Denver Homeless Out Loud

Denver Homeless Out Loud DHOL assures unhoused voices are directing policy by amplifying their collective experience to the ge We welcome you to join us in this work.

Denver Homeless Out Loud (DHOL) works with and for people who experience homelessness, to solve the issues that arise from the experience of homelessness. We work to help protect and advocate for dignity, rights and choices for people experiencing homelessness. To these ends, we commit our efforts toward goals affirmed and raised by homeless people, within our organization and throughout. We striv

e to combine our strengths to create ways of living in which everyone has a place they can call home. Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/homelessoutloud

A very good review of the Land Use bill SB23-213“Research has shown that increasing housing supply, like building units ...
04/12/2023

A very good review of the Land Use bill SB23-213

“Research has shown that increasing housing supply, like building units like duplexes and townhomes, can increase affordability. "
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Can? You mean it is somewhere in the realm of possibility?
It might? Maybe???

We could sue some better assurances that if implemented 213 will make housing more affordable in the end. This bill contains some vague language when it comes to actual affordability. The bill has potential but what is considered affordable in not clearly defined. If all they do is make it easier for developers to make more densely packed housing then that those who need deeply affordable housing will still not be able to afford housing and in the end this will not impact our housing crisis very much.

We are hopeful, but we are concerned. Remember when the city passed the camping ban? Based on promises legislators made that it will work? It has not worked. Homelessness in this city has only gotten worse. We are concerned that if deep affordability is not addressed in this bill that homelessness will only worsen across the state.

Do it right and a great need can be potentially met.

If it passes, the odds are good this bill will rewrite development rules where you live. Here’s what it does.

The Real-Estate Lobby opposes it.[ you know the ones responsible for the high cost of housing in the first place]  So th...
02/10/2023

The Real-Estate Lobby opposes it.
[ you know the ones responsible for the high cost of housing in the first place]

So this could be a way to control housing costs outside the speculative real-estate con that makes housing so expensive in the first place.

Colorado cities and counties would have the ability to snap up apartment complexes and convert them to affordable housing, rather than be sold to private bidders, under a new bill set to be introdu…

" Polis remains a primary obstacle to this latest push ... his office reiterated his skepticism to rent control"  --- Al...
01/25/2023

" Polis remains a primary obstacle to this latest push ... his office reiterated his skepticism to rent control"
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All that "talk" about housing at the State of the State address and first major push to do something on a large scale to make housing more affordable and Polis opposes it and is the primary obstacle.

Figures... instead of leading the charge he sets himself up as a roadblock. No doubt he will recommend ineffective detours to pretend he cares. Expect him to protect developers' rights to make as expensive housing as they want and to allow those developers to charge as much as they want over people's need for things we can actually afford.

If we keep building housing people can't afford we will continue to make more people homeless. We must build less expensive housing and limit costs or the numbers of those experiencing homelessness will only grow.

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By SETH KLAMANN | [email protected] | The Denver Post
PUBLISHED: January 24, 2023 at 11:31 a.m. | UPDATED: January 24, 2023 at 8:17 p.m.

Nearly half of Colorado’s House Democrats have signed on to a bill that would allow local governments to enact rent control, repealing a decades-old prohibition and setting up a potential showdown with Gov. Jared Polis.

HB23-1115 does not institute any rent control or stabilization policies statewide. But it removes a state-level block on local officials rolling out one of their own, and it comes as lawmakers and Polis weigh an array of legislation to address Colorado’s growing housing crisis.

“Rents are too high,” said Rep. Javier Mabrey, a Denver Democrat, eviction attorney and one of the bill’s primary sponsors. “And that does not just mean essential workers like grocery store workers and servers. It’s unaffordable for teachers and nurses.”

Mabrey, a freshman lawmaker, is joined by fellow Democrat Rep. Elizabeth Velasco, of Glenwood Springs, as prime sponsors in the House. Twenty other members — all Democrats — have also signed on. That list includes nearly all of the chamber’s leadership, including Majority Leader Monica Duran, Assistant Majority Leader Jennifer Bacon and the House’s two whips, Reps. Iman Jodeh and Andy Boesenecker.

Supporters cast rent control not as a silver bullet to Colorado’s housing affordability crisis but as a tool that should be available to local officials. Mabrey said he supported ongoing debates about land-use reform — intended to increase the supply of housing statewide — but that affordability must be included in that policy discussion.

If enacted, the bill would allow local authorities to step in and regulate rent increases. In Oregon, where there’s a statewide rent control policy, landlords can only increase rent by 7% plus inflation in a given year. St. Paul recently enacted a rent control policy capping increases at 3%, though officials there have since taken steps to loosen that policy and allow for exemptions.

The bill’s introduction drew praise from Colorado Homes for All, a coalition that’s long pushed for rent control and stabilization policies. Carmen Medrano, whose United for a New Economy group is part of the coalition, said there was more momentum this year to enact price controls.

“Affordable rents have always been an issue in our communities, and it’s something that COVID exasperated,” she said. “So I feel like the many people in Colorado now are feeling that pressure, and that constituents are reaching out to their elected officials, letting them know that something needs to be done.”

It’s unclear if local governments would take up that mantle. Kevin Bommer, the executive director of the Colorado Municipal League, said the group was monitoring the legislation and would consider a formal position in the future. But he noted that no local official has come forward to ask the league to address the state prohibition, and he said the organization has a good relationship with the Colorado Apartment Association, a vocal opponent of rent control.

Boesenecker sponsored a bill last session that would’ve enacted rent stabilization policies for mobile-home parks, a first foray into price controls. But that provision was stripped out of the bill after Polis signaled that he would veto the bill if it included rent stabilization.

Polis remains a primary obstacle to this latest push, supporters and opponents say. In a statement to the Post in December, his office reiterated his skepticism to rent control, warning of its unintended consequence of actually increasing rent. The Colorado Apartment Association’s opposition is also well known: Senior Vice President Drew Hamrick told the Post on Tuesday that “price controls are an old and bad idea.” He and other critics have warned that limiting rent increases will cause new development to crater.

Mabrey said he was having ongoing conversations with Polis’s office. A similar effort to repeal the prohibition, which dates back to 1981, died in the Senate in 2019.

This latest attempt, introduced Monday, has been referred to the House’s Transportation, Housing and Local Government committee — recently renamed to include housing in a nod to the issue’s urgency. Rep. Meg Froelich, the chair of that committee, declined to comment on the bill Tuesday but said she anticipated a “robust discussion” around housing affordability in general.

Speaker Julie McCluskie told reporters Tuesday afternoon that rent stabilization’s return to the statehouse — after Boesenecker’s attempt to include it in mobile home regulations last year — showed that the “plight of renters is very real.”

“I think what you’re seeing in this policy is recognition of a problem that still exists and another approach,” she said. “And trying to figure out how can local communities address this, and is this the right path?”

Hamrick, of the apartment association, predicted in December that a prohibition repeal would likely make it out of the House and that he hoped to kill it in the Senate, thus avoiding any showdown between Polis and Democratic lawmakers.

Senate President Steve Fenberg said Tuesday morning that ending the rent control prohibition would likely divide Senate Democrats.

As for his own position, Fenberg, of Boulder, said he thought “communities should have the right to make those decisions for themselves. It’s different in every community.” But he stressed that it should be a more nuanced discussion than a yes-or-no on rent control.

Asked about potential opposition in the Senate, Mabrey pointed to Democrats’ recent electoral success as proof that voters wanted them to address housing.

“Colorado elected almost a supermajority in the Colorado Senate because they understand that Democrats are there to fight for the working class,” he said. “The number one issue (in the election) was the economy, and they elected us. And within that, the number one issue is housing. This is a housing issue, and I think that my colleagues in the Senate understand that.”

Nearly half of Colorado’s House Democrats have signed on to a bill that would allow local governments to enact rent control, repealing a decades-old prohibition and setting up a potential sho…

"San Francisco... clears encampments without offering adequate shelter and fails to comply with the City’s own rules reg...
12/27/2022

"San Francisco... clears encampments without offering adequate shelter and fails to comply with the City’s own rules regarding seizure of unhoused people’s property."
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This is not only a wake up call for SF but for Denver too. What we do here in Denver is no different. We have many recorded instances of the city failing to comply with their own agreement in regards to confiscating and destroying peoples property. Mayors from city to city copy each other when it comes to policies concerning housing and our homeless. Without oversight they will just continue the cruelty against our poor. - thats how bullies work.

While struggling to do so, we have been able to find shelter for the sudden influx immigrants that have been coming. We found shelter/resources for them because we committed to meeting the need. You got to wonder when we will commit to meeting the needs of our homeless. As evidenced to our repose to the recent influx of surprise immigrants we can work hard and find the resources to meet those needs. Will it take an injunction from a federal judge for us to respond in a similar way for our homeless community?

We have 35 years of unfunded housing that we need to catch up with. [that's when the federal housing budget was cut] Our ability to catch up to the need will not happen over night. The least we can do in the interim is not cruelly push our homeless around the city and confiscate their property. That only makes things worse.

Instead of denials and resistance, Breed Administration should take immediate steps to provide alternatives for people living on the streets.

12/14/2022

Last min change of location for the Homeless Advisory Committee Meeting. the previous location is being used for " the recently-arrived migrants" that have been in the news - the new location

The Commons on Champa
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
1245 Champa St.

It is about a 30 min walk from where the previous location was.
We are certain some in the homeless community who need to
get the word will not be notified in time and arrive at the other location.

Thus loosing their opportunity to bring their issues to the city directly. As required by a binding contract.

This is a problem.

https://mcusercontent.com/3dd16000d361f613eadbb201b/files/c20999fc-cfea-971e-285b-41cb3f4977ae/Dec._HA_meeting.01.pdf

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