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Overview
Public housing residents who leave welfare for work often see their rents rise
in tandem with their higher household income, creating a potential disincentive
for them to find or keep jobs. The Jobs-Plus Community Revitalization Initiative
for Public Housing Families incorporates the first large-scale test of new rent
rules that help make low-wage work pay. Drawing on the experiences of housing
authorities in six cities, this report presents lessons on the implementation
and use of these innovative work incentives as part of a comprehensive package
of employment-related assistance.
Traditionally, public housing rents are set at 30 percent of a households income.
The Jobs-Plus rent incentives changed this policy in a variety of ways. Some
sites continued to calculate rent as a percentage of household income but dropped
the rate below the standard 30 percent level. Others established flat rents,
which kept rent the same even when earnings increased household income. Most
sites enriched their plans with other benefits to reward sustained employment.
The plans, which were phased in between 1998 and 2000, reflect and substantially
extend the public housing rent reforms established by 1998 federal housing
legislation.
Key Findings
- Marketing and explaining rent-based work incentives required sustained,
varied, and broadly targeted efforts. The constant arrival of new residents
and, in some sites, the range of ethnic groups with vastly different languages
and cultures made outreach a challenge. This challenge was compounded by the
complex nature of most plans. Helpful tactics in publicizing and clarifying
the plans included involving housing managers and resident volunteers in marketing
campaigns and seeking diverse forums to explain incentives. Several sites
focused outreach on already-employed residents and may have missed opportunities
to use incentives to encourage nonworkers to seek employment.
- Residents use of the incentives was substantial. The target population
for Jobs-Plus included all households headed by residents who were of working
age and nondisabled, whether or not they were already employed. Across all
sites, 48 percent of such households used rent incentives. In three sites,
well over half did so. However, some eligible residents did not use the incentives
because they remained unaware of or confused by the offer, were suspicious
of a housing authority initiative, or had other reasons for not participating
in the plan.
- Residents use of the incentives varied dramatically by site. Depending
on the site, between 19 percent and 75 percent of all targeted households
eventually took advantage of the rent incentives offer. (While only working
residents qualified for incentives, site differences in employment rates do
not account for this variation.) In general, the rates were highest at sites
where housing authority managers actively partnered with Jobs-Plus to promote
the incentives.
- Incentives created welcome boosts in household incomes and reportedly encouraged
additional work effort among residents who were already employed. The money
saved on rent was mostly used to make basic purchases and pay bills. Strikingly,
given the generally modest incomes of public housing tenants, some households
managed to increase their savings. Reports of some staff and residents suggest
that the relationship between incentives and work behavior was mixed, with
these reforms doing more to sustain and even increase work among employed
residents than to induce nonworkers to find jobs.
A subsequent report will present findings on how the Jobs-Plus program's full
package of incentives, services, and supports affected residents employment,
earnings, and other outcomes.
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