From somewhere in Montana, I share my personal experience with HUD's Home Choice Voucher Program and other Low-Income Rental obstacles.
Saturday, March 10, 2018
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
Webinar on HUD's Proposal to Raise Rents, February 28
http://nlihc.org/article/webinar-huds-proposal-raise-rents-february-28-0
Wednesday, February 21, 2018
AND NOW A WORD FROM THOSE MOST AFFECTED
If you would like to read an interesting little magazine put out by the National Low Income Housing Coalition called TENANT TALK.
REGISTER TO LEARN ABOUT THE BASICS OF THE FEDERAL FAIR HOUSING ACT
March 14, 2018 |
BASICS OF FAIR HOUSING - WEBNAR
PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS IS A WEBINAR PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS IS A WEBINAR Seattle, WA 98104 PLEASE NOTE - This is a Webinar & All Times are Pacific Time. Housing owners, property managers, renters, housing advocates - learn the basics of the Federal Fair Housing Act, with more in depth discussion on issues such as disability, family status, sexual orientation and domestic violence. This knowledge is not only critical to prevent costly violations, it's also good business! This training will be held as a Live Webinar, with the video presentation conducted online and audio conducted using a telephone conference line. Log-in and call-in information will be emailed to registrants the day prior to the training date. The times listed are PACIFIC time. Training is Free. Questions? Contact Kristina Miller at 206-220-5328 or Kristina.Miller@hud.gov For more information visit Contact Info: Kristina Miller (206) 220-5328 Kristina.Miller@hud.gov Registration closes on : March 12, 2018 |
HUD IS INVESTING $35 MILLION FOR SERVICE COORDINATORS IN PUBLIC HOUSING
HUD No. 18-015 HUD Public Affairs (202) 708-0685 | FOR RELEASE Tuesday February 20, 2018 |
HUD AWARDS $35 MILLION TO PROMOTE JOBS, SELF-SUFFICIENCY FOR PUBLIC HOUSING RESIDENTS
WASHINGTON - In an effort to help low-income residents become self-sufficient, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) today awarded $34.9 million to public housing authorities, public housing resident associations, Native American tribes, and non-profit organizations across the nation to hire or retain service coordinators to help them find jobs, educational opportunities, and achieve economic and housing independence (see list below).
The funding, provided through HUD’s Resident Opportunities and Self Sufficiency – Service Coordinators Program (ROSS-SC) helps grantees hire or retain "service coordinators" who work directly with residents to assess their needs and connect them with education, job training and placement programs, and/or computer and financial literacy services available in their community to promote self-sufficiency.
“It’s part of our mission to help connect public housing residents to better, higher paying jobs and critical services as a means of helping them move beyond public assistance and toward self-sufficiency,” said HUD Secretary Ben Carson. “This funding gives our local partners resources they can use to help residents become economically independent and achieve the dreams they have for themselves and their children.”
The purpose of HUD’s ROSS-SC program is to encourage innovative and locally driven strategies that link public housing assistance with public and private resources to enable HUD-assisted families to increase earned income; reduce or eliminate their need for welfare assistance; and promote economic independence and housing self-sufficiency. These grants provide funding to hire and retain Service Coordinators who will assess the needs of residents of conventional Public Housing or Indian housing and coordinate available resources in the community to meet those needs. In addition, ROSS-SC grants help improve living conditions for seniors, enabling them to age-in-place.
Fiscal Year 2017 ROSS-Service Coordinator Grants
STATE | GRANTEE NAME | AWARD AMOUNT | STATE TOTAL |
Arizona | Pinal County Housing Department | $204,000 | |
Arizona Total: | $204,000 | ||
California | The Housing Authority of the County of Los Angeles | $738,000 | |
Housing Authority of the City of Sacramento | $436,230 | ||
Housing Authority of the County of Santa Barbara | $246,000 | ||
Housing Authority of the County of Fresno | $230,660 | ||
Housing Authority of the City of San Buenaventura | $246,000 | ||
Chico Rancheria Housing Corporation & HA County of Butte | $245,000 | ||
Madera, City of | $233,382 | ||
Area Housing Authority of the County of Ventura (AHA) | $228,500 | ||
California Total: | $2,603,772 | ||
Colorado | Walsh Manor Local Resident Council | $215,918 | |
Westridge Local Resident Council | $240,556 | ||
Westwood Local Resident Council | $215,918 | ||
City of Englewood Housing Authority | $207,429 | ||
Colorado Total: | $879,821 | ||
Connecticut | Ansonia Housing Authority | $246,000 | |
Housing Authority of the Town of Greenwich | $246,000 | ||
Bristol Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Connecticut Total: | $738,000 | ||
Florida | Sarasota Housing Authority | $233,460 | |
Housing Authority of the City of Titusville | $208,832 | ||
The Housing Authority of the County of Flagler | $246,000 | ||
The Lee County Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Palatka Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Punta Gorda Housing Authority | $240,000 | ||
Florida Total: | $1,420,292 | ||
Georgia | Thomaston Housing Authority Resident Council Inc. | $246,000 | |
Northwest Georgia Housing Authority | $230,000 | ||
Housing Authority of Newnan | $246,000 | ||
Georgia Total: | $722,000 | ||
Iowa | City of Des Moines Municipal Housing Agency | $246,000 | |
Eastern Iowa Regional Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Iowa Total | $492,000 | ||
Idaho | Nampa Housing Authority | $241,219 | |
Nez Perce Tribal Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Idaho Total: | $487,219 | ||
Illinois | Decatur Housing Authority | $240,725 | |
Rock Island Housing Authority | $216,000 | ||
Macoupin County Housing Authority | $151,772 | ||
The Housing Authority of the City of Bloomington | $244,500 | ||
Rockford Housing Authority | $492,000 | ||
Oak Park Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Illinois Total | $1,590,997 | ||
Indiana | Housing Authority of the City of Kokomo | $190,395 | |
New Albany Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Housing Authority of the City of Bloomington | $184,391 | ||
Indiana Total: | $620,786 | ||
Kansas | Kickapoo Tribe in Kansas Housing Authority | $142,190 | |
Kansas Total: | $142,190 | ||
Kentucky | Bryant Way Resident Council | $178,827 | |
Gordon Avenue/Summit View Resident Council | $173,021 | ||
Louisville Metro Housing Authority | $721,800 | ||
Housing Authority of Covington | $231,000 | ||
Housing Authority of Floyd County | $179,109 | ||
Kentucky Total: | $1,483,757 | ||
Massachusetts | Fall River Housing Joint Tenant Council | $186,000 | |
New Bedford Housing Authority | $423,762 | ||
Norwood Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Quincy Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Falmouth Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Massachusetts Total: | $1,347,762 | ||
Maryland | Resident Services, Incorporated | $738,000 | |
Maryland Total: | $738,000 | ||
Maine | Portland Housing Authority | $240,756 | |
Lewiston Housing Authority | $213,539 | ||
Maine Total: | $454,295 | ||
Minnesota | Northwest Minnesota Multi-County HRA | $246,000 | |
Moorhead Public Housing Agency | $246,000 | ||
Minnesota Total: | $492,000 | ||
Missouri | Independence Housing Authority | $246,000 | |
Missouri Total: | $246,000 | ||
Mississippi | Laurel Housing Authority Beacon Homes Resident Council LLC | $246,000 | |
Arco Lane Site Based Resident Council, LLC | $246,000 | ||
Mississippi Total: | $492,000 | ||
Montana | Public Housing Authority of Butte's Resident Council | $129,652 | |
Missoula Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Montana Total: | $375,652 | ||
North Carolina | Greensboro Housing Authority | $230,415 | |
Housing Authority of the City of High Point | $492,000 | ||
Lenoir Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
North Carolina Total: | $968,415 | ||
North Dakota | Fargo Housing and Redevelopment Authority | $246,000 | |
North Dakota Total: | $246,000 | ||
New Jersey | Housing Authority of the City of Jersey City | $492,000 | |
Housing Authority of the City of Paterson | $442,349 | ||
Phillipsburg Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Housing Authority of the City of Rahway | $246,000 | ||
New Jersey Institute for Disabilities | $246,000 | ||
New Jersey Total: | $1,672,349 | ||
New Mexico | Housing Authority of the City of Truth or Consequences | $246,000 | |
Santa Fe County Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Albuquerque Housing Authority | $220,598 | ||
New Mexico Total: | $712,598 | ||
New York | Citywide Council of Syracuse Low Income Housing Residents | $492,000 | |
Ocean Bay Community Development Corporation, Inc. | $738,000 | ||
Albany Housing Authority | $492,000 | ||
Rochester Housing Authority | $492,000 | ||
Niagara Falls Housing Authority | $243,350 | ||
Community Development Corporation of Long Island, Inc. | $246,000 | ||
New York Total: | $2,703,350 | ||
Ohio | Jurisdiction-Wide Resident Advisory Board | $738,000 | |
Lucas Metropolitan Housing Authority | $679,331 | ||
Akron Metropolitan Housing Authority | $702,816 | ||
Zanesville Metropolitan Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Ohio Total: | $2,366,147 | ||
Oregon | Housing Authority of Clackamas County | $246,000 | |
Home Forward | $492,000 | ||
Housing Authority of Lincoln County | $246,000 | ||
Oregon Total: | $984,000 | ||
Pennsylvania | Allegheny County Housing Authority | $682,732 | |
Harrisburg Housing Authority | $384,000 | ||
Westmoreland County Housing Authority | $336,997 | ||
Family Service Association of Bucks County | $245,449 | ||
Pennsylvania Total | $1,649,178 | ||
Rhode Island | Chestnut Court Tenants Association | $246,000 | |
The Housing Authority of the City of Providence | $738,000 | ||
Johnston Housing Authority | $220,500 | ||
Housing Authority of the City of Pawtucket | $82,000 | ||
Rhode Island Total: | $1,286,500 | ||
South Carolina | Housing Authority of the City of Columbia, SC | $384,255 | |
Housing Authority of Greenville | $246,000 | ||
South Carolina Total: | $630,255 | ||
South Dakota | Sisseton Wahpeton Housing Authority | $177,000 | |
South Dakota Total: | $177,000 | ||
Tennessee | Johnson City Public Housing Authority | $246,000 | |
Morristown Housing Authority | $180,300 | ||
Columbia Housing & Redevelopment Authority | $246,000 | ||
The Crossville Housing Development Corporation | $160,722 | ||
Tennessee Total: | $833,022 | ||
Texas | Housing Authority of the City of Fort Worth | $242,000 | |
San Marcos Housing Authority | $225,405 | ||
Houston Housing Authority | $628,605 | ||
Texas Total: | $1,096,010 | ||
Virginia | Can I Live, Inc | $738,000 | |
Can I Live, Incorporated | $202,033 | ||
Cardinal Village Tenant Association, Inc. | $231,000 | ||
Pleasant View Tenant Association, Inc. | $231,000 | ||
Danville Redevelopment and Housing Authority | $231,000 | ||
Chesapeake Redevelopment & Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Harrisonburg Redevelopment and Housing Authority | $176,400 | ||
Alexandria Redevelopment and Housing Authority | $246,000 | ||
Virginia Total: | $2,301,433 | ||
Washington | The Housing Authority of the City of Bremerton | $246,000 | |
Housing Authority of the City of Tacoma | $246,000 | ||
Nisqually Indian Tribe | $228,600 | ||
Housing Authority of Kittitas County | $208,286 | ||
Washington Total: | $928,886 | ||
Wisconsin | S.E.T. Ministry Inc | $239,733 | |
Wisconsin Total: | $239,733 | ||
West Virginia | Charleston-Kanawha | $457,209 | |
The Huntington Housing Authority | $190,404 | ||
West Virginia Total: | $647,613 | ||
TOTAL | $34,973,032 |
Friday, February 16, 2018
Nothing More To Lose
There comes a time in some people's lives, when fear paralyzes their every move, dominates their every thought and leads them into a place of complacency and conformity and that is ok. When fear around my housing situation first gripped me back when I was a young divorced, mother of two I just put my head down worked hard, followed all the rules and was very great full my two kids had a roof over their heads.
Until recently, if your income increased anywhere from $20 to $200 dollars you had to tell them and your rent went up accordingly. Now, I hear rumors of those who utilize Federal Housing Programs may find that some of them will be paying 35% of their income or perhaps their Home Choice Voucher like mine, is on the chopping block (click here to learn more). My rent has already gone up allegedly because of a mistake that was made, but it is funny the correction took me to 35% of my income for rent.
Affordablehousingonline.com has a very interesting take on what could become a reality in the world of government housing waiting lists. " However, it is impossible to know exactly what Trump plans to do as he has not mentioned Section 8 or other housing programs specifically. We hold out hope that he realizes that these programs are not being abused and help keep millions of hard working American families out of homelessness." The article goes on to say.
Hope, what is that? Anymore in my mind hope is just another fantasy just like waiting for my knight in shining armor to come and save me; at least where being a recipient of government housing is concerned.
"Families in every state could face rent increases that could total $300 a year or more (see Appendix 1)." The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities article brings a suspicion of truth to some of the rumors I have been hearing about people's rent are possibly going up to 50% of their income. The thought of this not only squashes any hope I might have coned myself into holding on to; confirming it would be cheaper and more reliable if I bought a
camper to live in. The loan payments would then be 25% of my income.
The National Low Income Housing Coalition reminds us, "Research shows that when people have a stable home that they can afford, they are better able to find employment, achieve economic mobility, age in place, perform better in school, and maintain improved health."
The tenants in the United States are not the only ones facing the surge in rents; the BBC reports "While containing the cost to taxpayers, it leaves housing benefit vulnerable to becoming increasingly irrelevant with respect to its purpose - maintaining the affordability of adequate housing for those on low incomes."
When you have nothing to lose, fear is no longer a problem. Fear has become a motivator. I was afraid to speak up because I live on the crack of the floorboards that President Trump is prying up because he can just feel there is a quarter under there. The more he pries pulls and tugs the wider that crack gets and more people will find themselves falling through the cracks regardless of whether they speak up or not.
So before we all go free-falling here, Call your members of Congress and urge them to SUPPORT full funding for affordable housing programs and OPPOSE any proposals that increase rents and impose arbitrary, administratively burdensome and wasteful work requirements on federal housing assistance programs.
Until recently, if your income increased anywhere from $20 to $200 dollars you had to tell them and your rent went up accordingly. Now, I hear rumors of those who utilize Federal Housing Programs may find that some of them will be paying 35% of their income or perhaps their Home Choice Voucher like mine, is on the chopping block (click here to learn more). My rent has already gone up allegedly because of a mistake that was made, but it is funny the correction took me to 35% of my income for rent.
Affordablehousingonline.com has a very interesting take on what could become a reality in the world of government housing waiting lists. " However, it is impossible to know exactly what Trump plans to do as he has not mentioned Section 8 or other housing programs specifically. We hold out hope that he realizes that these programs are not being abused and help keep millions of hard working American families out of homelessness." The article goes on to say.
Hope, what is that? Anymore in my mind hope is just another fantasy just like waiting for my knight in shining armor to come and save me; at least where being a recipient of government housing is concerned.
"Families in every state could face rent increases that could total $300 a year or more (see Appendix 1)." The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities article brings a suspicion of truth to some of the rumors I have been hearing about people's rent are possibly going up to 50% of their income. The thought of this not only squashes any hope I might have coned myself into holding on to; confirming it would be cheaper and more reliable if I bought a
camper to live in. The loan payments would then be 25% of my income.
The National Low Income Housing Coalition reminds us, "Research shows that when people have a stable home that they can afford, they are better able to find employment, achieve economic mobility, age in place, perform better in school, and maintain improved health."
The tenants in the United States are not the only ones facing the surge in rents; the BBC reports "While containing the cost to taxpayers, it leaves housing benefit vulnerable to becoming increasingly irrelevant with respect to its purpose - maintaining the affordability of adequate housing for those on low incomes."
When you have nothing to lose, fear is no longer a problem. Fear has become a motivator. I was afraid to speak up because I live on the crack of the floorboards that President Trump is prying up because he can just feel there is a quarter under there. The more he pries pulls and tugs the wider that crack gets and more people will find themselves falling through the cracks regardless of whether they speak up or not.
So before we all go free-falling here, Call your members of Congress and urge them to SUPPORT full funding for affordable housing programs and OPPOSE any proposals that increase rents and impose arbitrary, administratively burdensome and wasteful work requirements on federal housing assistance programs.
Sunday, February 11, 2018
TO AFRAID TO PARTICIPATE
There are a few reasons why I have not been working on this blog or participating in low-income housing activities for over a year now. Mostly because I am afraid. No seriously, I am afraid that I am going to lose my housing and without a way to make money, well you know the saying.
In the last three years, I have also been dealing with family issues that have taken a considerable amount of time and finances, which leaves me looking desperately for a job any job. Who will hire a disabled, over 50-year-old person without a college degree?
When I read all the negative things in low-income housing, I start to have panic attacks and look for used campers for sale because I am positive that is what I will end up living in. With talk of low-income rents going up maybe 50% of our incomes, I am just beside myself.
Here I play by your rules for years. Thinking that I would at least have a roof over my head and some food to put in my belly after some jerk shook me out like a rag doll and put me on the disabled roaster. How disappointing it has been. I have spent 16 years on disability doing everything that those in power, to help people like me, tell me to do only to find myself further in debt and it has been a hell of a crawl out.
If I am to pay more for my rent, 50% of my income, I have no problem with that what so ever. How are you going to convince the Landlords that this is acceptable when they want you to have three times the income of the rent of the unit? If I can pay 50% of my income for a rental unit, will it include a garden space so that I can grow some of my own food? Will it include all utilities as the electric heat here in Montana runs around $269 a month for about 400 sq feet maybe less footage but the price is high?
How am I to pay for electricity? How am I to pay for shampoo, toilet paper? Gas to get to whatever type of job I can scrounge up? By the way, for the last 16 years, I have walked up and down the highways of Montana collecting all the cans everyone is throwing out their car windows to supplement my income. I was not able to find a job that was compatible with my disability for 15 years so I had to do something to make sure I could still participate in family functions like the births of my grandchildren.
Here is another thing that keeps me up at night, if I were to buy life insurance at some point that will count as income and I will have to choose between housing or making sure my kids have the money to dispose of my body other than taking me to the mountains for the bears to have.
Society and the government would not let me live in a camper as that would be cheaper than paying rent. I can buy a camper, self-contained for under 20 grand to live in, but that would trigger welfare checks, police visits; because it is not normal to live in a camper in the winter in Montana, stretching those resources even further than they are now. Most those folks drive over to Arizona where it warm, not below zero.
I don't understand it. I worked hard all my life, spent my money raising two kids, paid into the social security system under the belief that everything would be ok if the sky fell. What a lie, our system is broken.
Don't get me wrong, I have empathy for those on DACA, I understand the need for helping others, but I don't understand how a person can slip through the cracks because they are $1.75 away from being considered self-sustaining even though not all factors and expenses of life are considered at today's rate, but rather two years prior.
How can you be considered self-sustaining when you can not pay the Real Market Rents of today's rental units? When presenting the Government's Fair Market Rents, most landlords laugh and say, " Are you kidding? I can get three times that much from someone else."
I am afraid to participate in the conversation around housing as I see that this issue is going to go nowhere. To live in these buildings under the draconian treatment from some of the property managers and the government's ignorance of what it actually takes to sustain life on the inappropriate wages, unfair return on money's paid into the system like social security; take control over what we can and can not afford to pay and what we can and can not do to help ourselves financially.
You put us here! Yes you, you business owner paying women 20 cents on the dollar! Yes you Big Brother, taking money out of our paychecks every week and telling us it will be there when we are old or disabled, but giving back exactly what you took and never paying us for the privilege of using our money to fund your drunken trips to Cavo.
Take a cut out of your pay Big Brother, one day of your pay would probably pay my rent for a couple of months I am sure. Cut your pay Government Employes who make over $15 an hour and I bet you could find the money to save our housing, fund medical help, fund infrastructure that is beyond condemned and improve all our lives. But no Big Brother needs his mattress stuffed with brand new thousand dollar bills every two to three weeks so just keep slaving away little sister and I will let you know when you deserve to not sleep in the dumpster and fight the farel cats and dogs for the scraps.
There are more people in poverty than there are controlling this country. When will the majority be heard on this issue? Are we going to continue to allow those in control pay us far less than our sweat, sacrifices - missed first steps, family funerals, and time are worth? When will the government pay the interest that accumulated on the funds taken from our paychecks for when we grew old and disabled so we can live in today's world?
I say go ahead and bite the proverbial hand that feeds us. The hand is feeding us S***, and I for one am not going to buy it anymore. It is time, the Emperor is told he has no clothes!
In the last three years, I have also been dealing with family issues that have taken a considerable amount of time and finances, which leaves me looking desperately for a job any job. Who will hire a disabled, over 50-year-old person without a college degree?
When I read all the negative things in low-income housing, I start to have panic attacks and look for used campers for sale because I am positive that is what I will end up living in. With talk of low-income rents going up maybe 50% of our incomes, I am just beside myself.
Here I play by your rules for years. Thinking that I would at least have a roof over my head and some food to put in my belly after some jerk shook me out like a rag doll and put me on the disabled roaster. How disappointing it has been. I have spent 16 years on disability doing everything that those in power, to help people like me, tell me to do only to find myself further in debt and it has been a hell of a crawl out.
If I am to pay more for my rent, 50% of my income, I have no problem with that what so ever. How are you going to convince the Landlords that this is acceptable when they want you to have three times the income of the rent of the unit? If I can pay 50% of my income for a rental unit, will it include a garden space so that I can grow some of my own food? Will it include all utilities as the electric heat here in Montana runs around $269 a month for about 400 sq feet maybe less footage but the price is high?
How am I to pay for electricity? How am I to pay for shampoo, toilet paper? Gas to get to whatever type of job I can scrounge up? By the way, for the last 16 years, I have walked up and down the highways of Montana collecting all the cans everyone is throwing out their car windows to supplement my income. I was not able to find a job that was compatible with my disability for 15 years so I had to do something to make sure I could still participate in family functions like the births of my grandchildren.
Here is another thing that keeps me up at night, if I were to buy life insurance at some point that will count as income and I will have to choose between housing or making sure my kids have the money to dispose of my body other than taking me to the mountains for the bears to have.
Society and the government would not let me live in a camper as that would be cheaper than paying rent. I can buy a camper, self-contained for under 20 grand to live in, but that would trigger welfare checks, police visits; because it is not normal to live in a camper in the winter in Montana, stretching those resources even further than they are now. Most those folks drive over to Arizona where it warm, not below zero.
I don't understand it. I worked hard all my life, spent my money raising two kids, paid into the social security system under the belief that everything would be ok if the sky fell. What a lie, our system is broken.
Don't get me wrong, I have empathy for those on DACA, I understand the need for helping others, but I don't understand how a person can slip through the cracks because they are $1.75 away from being considered self-sustaining even though not all factors and expenses of life are considered at today's rate, but rather two years prior.
How can you be considered self-sustaining when you can not pay the Real Market Rents of today's rental units? When presenting the Government's Fair Market Rents, most landlords laugh and say, " Are you kidding? I can get three times that much from someone else."
I am afraid to participate in the conversation around housing as I see that this issue is going to go nowhere. To live in these buildings under the draconian treatment from some of the property managers and the government's ignorance of what it actually takes to sustain life on the inappropriate wages, unfair return on money's paid into the system like social security; take control over what we can and can not afford to pay and what we can and can not do to help ourselves financially.
You put us here! Yes you, you business owner paying women 20 cents on the dollar! Yes you Big Brother, taking money out of our paychecks every week and telling us it will be there when we are old or disabled, but giving back exactly what you took and never paying us for the privilege of using our money to fund your drunken trips to Cavo.
Take a cut out of your pay Big Brother, one day of your pay would probably pay my rent for a couple of months I am sure. Cut your pay Government Employes who make over $15 an hour and I bet you could find the money to save our housing, fund medical help, fund infrastructure that is beyond condemned and improve all our lives. But no Big Brother needs his mattress stuffed with brand new thousand dollar bills every two to three weeks so just keep slaving away little sister and I will let you know when you deserve to not sleep in the dumpster and fight the farel cats and dogs for the scraps.
There are more people in poverty than there are controlling this country. When will the majority be heard on this issue? Are we going to continue to allow those in control pay us far less than our sweat, sacrifices - missed first steps, family funerals, and time are worth? When will the government pay the interest that accumulated on the funds taken from our paychecks for when we grew old and disabled so we can live in today's world?
I say go ahead and bite the proverbial hand that feeds us. The hand is feeding us S***, and I for one am not going to buy it anymore. It is time, the Emperor is told he has no clothes!
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