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Sunday, November 24, 2024 |
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SECTION 8 |
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over the hill
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 19 2012 Location: middletown Status: Offline Points: 952 |
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Will that be a good thing or a bad thing? Does he believe Dougie's spins? Is he grateful for his appointment by him,so much so he will still do his bidding to keep his job?
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409
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Mar 27 2009 Status: Offline Points: 1014 |
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MIDDLETOWN Middletown agrees to cease operation of Section 8 program By Michael D. Pitman Staff Writer Middletown — The Middletown Public Housing Agency board voted Tuesday night to end an 18-month dispute with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and transfer its 1,662 Section 8 housing vouchers to Butler and Warren counties and cease operations within three months. The next step will be for City Council to approve the Voluntary Compliance Agreement and Memorandum of Understanding at its July 15 meeting. “In many ways this discussion became an issue of efficiency,” said City Manager Doug Adkins. “The county housing authorities are better suited to manage the resource on behalf of our residents in Butler and Warren counties, allowing the city to focus on more city services.” The Voluntary Compliance Agreement and Memorandum of Understanding calls for the unused 300-plus Section 8 vouchers to be allocated to another county’s public housing authority to address waiting list needs. Warren Metropolitan Housing Authority will receive 350 vouchers and Butler Metro will receive the remaining balance. Butler Metro Housing Authority Executive Director Phyllis Hitte and Warren Metropolitan Housing Authority Executive Director Jacqueline Adkins both declined to comment because HUD has not yet issued a statement. Butler Metro does handle more than 1,100 Section 8 vouchers and Warren Metropolitan handles nearly 450 Section 8 vouchers. The potential agreement will give housing authorities in each Butler and Warren counties control of all of the Section 8 vouchers assigned to the respective counties. A representative of HUD could not be reached for comment. Law Director Les Landen said that no one currently on the program will lose their voucher, but they will have to go to Hamilton in Butler County and Lebanon in Warren County for services, and the process of transferring the program to the respective counties is expected to take until Sept. 30. The MPHA’s October 2012 plan — which was to reduce its voucher allocation by 1,008 over the course of four to five years — was the city’s response to a HUD letter saying they were out of compliance with assigning Section 8 vouchers to families. The city was required to have at least 95 percent of its housing choice vouchers awarded to an applicant family. As of August 2012, the city was around 82 percent compliant. Currently the city is closer to 80 percent complaint as they had not reassigned unused vouchers in its attempt to achieve the reduction down to 654. City officials said Middletown has more Section 8 housing per capita than any other city in Ohio, and that a reduction in the amount of subsidized housing was necessary. In 2013, Section 8 vouchers account for 49.8 percent of all subsidized housing and 14.3 percent of all available housing in Middletown, officials said. Many of the city’s landlords accused officials of using bully tactics and unusually stringent regulations to force them out of the program. The city paid out about $10 million a year in funds it received from HUD to hundreds of landlords who rented properties to voucher-holders. Several landlords have applauded the upcoming changes and that the county will now be running the program. Once City Council, which are the members of the MPHA board, approves the agreement the transfer of the program to the housing authorities in Butler and Warren counties can begin. And once the two housing authorities assume administrative control of the vouchers, “MPHA shall cease (housing choice voucher) program operations and commence its formal dissolution as a (public housing agency) and governmental entity.” The agreement also “releases and resolves” all charges HUD may levy against the city, its officials, agents and contractors “concerning the utilization of MPHA’s budget authority and failure to timely reissue vouchers” and releases HUD from any claim by the city for “reimbursement, compensation and other payment related to MPHA’s administration of the (housing choice voucher) program.” |
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Every morning is the dawn of a new error...
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over the hill
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 19 2012 Location: middletown Status: Offline Points: 952 |
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You send the program to WMHA and BMHA and we won't charge you with civil rights violations. Pretty sweet deal for Judy and Dougie.
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VietVet
MUSA Council Joined: May 15 2008 Status: Offline Points: 7008 |
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Adkins:
“In many ways this discussion became an issue of efficiency,” said City Manager Doug Adkins. “The county housing authorities are better suited to manage the resource on behalf of our residents in Butler and Warren counties, allowing the city to focus on more city services.” MERCY SAKES ADKINS. THE ISSUE WASN'T ABOUT EFFICIENCY AS MUCH AS IT WAS ABOUT HUD TAKING YOU AND THE CITY TO THE WOODSHED IF YOU CONTINUED ON YOUR CURRENT PATH OF DEFIANCE. IF THE COUNTY HOUSING AUTHORITY IS "BETTER SUITED TO MANAGE THE RESOURCES ON BEHALF OF OUR RESIDENTS", WHY WAS MIDDLETOWN INVOLVED IN IT IN THE FIRST PLACE? ANOTHER "CONVENIENCE STATEMENT' BASED ON THE SITUATION FROM THIS PERSON. AND FINALLY..... "ALLOWING THE CITY TO FOCUS ON MORE CITY SERVICES" GOOD ONE DOUGGIE THIS CLOWN IS NO BETTER THAN ANY OF THE PREVIOUS ACTORS AS TO SPREADING THE BULLCRAP. The agreement also “releases and resolves” all charges HUD may levy against the city, its officials, agents and contractors “concerning the utilization of MPHA’s budget authority and failure to timely reissue vouchers” and releases HUD from any claim by the city for “reimbursement, compensation and other payment related to MPHA’s administration of the (housing choice voucher) program.” NOW, THAT'S THE REAL REASON FOR THE SECTION 8 PROGRAM ABANDONMENT DOUG. JUST TELL IT LIKE IT IS AND YOU MIGHT GET A LITTLE MORE RESPECT. |
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I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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What will City Hall now do without the Section 8 Program as the whipping post for all their problems?
What will City Hall do now that all that HUD money will go to Butler and Warren County? Maybe now the HUD Funds will used in the areas of greatest need to improve the city. |
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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I can not believe that TV Middletown did not film the MPHA meeting last night.
Since the Section 8 Program has dominated the focus of City Hall for the past two years and this final meeting of MPHA is not made public...another shameful action by City Hall. I thought that was why we funded TV Middletown with our tax dollars. City Hall can not continue to hide their wrong doings and illegal action forever....all of it will be made public. |
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spiderjohn
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Jul 01 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2749 |
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Soo--what do we actually lose OR gain?
I assume that we lose the funding to administrate the Section 8 program. Do we also lose future HUD and/or CDBG funding? Will we see an attrition of vouchers in our city? Will less or more vouchers be brought here by the county agencies? Could they send more here to keep them from communities that do not want them? Can we use the $250,000 software that we purchased to allow the former hired administrating firm to monitor the program/voucher holders? Do we even know how to use the software? This will tell the tale in large part as to the plan of action by Mr.A. He seems to have an aggressive community agenda--- Let's see what he can do to turn this city around, since the tail seems to wag the dog @ Donham Abbey. Where does Council fit in anymore, since they seem to be little more than a reactionary rubber stamp imo. Hopefully three strong progressive individuals will emerge to run in the up-coming election. SOS won't cut it imo. I agree on TVM--they need to be showing these important meetings. Still--they are at the mercy of Council for funding until the public steps up big time. So what do or can they really do to change their programming Why would Council deny the opportunity to show these type of important meetings? Informed citizens become the best and most active supporting citizens. |
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acclaro
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Jul 01 2009 Status: Offline Points: 1878 |
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As I stated many months ago, Mr. Adkins would get the city manager job because he would loose his job with the transfer.
I'll let others figure out why he lost his job, got the new job, got a 15% increase, and another 10% increase year 2 before starting a job. Nothing changes in up/down, east/west Middletown dynamics. |
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'An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last.' - Winston Churchill
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SEEKING THE TRUTH
MUSA Resident Joined: Oct 17 2012 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 62 |
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Mess with the BULL and GET the horns.
Maybe some people in this town should not be @#$% with by by Judy. Nice move Doug I won the bet. section 8 whatTTTTTTTTTT
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Sheila McLaughlin,
smclaughlin@enquirer.com10:05 p.m. EDT Middletown Public Housing Authority voted
Tuesday night to dissolve the agency amid accusations that it tried to kick
tenants out of the program and hassled its largest landlords to reduce the
number of Section 8 housing units available. In essence it was a
unanimous decision voiced by council members. All are members of the housing
authority. The next step will
happen July 15, when council approves the same Memorandum of Understanding and
compliance agreement with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. In doing so, the city
agrees to turn over its 1,662 Section 8 housing vouchers to metropolitan
housing authorities in “No one who has a
voucher will lose it as a result of this agreement,” City Manager Doug Adkins
said. “Subsidized housing will still be available in the community for
low-income residents.” The Middletown Public
Housing Agency should be shut down by September. The agreement also
bans A recent Enquirer
investigation found hundreds of documents that detailed the city’s plan to get
rid of at least two-thirds of Middletown Public Housing Agency’s 1,662 Section
8 vouchers. They said Section 8
clusters have created pockets of poverty in a city that is trying to
revitalize. With about 50,000 residents, City officials argue
that’s out of balance, even though previous councils had sought to more than
triple the number of vouchers to help pay for the program’s administrative
costs. They denied trying to push out low-income residents. However, some
landlords were placed under criminal investigation and charged with felony
theft after subsequent audits of their Section 8 records. Dan Tracy was one of
them. He was kicked out of the city program as a result, even though HUD
allowed him back in. He’s suing “The city has been
hard-nosed about it. A lawsuit could have been avoided by doing the right
thing,” |
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VietVet
MUSA Council Joined: May 15 2008 Status: Offline Points: 7008 |
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Incompetence in every facet of this endeavor by city leaders and council, past and present. What else is new. Must be the required criteria for occupying a position with this city nowadays.
"They said Section 8 clusters have created pockets of poverty in a city that is trying to revitalize. With about 50,000 residents, Middletown has 13 percent of Butler County’s population but has 56 percent of its Section 8 housing vouchers. City officials argue that’s out of balance, even though previous councils had sought to more than triple the number of vouchers to help pay for the program’s administrative costs. They denied trying to push out low-income residents" This says it all. How in the hell can you revitalize a city when you invite more poverty in? Creates an increase in crime, a strain on your resources and a ghetto-like image to outsiders that may never be repaired. City leaders created the problem with oversaturation, then blame the decision they made for creating an "out of balance" situation in their words. They are their own worst enemy. Are there no boundaries to their ignorance? |
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I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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Stanky
MUSA Resident Joined: Jul 04 2011 Status: Offline Points: 193 |
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We need to hear from M29 about his complicity in increasing the vouchers during his time on council.
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over the hill
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 19 2012 Location: middletown Status: Offline Points: 952 |
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From the article it sounds like one man has the guts to take on the administration. Maybe we need more people standing up and saying this isn't right. More power to him if he was unjustly charged with a crime.
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409
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Mar 27 2009 Status: Offline Points: 1014 |
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Posted: 5:22 p.m. Monday, July 14, 2014 MIDDLETOWN Council expected to vote Tuesday to move Section 8 to Butler, Warren By Michael D. Pitman Staff Writer MIDDLETOWN — Middletown City Council is expected to approve an agreement with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Tuesday and begin transferring the city’s 1,662 Section 8 housing vouchers to Butler and Warren counties. The board of the Middletown Public Housing Agency, which is made up of all five City Council members, voted unanimously July 1 to accept a Voluntary Compliance Agreement and Memorandum of Understanding with HUD to shut down its city-run Section 8 housing program by Sept. 30. The agreement also stipulated the city would hand over all of its housing choice vouchers to the metropolitan housing authorities in Butler and Warren counties. Butler County would receive 1,312 of the city’s vouchers and Warren County would receive the other 350 under the agreement. It was initially reported that any vouchers not assigned to a family (there are currently more than 300) would be sent to a public housing authority with a waiting list, but Middletown Law Director Les Landen said that is not the case. Landen said once City Council approves the deal, he would “then anticipate it would be signed by HUD, the city and MPHA, and that agreement would be in place. “And that would likely lead to a couple of agreements with Butler County and Warren County,” he said. The pending agreement would end an 18-month dispute between Middletown and HUD over the city’s subsidized housing program. HUD officials had maintained Middletown was out of compliance with the agency’s regulations by not having at least 95 percent of its available vouchers filled. The city had a compliance rate of only 82 percent, according to HUD. City officials were adamant about their desire to reduce the amount of Section 8, or low-income housing, citing the fact that Middletown had more Section 8 housing per capita than any city in Ohio and almost double what the rest of Butler County has. Section 8 accounts for more than 14 percent of all available housing in the city and nearly 50 percent of all subsidized housing, according to 2013 data from the city. The city pays out around $10 million a year in funds from HUD to hundreds of landlords who rent properties to voucher-holders. Middletown was one of two cities in Ohio that still managed its own public housing authority. Butler Metro Housing Authority Executive Director Phyllis Hitte and Warren Metropolitan Housing Authority Executive Director Jacqueline Adkins are not commenting on ensuing transfer of vouchers until they receive an official notification from HUD. The spokesman for HUD’s regional office in Chicago, which covers Ohio, has not returned phone calls from the Journal-News seeking comment. |
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Every morning is the dawn of a new error...
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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I do hate to tell you but this is just the beginning of the Middletown Section 8 Voucher Scandal. This was a total failure of City Council and those at City Hall |
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middletownscouter
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 11 2010 Location: Sunset Park Status: Offline Points: 501 |
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I've been trying to keep up with this whole debacle but the question I don't think I've found an answer to (and maybe I missed it), is whether this transfer means that the number of Section 8 vouchers in the city of Middletown will increase, decrease or maintain?
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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MiddletownScouter
When these 1662 vouchers are transfered to Warren and Butler counties Middletown will have NO OVERSIGHT OR CONTROL over the Section 8 Program...However I would doubt that Butler County would increase this number above the current 1662 vouchers that are now located in Middletown area..
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over the hill
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 19 2012 Location: middletown Status: Offline Points: 952 |
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BMHA wil bring Middletown back in to compliance with 1312 vouchers from HUD and WCPH will have 350 vouchers in the city of Middletown but located in Warren County. This is the number 1662 that was in question all along with Middletown not being in compliance. The were so sure they did not have to fill those vouchers as they became available thru people leaving the program. They were wrong. If the powers that be knew half as much about the program as they thought they did, they could have saved themselves lots of money they spent on attorney fees and the possible ensuing law suits to come. IMO
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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over the hill
You are soooo right
City Hall huffed and puffed for 18 months, wasted time, a big bunch of money and gained nothing. Before this is all over it will cost City Hall even more big bucks for yet another royal scew up. |
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VietVet
MUSA Council Joined: May 15 2008 Status: Offline Points: 7008 |
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I was hoping that, after the Section 8 administration was moved out of the city, the Butler County folks would correct the amount of vouchers that Middletown is SUPPOSE to have....that being around 700 or so. There needs to be a fair allocation of vouchers distributed in each community in Butler County depending on city population. It wouldn't hurt to see the communities that haven't received their fair share finally absorb the correct number into their community. There is no purpose in over-saturating this city while leaving other towns with less than their fair share. As a matter of fact, it helps weaken an already vulnerable city when they continue to deem Middletown the SW Ohio Mecca for Section 8. Let's spread the Section 8 out to dilute it's effect. The past and present city leaders were ignorant to ask for more Section 8. That doesn't mean that we need to see the mistake continue with the mega-voucher numbers concentrated here. |
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I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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processor
MUSA Resident Joined: May 07 2013 Status: Offline Points: 151 |
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Well said Vet. I hope that you're right, but have little confidence in Butler and Warren counties admin. They are Hamilton and Lebanon centric and don't care about Middletown. My guess is that overtime Middletown will gain more subsidized housing.
AS Ms. Moon pointed out, with the program control being transferred, Middletown will have little to no say in the allocation of vouchers. |
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over the hill
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 19 2012 Location: middletown Status: Offline Points: 952 |
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Middletown lost their control of the program(big mistake). I agree with you VV but according to HUD they see the need. It probably did not help when Judy and Doug decided to declare Middletown 54% poverty level. But as we know that was about the money not about what was best for our city.
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over the hill
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 19 2012 Location: middletown Status: Offline Points: 952 |
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Well there seems to be another delay in the moving of the section 8 voucher program. Seems they have pushed it back to Nov 1 for the transfer. Wonder what that's all about?
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