We are led to believe if we fit the criteria for even getting on the Section 8 waiting list, if we are patient and manage to survive where we are living, eventually we will be notified and given a housing voucher to assist us with rent. That we will cease to live from day to day, month to month in trepidation of losing the roof over our head due to arbitrary rental practices or having the place sold out from under us, etc.
I joined the hopeful when I was reviewed and allowed to be on the waiting list in January 2007. In January 2008 I moved, as the home I was living in was foreclosed on. I managed to locate in an RV park and lived there for a year and a half. The noise, lack of privacy, and a arbitrary policy of having to have one's trailer moved to another part of the park every 6 to 9 months, added to the disarray of living there.
After living thus, for a year and a half, I moved again, to country property. Thinking I was very fortunate, I invested in having an electrician put in the proper connections for an RV, and paid someone to move the RV to the site, which was a postage stamp sized particle of land. I had to accept I had no septic system to connect to, but it seemed a better choice than the RV park. Alas, the choice country property turned out to be anything but. Let me just say ongoing drama, questionable activity on said property, a revolving door on tenants, that either stayed to contribute to aforementioned activity, bringing their own disharmony, & opening the place for 'strangers' to come and go, or were people who had mistakenly thought they were coming to a place of quietude, like myself and found different and left as soon as possible.
Unfortunately, my finances were such, I could not just pick up and leave, like more fortunate former tenants. Not that I didn't try. Craigslist, word of mouth, flyers were availed of. I endured, suffering stress of living under such conditions as the years continued to pass. Note: I only relate my experiences in regards to living conditions while awaiting a Section 8 voucher to let dear reader know the trials and tribulations, and conditions one many times, has to endure. I know I am not alone in this.
I was prompt when I moved each time to report the move to the Housing Authority and would call them occasionally, to make sure the information they held regarding my newest address and contact information was up to date and assure myself I was secure on the list. I began to question when others spoke of being contacted by H.A. and given housing vouchers, so I called H.A. again and was told they could not find me on the list! Days later, I was contacted and told "someone had put me on the non-active list" ! (By then, it had been 7 years of waiting and being increasingly traumatized by my living conditions. Things were such, that IHSS and Adult Protective Services attentions were called to the property and landowner. I was threatened with a huge rent increase, which I could not pay and it was only when A.P.S. was called in that the landowner backed down.)
I sought help in getting housing but was told "the housing situation in Sonoma County is very tight." I was left to my own devices, with the exception of being told I could move to a Shelter and give up all my belongings and cat. That was not an option, though I was eager to leave. I had sacrificed and given up much of my worldly goods, when the house foreclosed. As was mentioned after pursuing H.A. again, finding that I had been on the non-active list most probably for years, the issue was looked into and after another 3 months I had an intake appointment and then orientation meeting and handed a housing voucher and told I had 3 months to find a place. No mention of the faux pas, on their part.
Obtaining a housing voucher initially, seems is the goal to obtain. It is not until one finally gets it does one find that repeatedly, one either finds ads for housing which often state "No housing vouchers." or apartment managers turn you away upon finding out you hold a voucher. The stigma for voucher holders seems to be countrywide, as I have searched the internet for information and the story is the same from state to state. We, the voucher holders aren't wanted. Despite the fact I'm mature, have great local references, a background in Community Services and Nursing, do not smoke, drink, no one is interested when Section 8 comes up.
I searched for those 3 months to no avail and panicked, approached H.A. after reviewing the packet they give you at the initial orientation meeting, thinking I would have to be interviewed and possibly not given an extension on the time I needed to find a place. It seems though, that the situation is so bad, they stopped questioning those that asked for an extenstion and just handed out a letter stating an additional month was granted. I was told by an employee at H.A. that my case was not rare and that many "frantic people" had requested extensions. So another month ticks by, and the same thing, goes on. Ads/managers stating "no voucher holders." (we are told at the orientation, to seek an interview about an apartment or house without mentioning Section 8, to hopefully better our chances, little knowing at that time just how difficult the housing search would be, until we hold that piece of paper and start the quest.)
Many of us have put our lives on hold and endure, waiting for the 'voucher day' to come, only to find our chances of obtaining housing are small to nil. During my search I found one woman who was begging on Craigslist for a place for her and her 2 sons. Her initial housing voucher had expired and she had to wait 4 more years to be called again and had those impossibly short 3 months to try and find a place to live with 2 now, teenage boys.
I think it is a great disservice to people who hopefully wait for years, thinking getting that voucher will be the end of squatting on friends couches, living in cramped quarters with children, or like myself, enduring emotional abuse in surroundings one would not voluntarily chose to live in had one had a choice, to find we are repeatedly turned away simply due to the aforementioned stigmas seemingly attached to Voucher holders.
This issue needs to be addressed locally and nationwide. This is a chronic problem, not only for voucher holders, but those that just make enough to not be able to avail themselves of any assistance, but cannot afford the ever climbing rents. In purportedly the 'richest country' in the world there is an increasing number of people homeless, or near to becoming so. I am one of them.