children.8 MBQ administrative data from August 2008 showed <strong>the</strong>following sources of income for leased families: 47 percenthad employment income; 40 percent had SSI, SocialSecurity or pensi<strong>on</strong> income; and 34 percent had TANFor o<strong>the</strong>r welfare income. Percentages do not add up to100 percent because a household may have more than<strong>on</strong>ce source of income.9 See U.S. Department of <strong>Housing</strong> and Urban Development,“Seventh Annual <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> to C<strong>on</strong>gress <strong>on</strong> Public<strong>Housing</strong> and Rental Assistance <strong>Program</strong>s: Demographics,Income and Work and Rent,” 2008, pp. 9, 11.10 Plaintiffs’ Pre-Trial Memorandum, United States DistrictCourt for <strong>the</strong> District of Maryland, CarmenThomps<strong>on</strong>, et al., Plaintiffs, v. United States Departmentof <strong>Housing</strong> and Urban Development, et al., Defendants,pp. 13-14, 23; http://www.naacpldf.org/c<strong>on</strong>tent/pdf/thomps<strong>on</strong>/Thomps<strong>on</strong>_v._HUD_Pretrial_Memorandum.pdf.11 john powell, “Remedial Phase Expert <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> of johnpowell In Thomps<strong>on</strong> v. HUD,” August 19, 2005, p. 16.Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009 from:www.PRRAC.org/projects/baltimore.php12 Ibid.13 “An Analysis of <strong>the</strong> Thomps<strong>on</strong> v. HUD Decisi<strong>on</strong>,”Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council, February2005, http://www.prrac.org/pdf/Thomps<strong>on</strong>Analysis.pdf14 See James E. Rosenbaum, “Changing <strong>the</strong> Geography ofOpportunity by Expanding Residential Choice: Less<strong>on</strong>sfrom <strong>the</strong> Gautreaux <strong>Program</strong>,” <strong>Housing</strong> Policy Debate 6(1)1995, pp. 231-269.15 In additi<strong>on</strong> to Gautreaux-like claims of intenti<strong>on</strong>al discriminati<strong>on</strong>in violati<strong>on</strong> of <strong>the</strong> c<strong>on</strong>stituti<strong>on</strong>al guaranteeof equal protecti<strong>on</strong>, <strong>the</strong> cases also often included claimsalleging violati<strong>on</strong>s of <strong>the</strong> Fair <strong>Housing</strong> Act of 1968.Some of <strong>the</strong> cases, including Walker v. HUD coveringDallas and NAACP V. City of Y<strong>on</strong>kers, were fully litigated.Many o<strong>the</strong>rs were settled in <strong>the</strong> 1990s. Am<strong>on</strong>g <strong>the</strong> citiesthat have had court-ordered mobility programs as a resultof litigati<strong>on</strong> are Buffalo, N.Y.; Chicago; Dallas;Kansas City; Minneapolis; New Haven, C<strong>on</strong>n.; andPittsburgh. See Florence Wagman Roisman, “AffirmativelyFur<strong>the</strong>ring Fair <strong>Housing</strong> in Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong>Markets: The <strong>Baltimore</strong> Public <strong>Housing</strong> Desegregati<strong>on</strong>Litigati<strong>on</strong>,” 42 Wake Forest L. Rev. 333 (Summer 2007);Margery Austin Turner and Kale Williams, <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong>:Realizing <strong>the</strong> Promise (<str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> of <strong>the</strong> Sec<strong>on</strong>d Nati<strong>on</strong>alC<strong>on</strong>ference <strong>on</strong> Assisted <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong>,December 1997) Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 20, 2009 from:www.prrac.org/pdf/RealizingPromise1997.pdf16 Source: Rachel G. Bratt, “A Wi<strong>the</strong>ring Commitment,”Shelterforce, July/August 1997.17 MTO was launched in 1994 in <strong>Baltimore</strong>, Bost<strong>on</strong>,Chicago, Los Angeles and New York city. Under MTO,families were randomly assigned to <strong>on</strong>e of three groups:an “experimental group” receiving mobility counselingand using vouchers in census tracts with poverty ratesbelow 10 percent, a “Secti<strong>on</strong> 8” group receiving regularSecti<strong>on</strong> 8 vouchers but no mobility counseling, and ac<strong>on</strong>trol group. See Larry Orr and o<strong>the</strong>rs, “Moving toOpportunity Interim Impacts Evaluati<strong>on</strong>,” prepared byAbt Associates and Nati<strong>on</strong>al Bureau of Ec<strong>on</strong>omic Researchfor <strong>the</strong> U.S. Department of <strong>Housing</strong> and UrbanDevelopment, September, 2003, pp. 2, 12. Retrieved <strong>on</strong>48New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


October 11, 2009 from: http://www.abtassociates.com/reports/2003302754569_71451.pdf18 For a list of mobility programs see Margery AustinTurner and Kale Williams, <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong>: Realizing <strong>the</strong>Promise, (<str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> of <strong>the</strong> Sec<strong>on</strong>d Nati<strong>on</strong>al C<strong>on</strong>ference <strong>on</strong>Assisted <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong>, December 1997), p. 3.Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 23, 2009 from:www.prrac.org/pdf/RealizingPromise1997.pdf.19 From 2003 to late 2007, a different, n<strong>on</strong>profit group (<strong>the</strong>Innovative <strong>Housing</strong> Institute) was resp<strong>on</strong>sible for providingunits with project-based vouchers and serving mobilityclients interested in Secti<strong>on</strong> 8 homeownership. Inlate 2007 Metropolitan <strong>Baltimore</strong> Quadel assumed fullresp<strong>on</strong>sibility for <strong>the</strong> counseling and producti<strong>on</strong> aspectsof <strong>the</strong> Secti<strong>on</strong> 8 homeownership and project-basedvoucher programs as well as administrati<strong>on</strong> of vouchersin those programs. Now, all programs are under <strong>on</strong>eroof.20 The Annie E. Casey Foundati<strong>on</strong> provided c<strong>on</strong>tributi<strong>on</strong>sfor enhanced counseling services for a subset of <strong>the</strong> caseloadto receive sec<strong>on</strong>d move counseling (an enhancementthat was later extended program wide) and employmentservices. The Abell Foundati<strong>on</strong> has provided c<strong>on</strong>tributi<strong>on</strong>sfor security deposit assistance and is subsidizinglow-cost car purchases by program participants wh<strong>on</strong>eed a car to get to a job. The Krieger Fund has providedseed funding for a set of educati<strong>on</strong>al supports forprogram families.21 Margery Austin Turner, “HOPE VI, Neighborhood Recovery,and <strong>the</strong> Health of Cities,” in From Despair toHope: HOPE VI and <strong>the</strong> New Promise of Public <strong>Housing</strong> inAmerica’s Cities, Henry G. Cisneros and Lora Engdahl,editors, Brookings Instituti<strong>on</strong> Press, 2009, p. 182.22 Michael Stoll, “Job Sprawl and <strong>the</strong> Spatial Mismatch BetweenBlacks and Jobs,” Brookings Instituti<strong>on</strong> Survey Series,2005.23 George Galster and o<strong>the</strong>rs, Assessing Property Value Impactsof Dispersed <strong>Housing</strong> Subsidy <strong>Program</strong>s, Office of PolicyDevelopment and Research, U.S. Department of<strong>Housing</strong> and Urban Development (March 1999), Ch. 7-2. Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 14, 2009 from:http://www.huduser.org/Publicati<strong>on</strong>s/pdf/assess_1.pdfAlso cited in U.S. Department of <strong>Housing</strong> and UrbanDevelopment, Secti<strong>on</strong> 8 Tenant-Based Assistance: A LookBack After 20 Years, (March 2000) at p. 21. Retrieved <strong>on</strong>September 16, 2009 from: http//:www.huduser.org/publicati<strong>on</strong>s/doc/look.doc.24 Ibid.25 Philip D. Tegeler, Michael L. Hanley, and Judith Liben,“Transforming Secti<strong>on</strong> 8 Using Federal <strong>Housing</strong> Subsidiesto Promote Individual <strong>Housing</strong> Choice and Desegregati<strong>on</strong>,”Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review,Summer 1995: 30 Harv. C.R.-C.L.L. Rev 451.26 Generally, vouchers can be used to access units withrents falling within 90 to 110 percent of <strong>the</strong> HUDdeterminedFair Market Rent (FMR) for <strong>the</strong> metro area.To access units in healthier suburban rental submarkets,public housing authorities can request permissi<strong>on</strong> for apayment standard exceeding 110 percent of FMR. The<strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong> has set paymentstandards ranging from 110 percent of FMR up to 130percent in some areas.27 See Lawyers’ Committee for Better <strong>Housing</strong>, “LockedOut: Barriers to Choice for <strong>Housing</strong> Voucher Holders,”(Chicago, 2002). Retreived October 11, 2009 from:http://lcbh.org/images/2008/10/housing-voucherbarriers.pdf.Greater New Orleans Fair <strong>Housing</strong> Acti<strong>on</strong>Center, “<strong>Housing</strong> Choice in Crisis: An Audit <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong>Discriminati<strong>on</strong> against <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher Holdersin <strong>the</strong> Greater New Orleans Rental <strong>Housing</strong> Market,”(New Orleans, 2009). Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11,2009 from: http://www.gnofairhousing.org/pdfs/<strong>Housing</strong>ChoiceInCrisis2009.pdf.28 See a comparis<strong>on</strong> of MTO and regular Secti<strong>on</strong> 8 leaseuprates in Mark Shroder, “Moving to Opportunity: AnExperiment in Social and Geographic <strong>Mobility</strong>,”Cityscape: A Journal of Policy Development and Research, vol.5, no. 2, 2001, pp, 57-67. Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009from: http://www.huduser.org/Periodicals/CITYSCPE/VOL5NUM2/shroder.pdf.29 See Meryl Finkel and Larry Bur<strong>on</strong>, “Study <strong>on</strong> Secti<strong>on</strong> 8Voucher Success Rates, Volume 1, Quantitative Study ofSuccess Rates in Metropolitan Areas,” prepared by AbtAssociates for <strong>the</strong> U.S. Department of <strong>Housing</strong> andUrban Development, November 2001, p. 2-3 (chapter 2,page 3). Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009 from:http://www.huduser.org/publicati<strong>on</strong>s/pdf/sec8success.pdf.30 See Mark Shroder, “Moving to Opportunity: An Experimentin Social and Geographic <strong>Mobility</strong>,” p. 62.31 The Thomps<strong>on</strong> partial c<strong>on</strong>sent decree called for twoyears of post-move assistance, but <strong>the</strong> sec<strong>on</strong>d year wasnot included in MBQ’s initial c<strong>on</strong>tract.32 Surprisingly, <strong>the</strong>re does not appear to be any nati<strong>on</strong>aldata or published studies <strong>on</strong> frequency of moves by<strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher families. MBQ Managing DirectorJim Evans, who has administered voucher programsfor large urban agencies in Indiana and Texas,observes that approximately half of <strong>the</strong> voucher familiesin those programs tended to move every year.33 See Lynora Williams, Fragmented: Improving Educati<strong>on</strong>for Mobile Students, Washingt<strong>on</strong>, D.C.: Poverty & RaceResearch Acti<strong>on</strong> Council, 2004. Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October11, 2009 from: http://www.prrac.org/pubs_fiems.php34 See Larry Orr and o<strong>the</strong>rs, “Moving to Opportunity InterimImpacts Evaluati<strong>on</strong>,” p. 34. The data <strong>on</strong> reas<strong>on</strong>sfor sec<strong>on</strong>d moves in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong><strong>Program</strong> is provided in <strong>the</strong> Outcomes secti<strong>on</strong> of thisreport.35 Some landlords actively recruit mobility program participants.For example, advertisements from landlords inSecti<strong>on</strong> 8 submarkets seeking Secti<strong>on</strong> 8 and sec<strong>on</strong>d-yearMBQ participants have appeared in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Sunand <strong>on</strong> Craig’s List.Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 49


36 See Edward G. Goetz, testim<strong>on</strong>y before House Committee<strong>on</strong> Financial Services, Subcommittee <strong>on</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> andCommunity Opportunity, Academic Perspectives <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> Futureof Public <strong>Housing</strong>, 111th C<strong>on</strong>g., 1st sess., July 29,2009; retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009 from: http://www.house.gov/apps/list/hearing/financialsvcs_dem/goetz.pdf.Also see Gregory Mills and o<strong>the</strong>rs, “Effects of <strong>Housing</strong>Vouchers <strong>on</strong> Welfare Families,” prepared by Abt Associates,Amy J<strong>on</strong>es & Associates, Cloudburst C<strong>on</strong>sultingand <strong>the</strong> QED Group for <strong>the</strong> U.S. Department of <strong>Housing</strong>and Urban Development, September 2006; retrieved<strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009 from: http://www.huduser.org/Publicati<strong>on</strong>s/pdf/hsgvouchers_1.pdf;and Margery AustinTurner and Xavier de Souza Briggs, “Assisted <strong>Housing</strong><strong>Mobility</strong> and <strong>the</strong> Success of Low-Income Minority Families:Less<strong>on</strong>s for Policy, Practice, and Future Research,”Urban Institute Brief no. 5, March 2008; retrieved <strong>on</strong>October 11, 2009 from: http://www.urban.org/UploadedPDF/411638_assisted_housing.pdf.37 The Thomps<strong>on</strong> partial c<strong>on</strong>sent decree did not includefunding for specialized employment services. The enhancedemployment services have been funded through agrant from <strong>the</strong> Annie E. Casey Foundati<strong>on</strong>. The Caseyenhanced employment program initially covered 75participants. Fifteen of <strong>the</strong> original participants c<strong>on</strong>tinueto receive <strong>the</strong> services, al<strong>on</strong>g with an additi<strong>on</strong>al 35participants.38 Job Opportunities Task Force, “The 60-Hour PracticeDriving Law: Unintended C<strong>on</strong>sequences for Maryland’sEc<strong>on</strong>omy.” (July 2007).39 The distributi<strong>on</strong> descripti<strong>on</strong> comes from MBQ’s June2009 report which lists 1,263 families in <strong>the</strong> post-placementcaseload, 352 of which were previously in publichousing and 911 <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> wait list.40 These numbers likely undercount <strong>the</strong> number of publichousing families participating in <strong>the</strong> program becausefamilies coded by <strong>the</strong> intake system as coming from awaiting list may very well have been in public housingpreviously or even still living in public housing but as adependant.41 ACLU 2007 New Mover Survey.42 DeLuca and Rosenblatt articles, 2009a and 2009b (endnote4). Data is as of September 2007.43 ACLU 2007 New Mover Survey and 2007 Post-PlacementSurvey.44 For a recent analysis see Elizabeth Julian and Michael M.Daniel, “HUD-Assisted Low-Income <strong>Housing</strong>: Is ItWorking and for Whom?” Poverty & Race (July/August 2009).45 ACLU 2007 Post-Placement survey.46 ACLU 2007 Sec<strong>on</strong>d Mover Survey.47 ACLU 2007 Post-Placement Survey and 2007 Sec<strong>on</strong>dMover Survey.48 Ibid.49 Ibid.50 ACLU 2007 Sec<strong>on</strong>d Mover survey.51 Xavier de Souza Briggs, “Streng<strong>the</strong>ning <strong>Housing</strong> Opportunitythrough <strong>the</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher <strong>Program</strong>,”testim<strong>on</strong>y before <strong>the</strong> Nati<strong>on</strong>al Commissi<strong>on</strong> <strong>on</strong> Fair<strong>Housing</strong> and Equal Opportunity, September 22, 2008.Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009 from: http://www.prrac.org/projects/fair_housing_commissi<strong>on</strong>/bost<strong>on</strong>/de-souza-briggs.pdf52 Resp<strong>on</strong>dents who had a driver’s license but not a carwere less likely to report dissatisfacti<strong>on</strong> with transportati<strong>on</strong>than those who had nei<strong>the</strong>r a license nor a car andmore likely to say <strong>the</strong>y were “somewhat satisfied.” Thisunderscores <strong>the</strong> value of <strong>the</strong> assistance that <strong>the</strong> programprovides to help participants pay for driver’s educati<strong>on</strong> sothat <strong>the</strong>y can obtain a license. Additi<strong>on</strong>ally, participantsliving in Howard County are more satisfied with <strong>the</strong>irtransit opti<strong>on</strong>s than those living in Harford County.53 See Unequal Health Outcomes in <strong>the</strong> United States, reportsubmitted by <strong>the</strong> CERD Working Group <strong>on</strong> Health andEnvir<strong>on</strong>mental Health to <strong>the</strong> U.N. Committee <strong>on</strong> Eliminati<strong>on</strong>of Racial Discriminati<strong>on</strong>. Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October11, 2009 from: http://www.prrac.org/pdf/ CERDhealthEnvir<strong>on</strong>ment<str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g>.pdf.54 <strong>Baltimore</strong> City Health Department, 2008 NeighborhoodHealth Profiles, Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009 fromwww.baltimorehealth.org/neighborhood.html55 Ibid.56 The percentage of parents in this survey reporting betterhealth was 31.3 percent, somewhat lower than similarsurveys of recent movers.57 Larry Orr and o<strong>the</strong>rs, “Moving to Opportunity InterimImpacts Evaluati<strong>on</strong>,” pp. 69-84. See also DoloresAcevedo-Garcia. “Does <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> Policy ImproveHealth?” 5 <strong>Housing</strong> Policy Debate 49, 76 (2004).58 Susan J. Popkin and Mary K. Cunningham, “Has HOPEVI Transformed Residents’ Lives?” in From Despair toHope: HOPE VI and <strong>the</strong> New Promise of Public <strong>Housing</strong> inAmerica’s Cities, Henry G. Cisneros and Lora Engdahl,editors, Brookings Instituti<strong>on</strong> Press, 2009, p. 198.59 Almost all are transferring <strong>the</strong>ir children to take advantageof schools in <strong>the</strong>ir new district. Seventy-four percentof recent movers and 92 percent of l<strong>on</strong>ger-term participantssurveyed in 2007 said <strong>the</strong>y had transferred <strong>the</strong>irchildren to schools in <strong>the</strong> new district. This is in c<strong>on</strong>trastwith MTO findings, including those from <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong>site. Most MTO experimental movers generally did notmove to suburban areas and hence did not change schooldistricts. Even when parents did move bey<strong>on</strong>d <strong>the</strong> centercity school district, some did not transfer <strong>the</strong>ir children toschools in <strong>the</strong>ir new neighborhoods. Stefanie DeLuca andPeter Rosenblatt, forthcoming, 2010, “Does Moving ToBetter Neighborhoods Lead to Better Schooling Opportunities?Parental School Choice in an Experimental<strong>Housing</strong> Voucher <strong>Program</strong>.” Teachers College Record 112(5).60 DeLuca and Rosenblatt (2009a and 2009b).61 ACLU 2007 Post-Placement Survey.50New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


62 See Kami Kruckenberg and o<strong>the</strong>rs, C<strong>on</strong>necting Families toOpportunity: a Resource Guide for <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher<strong>Program</strong> Administrators, Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong>Council, July 2009, pp. 15-18. Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11,2009 from: http://www.prrac.org/pdf/c<strong>on</strong>nectingfamilies.pdf.63 ACLU 2007 Post-Placement Survey.64 See Rosenbaum, “Changing <strong>the</strong> Geography of Opportunityby Expanding Residential Choice: Less<strong>on</strong>s from <strong>the</strong>Gautreaux <strong>Program</strong>,” pp. 239-244.65 ACLU 2007 New Mover Survey; ACLU 2007 Post-Placement Survey.66 See Philip Tegeler and Michael Sarbanes “Lawyers &Social Change: Taking <strong>the</strong> L<strong>on</strong>g View in <strong>Baltimore</strong>,” TheNext American City. September 2005, p. 27; and Memorandumfrom Hea<strong>the</strong>r Brome, policy analyst, New EnglandPublic Policy Center at <strong>the</strong> Federal Reserve Bank ofBost<strong>on</strong>, to Jeffrey Blodgett, vice president of research,CERC, “Urban vs. suburban job growth,” October 20,2006.67 ACLU 2007 New Mover and Post-Placement Surveys.This data should be viewed with <strong>the</strong> caveat that <strong>the</strong> samplesizes were relatively small because some resp<strong>on</strong>dentsdid not answer some or all of <strong>the</strong> questi<strong>on</strong>s regardingemployment.68 ACLU New Mover Survey 2008.69 Ibid.70 Although researchers know of no nati<strong>on</strong>al or local data<strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> percent of <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher families whomove after <strong>the</strong>ir first year of occupancy, MBQ project directorJim Evans, who has administered voucher programsfor large urban agencies in Indiana and Texas,observes that approximately half of <strong>the</strong> voucher familiesin those programs tended to move every year.71 DeLuca and Rosenblatt, (2009a and 2009b), note 4. Thisfigure excludes <strong>the</strong> approximately 200 families forced tomove when <strong>the</strong> large apartment complexes within which<strong>the</strong>y lived were sold, almost all of whom had alreadystayed bey<strong>on</strong>d <strong>on</strong>e year.72 DeLuca and Rosenblatt, ( 2009a and 2009b), note 4. Ascited earlier, <strong>the</strong> average neighborhood of origin was 80percent black with a poverty rate of 32.8 percent, while<strong>the</strong> average “first move neighborhood” was 21.1 percentblack with a poverty rate of 7.5 percent. In comparis<strong>on</strong>,<strong>the</strong> average sec<strong>on</strong>d move neighborhood was 59.8 percentblack and had a poverty rate of 16 percent. However,<strong>the</strong>se averages for sec<strong>on</strong>d-move neighborhoods obscure<strong>the</strong> fact that <strong>the</strong>re is broad variati<strong>on</strong> in sec<strong>on</strong>d move locati<strong>on</strong>sbecause <strong>the</strong>se moves are not subject to targetingrequirements.73 Ibid.74 MBQ Administrative Data.75 Ibid. Additi<strong>on</strong>ally, data from recent movers surveyed by<strong>the</strong> ACLU of Maryland in 2008 shows a similar patternof stability post sec<strong>on</strong>d-move counseling, with 66 percentof resp<strong>on</strong>dents reporting that <strong>the</strong>y planned to stayin <strong>the</strong>ir new home at <strong>the</strong> end of <strong>the</strong>ir first year’s lease,and 76 percent saying that <strong>the</strong>y would like to stay in <strong>the</strong>same neighborhood.76 ACLU 2007 Sec<strong>on</strong>d Mover Survey; MBQ administrativedata analyzed in DeLuca and Rosenblatt (2009a, 2009b)77 See Larry Orr and o<strong>the</strong>rs, “Moving to Opportunity InterimImpacts Evaluati<strong>on</strong>,” p. 34.78 Only 11 percent of Sec<strong>on</strong>d Movers surveyed said beingnear to family and friends was an important factor in selectinga neighborhood in which to live. ACLU 2007Sec<strong>on</strong>d Mover Survey. Perhaps surprisingly, this wascited as important by a larger percentage of l<strong>on</strong>ger-termstayers, 31 percent, but still a minority. ACLU 2007Post-Placement Survey.79 ACLU 2007 Sec<strong>on</strong>d Mover Survey. (Data includes familiesmoving in <strong>the</strong> “ordinary course” i.e. does not includeparticipants forced to move when large apartment complexeswere sold and <strong>the</strong> new owners did not c<strong>on</strong>tinueparticipati<strong>on</strong> in <strong>the</strong> program). For a HUD sp<strong>on</strong>soredstudy of how <strong>the</strong> short term housing choices of individuals,housing outcomes, and workforce c<strong>on</strong>sequences arec<strong>on</strong>diti<strong>on</strong>ed by regulatory barriers and l<strong>on</strong>g term patternsof development and tranportati<strong>on</strong> infrastructure,see Carliner, et al., A Review of Regulatory Barriers to EmployerAbility to Recruit and Retain Employees: Workforce<strong>Housing</strong> Final <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g>, U.S. Department of <strong>Housing</strong> andUrban Development, Office of PolicyDevelopment and Research (2008) at p. 85. Retrieved <strong>on</strong>October 12, 2009 from http://www.huduser.org/Publicati<strong>on</strong>s/pdf/review_regbarrier.pdf80 ACLU 2007 Sec<strong>on</strong>d Mover survey.81 Ibid.82 Jobs-Plus was a federal dem<strong>on</strong>strati<strong>on</strong> program of <strong>the</strong>1990s aimed at helping public housing residents find andkeep jobs in part by changing rent rules so that participantswho increased earnings through work were not penalizedwith a c<strong>on</strong>current increase in rent.83 MBQ administrative data analyzed in DeLuca andRosenblatt (2009a, 2009b), note 4.84 Job Opportunities Task Force, “The 60-Hour PracticeDriving Law: Unintended C<strong>on</strong>sequences for Maryland’sEc<strong>on</strong>omy,” (July 2007).85 Ibid. JOTF reports that participants in “Ways to Work,”a program similar to Vehicles for Change that helps lowincomeworkers obtain cars, increase <strong>the</strong>ir salaries by anaverage of 41 percent <strong>on</strong>ce <strong>the</strong>y have a car.86 See Kami Kruckenberg and o<strong>the</strong>rs, C<strong>on</strong>necting Families toOpportunity: a Resource Guide for <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher<strong>Program</strong> Administrators, pp. 15-18. Am<strong>on</strong>g <strong>the</strong> sourcescited are Briggs et al, “Why Did <strong>the</strong> Moving to OpportunityExperiment Not Get Young People into BetterSchools?”; Richard Rothstein, “Even <strong>the</strong> Best SchoolsCan’t Close <strong>the</strong> Achievement Gap,” Poverty & Race(Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council, Washingt<strong>on</strong>,D.C.) September/October 2004; and Susan Popkin,Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council and <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign 51


Tama Leventhal, and Gretchen Weismann, Girls in <strong>the</strong>‘hood: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment, (Washingt<strong>on</strong>,D.C.: The Urban Institute, 2006). For details <strong>on</strong>how poor parents face challenges negotiating <strong>the</strong> housingand school link in <strong>the</strong> absence of supports, seeDeLuca and Rosenblatt, “Does Moving To BetterNeighborhoods Lead to Better Schooling Opportunities?Parental School Choice in an Experimental <strong>Housing</strong>Voucher <strong>Program</strong>,” Teachers College Record 112(5).87 See Kruckenberg and o<strong>the</strong>rs, C<strong>on</strong>necting Families to Opportunity,pp. 5-14, which reviews <strong>the</strong> research <strong>on</strong> neighborhoodimpacts <strong>on</strong> health.88 Briggs and o<strong>the</strong>rs, “Why Did <strong>the</strong> Moving to OpportunityExperiment Not Get Young People into Better Schools?”<strong>Housing</strong> Policy Debate, vol. 19, issue 1, 2008, pp. 53-91.Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009 from: http://www.mi.vt.edu/data/files/hpd%2019.1/briggs_article.pdf; DeLucaand Rosenblatt. “Does Moving To Better NeighborhoodsLead to Better Schooling Opportunities? Parental SchoolChoice in an Experimental <strong>Housing</strong> Voucher <strong>Program</strong>,”Teachers College Record 112(5).89 See Bruce Katz and Margery Austin Turner, “RethinkingU.S. Rental <strong>Housing</strong> Policy,” Joint Center for <strong>Housing</strong>Studies of Harvard University, March 2007; retrieved <strong>on</strong>October 11, 2009 from: http://www.jchs.harvard.edu/publicati<strong>on</strong>s/rental/revisiting_rental_symposium/papers/rr07-10_turner_katz.pdf; and Bruce Katz,“Neighborhoods of Choice and C<strong>on</strong>necti<strong>on</strong>: TheEvoluti<strong>on</strong> of American Neighborhood Policy and Whatit Means for <strong>the</strong> United Kingdom,” The BrookingsInstituti<strong>on</strong> Metropolitan Policy <strong>Program</strong> research brief,July 2004; retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009 from:http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Files/rc/reports/2004/07metropolitanpolicy_katz/20040713_katz.pdf.90 Kirk McClure, 2009. <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher MarketingOpportunity Index: Analysis of Data at <strong>the</strong> Tract andBlock Group Level, <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> to <strong>the</strong> U.S. Department of<strong>Housing</strong> and Urban Development, Office of Policy Developmentand Research.91 Tegeler and Sarbanes, “Lawyers & Social Change: Taking<strong>the</strong> L<strong>on</strong>g View in <strong>Baltimore</strong>,” p. 27.92 The federal law governing of <strong>the</strong> LIHTC program, 26U.S.C. § 42(m)(1)(A)(ii), requires <strong>on</strong>ly that local governmentsbe given notice and an opportunity for comment<strong>on</strong> LIHTC applicati<strong>on</strong>s submitted by private developers.Only Arkansas, Kansas, Maryland, New Mexico,Oklahoma, and South Dakota impose additi<strong>on</strong>al mandatoryrequirements for local approval. See Sarah Bookbinderand o<strong>the</strong>rs, Building Opportunity: Civil Rights BestPractices in <strong>the</strong> Low-Income <strong>Housing</strong> Tax Credit <strong>Program</strong>,Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council, Lawyers’Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, December2008, pp. 10-12. Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009 from:http://www.prrac.org/pdf/2008-Best-Practices-final.pdf.93 See Kruckenberg and o<strong>the</strong>rs, C<strong>on</strong>necting Families toOpportunity: a Resource Guide for <strong>Housing</strong> Choice Voucher<strong>Program</strong> Administrators, p. 2.94 Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council, “A Nati<strong>on</strong>alOpportunity Voucher <strong>Program</strong>: A bridge to quality, integratededucati<strong>on</strong> for low-income children,” July 2009.Retrieved <strong>on</strong> October 11, 2009 from:http://www.prrac.org/pdf/opportunityvouchers.pdf.95 The cost range encompasses counseling costs. Higherrental subsidies going to costlier units in more affluentsuburbs are covered by housing assistance paymentsand not factored into <strong>the</strong> overall mobility counselingcosts.52New Homes, New Neighborhoods, New Schools: A <str<strong>on</strong>g>Progress</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Report</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Baltimore</strong> <strong>Housing</strong> <strong>Mobility</strong> <strong>Program</strong>


Poverty & Race Research Acti<strong>on</strong> Council (PRRAC)1015 15th St. NW, Suite 400Washingt<strong>on</strong>, DC 20005202/906-8023 • Fax 202/842-2885www.prrac.org<strong>Baltimore</strong> Regi<strong>on</strong>al <strong>Housing</strong> Campaign (BRHC)C/o Citizens Planning & <strong>Housing</strong> Associati<strong>on</strong>218 W. Saratoga Street, 5th Floor<strong>Baltimore</strong>, MD 21201410/539-1369 • 410/625-7895www.cphabaltimore.org

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