JobsOhio

January 2021: Governor's Budget, Rent Assistance

This was originally published in the February 2, 2021 OCDCA newsletter.

Federal News

Federal Eviction Moratoriums Extended
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention extended the national moratorium on evictions until March 31, as ordered by President Biden on his first day in office. In addition, HUD and USDA extended eviction and foreclosure moratoriums through March 31. FHFA extended foreclosure and REO eviction moratoriums until February 28. Go to NACEDA's COVID-19 housing resources page for more information.

Federal Reserve Issues Community Reinvestment Act ANPR

Submit comments by February 16 for the Federal Reserve Board's Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). The Fed proposal improves upon the current CRA exam structure in contrast to previous rulemaking by the Office of the Comptroller, which dramatically weakens CRA. These two federal agencies regulate different banks and were unable to agree upon common rulemaking. NCRC has posted sample comment letters.

Senator Portman Reintroduces Tax Credit Bill to Encourage Revitalization of Distressed Homes

The Neighborhood Homes Investment Act (NHIA) was introduced on January 28 by Senators Rob Portman (R-OH) and Ben Cardin (D-MD), and co-sponsored by Senators Tim Scott (R-SC), Todd Young (R-IN), Chris Coons (D-DE), and Sherrod Brown (D-OH). NHIA would encourage private investment in an estimated 500,000 homes that currently cannot be developed or rehabilitated because the costs to do so exceed the value of the home. The tax credit supports development of homes in rural communities struggling with the costs of new construction, as well as the rehabilitation of homes in distressed urban communities. For NHIA info relative to Ohio, watch the OCDCA webinar recording from December 8th. View the slides from Matt Josephs of LISC and the Cleveland data from Kate Monter Durban at CHN Housing Partners. Learn more.

President Biden Directs HUD to Reverse Anti-Fair Housing Policies

The President signed an executive order on January 27 directing his administration to end policies that enable discrimination in housing and lending, and acknowledging the federal government's role in erecting systemic barriers to fair housing. The previous day, he issued a memorandum directing HUD to examine Trump Administration revisions making it harder to utilize the Fair Housing Act's Disparate Impact Standard, as well as the abandonment of the Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing provisions within the Act. The president also pledged federal action to pursue environmental justice, lift restrictions on housing production, and ease the racial gap in homeownership and homelessness. Read Biden Lays Out His Blueprint for Fair Housing from Bloomberg CityLab for analysis plus information on HUD appointments.

Rep. Marcia Fudge Gets Hearing on HUD Secretary Nomination

The Senate Banking Committee held a hearing January 28 on the nomination of Representative Marcia Fudge (D-OH) to serve as HUD Secretary. Pat Toomey (R-PA), the acting committee chairman, and Ranking Member Sherrod Brown (D-OH), the likely incoming Chairman, applauded Fudge's long career in public service and highlighted her commitment and passion in their public statements. Her nomination has bipartisan support and advocates believe her confirmation process will be smooth in the coming weeks.

State News

Governor Dewine Unveils Budget Proposal

The DeWine Administration unveiled its second budget proposal Monday for the biennium from July 1, 2021 - June 30, 2023, with the spending bill coming to nearly $171.6 billion over two years. Gov. Mike DeWine touted $1 billion in targeted investments aimed at the state's recovery from an economic and public health crisis, what is perhaps most notable about the budget is what isn't in it. There isn't tax increases or decreases, a plan to borrow from the state's "rainy day" Budget Stabilization Fund, or a significant slash in spending.

Of note are proposed single occurrence expenditures to invest in Ohio communities focused on pandemic recovery including:

  • $450 million under what's called "Investing in Ohio by Enhancing our Communities" by investing in community infrastructure projects ($200 million) and expanding broadband access ($250 million).

  • $460 million for small business relief, such as entertainment and hospitality enterprises.

  • $20 million for new businesses that started in 2020.

  • Enhanced services to minority businesses.

  • $70 million for workforce development.

The budget will now move to the Ohio House of Representatives and then the Ohio Senate. Click here for broad budget details from the Associated Press.

Rent, Utility Assistance Approved

The first round of federal aid dollars from the latest federal relief bill to pass through the Controlling Board will go toward rent and utility assistance. The board gave its OK to the use of $100 million in funding for the aid programs, which will be administered by community action agencies through the Ohio Development Services Agency (ODSA). Renters in the U.S. owe an estimated $57 billion in back rent, with the typical renter almost four months and $5,600 behind on their monthly rent and utilities. ODSA recently allocated $55.8 million from the state's federal Community Development Block Grant - Coronavirus relief funding for the Home Relief Grant Program to provide assistance into early 2021. Congress approved $25 billion for emergency rental assistance in the new economic stimulus package with Ohio's distribution of $778.1 million expected soon. Ohioans seeking assistance should contact their local community action agency. For more information and a listing of local community action agencies visit ODSA's Home Relief Grant web page.

Ohio's Vaccine Resources

The Ohio Department of Health has created a COVID-19 Vaccine Myth v Fact sheet, which is available in several languages. There is other information and resources available on their portal as well to help with an adequate vaccine distribution and information campaign.

JobsOhio Inclusion Grants

The JobsOhio Inclusion Grant exists to provide financial support for eligible projects in designated distressed communities and/or for businesses owned by underrepresented populations across the state.

Grant decisions are based on a number of project factors, including but not limited to company location, company ownership, jobs created and/or retained, and project fixed asset investment. Support is generally intended for small to medium-sized companies with eligible projects.

Learn more about these factors and how to help your community's businesses apply.

September 2020: Federal Eviction Moratorium

This was originally published on October 1, 2020 in the OCDCA Newsletter.

Federal News

Important Eviction Moratorium and Rental Assistance Information

From the National Low-Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC) . . .Evidence is growing that corporate landlords are trying to rush evictions through court systems before renters learn about their rights under the Center for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC's) eviction moratorium. These are the same corporate landlords who repeatedly attempted illegal evictions under the more limited CARES Act eviction moratorium. This is outrageous and truly despicable.

The CDC eviction moratorium protects eligible renters that have signed a declarative statement, but most renters remain unaware of the moratorium and the steps they must take to protect their homes! Help get the word out!

To be protected by the CDC's eviction moratorium for nonpayment of rent, qualified renters facing eviction should immediately provide a signed declaration to their landlords! Details about the moratorium and a sample declaration is on NLIHC's National Moratorium webpage that includes materials developed by NLIHC, NHLP and other national partners, including:

Overview of National Eviction Moratorium
National Eviction Moratorium: FAQ for Renters (translated into Spanish)
Sample declarative statements in English, Spanish, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Tagalog, Vietnamese, and Arabic.

Please do all you can to get the word out about the moratorium and declarations to all renters! Urge your members of Congress and policy makers at all levels to inform struggling constituents of their protections under the CDC order.

Then, continue to urge Congress and the White House to #GetBacktoWork to enact the essential housing provisions included in the HEROES Act and passed by the House four months ago!

The federal eviction moratorium is essential relief for struggling renters, but it merely postpones evictions - it doesn't prevent them. Renters are accruing more debt than they can possibly pay off, and small landlords are increasingly struggling to pay their bills without rental income. Congress must provide at least $100 billion in emergency rental assistance to keep renters stably housed during and after the pandemic and to ensure we don't lose any of our country's essential housing stock.

Take Action

  1. Share information with renters about the federal eviction moratorium and the steps they must take to be protected!

  2. Contact your senators and representatives: Demand that Congress and the White House restart negotiations and pass the essential housing provisions of the HEROES Act. Find the phone numbers of your members of Congress here or send an email!

Thank you for your advocacy!

State News:

JobsOhio Launches Vibrant Community Program

The Vibrant Community Program recognizes that distressed communities may not have adequate resources to develop and implement economic development projects that can attract private investment and create new jobs in the community. The program was established to assist distressed small and medium sized communities with the implementation of catalytic development projects that fulfill a market need and represent a significant reinvestment in areas that have struggled to attract new investment. For more information click here.

$650 Million in Coronavirus Relief to Local Governments

The General Assembly approved $650 million to Ohio cities, townships and villages to cover their coronavirus-related expenses, in a move that would allocate the state's final share of emergency local-government funding. The article lists awards by county and local government. All of these resources must be spent responding to the pandemic and members should reach out to their local governments to learn of opportunities.

Frontline Examines Child Poverty in Ohio Communities

PBS Frontline examines issues surrounding child poverty during the pandemic by visiting three Ohio communities in their documentary film called Growing Up Poor in America. Click here to view.