Washington, DC’s coverage of the “There’s No Place Like Home” report by Housing America and the Doc4Kids Project highlights the 5 million children impacted by inadequate housing nationwide.
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Communication Works
Embargo for release until Wednesday, April 7, 12 p.m. EST
Media Advisory
March 30, 1999
Contact: Lisa Chen, Tommy McDonald (cell:415-378-4001), Michael Shellenberger, Communication Works, 415-255-1946, Randy Shaw, Tenderloin Housing Clinic (cell:415-235-4133)
Affordable Housing Crisis Leads to Increased Childhood Disease, Death, Injury and Educational Failure, New Report Finds
Nearly 5 Million Kids Impacted by Inadequate Housing – A Significant Predictor of Kids’ Health and Academic Performance, Latest Data Concludes
What: Press conference
Where: National Press Club, Lisagor Room, 529 14th St., NW, Washington,DC
When: Wednesday, April 7, 1999, noon
Who: Randy Shaw, Housing America; Dr. Joshua Sharfstein (speaks Spanish), Dr. Megan Sandel (speaks Spanish), Boston Univ. Medical Center; Yvonne Wilson, Rhonda Schuler, Section 8 recipients; 10-15 children from Baltimore’s Safe and Sound youth activities program.
B-roll of substandard dwellings, rat infestation and children being examined by doctors can be downlinked at 3 p.m. EST, April 7.
The satellite coordinates are: Telstar 5, Transponder 17, C-band. Downlink frequency: 4040 Vertical
WASHINGTON, DC — Hundreds of thousands of America’s children are suffering from disease, hunger, serious injury, and educational failure from living in substandard shelter as the housing crisis worsens for their families, says a new nationwide report by Housing America and the Doc4Kids Project. Press conferences in Columbus, OH, St. Louis, MO, Washington, DC, San Francisco, CA, and Syracuse, NY will be held Wednesday, April 7 to release the report and to launch a national field campaign to increase funding for affordable housing.
The shortage of affordable housing faced by more than 12.5 million Americans last year — nearly a third of them children — is among the most significant predictors of a children’s health, concludes the report, which was authored by physicians at Boston Medical Center and housing experts at Housing America, a new national grassroots field campaign committed to making housing affordable for families.
In the past two years alone, an estimated 1.5 million low-cost housing units have been lost to the rental market, according to the report, which also shows how the housing crisis has spread from urban centers and the suburbs to America’s heartland. “The epidemic of children who suffer from health problems attributable to poor housing is now striking the heartland states like Ohio, Missouri, and Colorado,” said Randy Shaw, co-author of the report and director of Housing America. “It is shameful when kids suffer because their families cannot afford safe and stable housing.”
There’s No Place Like Home: How America’s Housing Crisis Threatens Our Children, the first report to take a comprehensive look at the link between affordable housing and children’s health, includes previously unreleased data from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, as well as research from the Centers for Disease Control, leading medical and public health journals and firsthand observation by pediatricians across the country.
Among the key findings of the report:
- 21,000 children have stunted growth and 120,000 children suffer from anemia because their families must choose between food and rent.
- 10,000 children between the ages of 4 and 9 are hospitalized for asthma attacks each year because of cockroach infestation at home.
- 2.5 million IQ points will be lost among children ages 1-5 from lead poisoning, with virtually all affected children poisoned at home.
- Children who are forced to move from school to school because their families are unable to obtain affordable housing are significantly more likely to fail a grade and have behavioral problems.
In light of these findings, Housing America urges Congress to:
- Provide 100,000 new Section 8 vouchers.
- Protect affordable housing stock at risk of conversion or deterioration by approving HR 425 (Vento, D-MN), which would provide matching federal funds to states and localities for such initiatives.
- Increase the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) by approving HR 175 (R-CT) and amending the legislation to assist more families at or below the federal poverty line.
- Ensure affordable housing for kids with severe asthma or chronic diseases by embarking a $50 million Section 8 certificate reserve for their families.
- Eliminate the “shelter deduction cap” so families forced to pay high market rents receive their fair allocation of food stamps.
