UN: Millions in U.S. Lack Access to Housing
New York, Nov 9 2009 5:10PM
An independent United Nations expert has warned that the United States is an increasingly expensive place to find housing, leaving many more people homeless at a time when the financial crisis is hitting hard across the country.
“Millions of people
in the U.S. are spending high percentages of their income to
make their monthly rent and mortgage payment, face
foreclosure or eviction, and live in overcrowded and
substandard conditions,” said Raquel Rolnik, the UN
Special Rapporteur on adequate housing, in a statement
following her first official visit to the United States.
“The number of homeless continues to rise with
increasing numbers of working families and individuals
finding themselves on the streets. The economic crisis has
exacerbated this situation.”
Ms. Rolnik traveled to
the cities of Washington DC, New York, Chicago, New Orleans,
Los Angeles and the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South
Dakota, as part of an 18-day fact-finding mission about the
status of affordable and adequate housing in the US.
The Special Rapporteur met with senior Government
officials at the local, state, and federal level, including
at the Department of State and the Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD). She also attended public town hall
meetings in each city visited, and engaged in discussions
with representatives of civil society and people
experiencing homelessness.
In a statement, Ms.
Rolnik said she was pleased to note that the new US
Administration is thinking critically and broadly to
confront and solve the affordable housing crisis in the
country, reversing decades of budget cuts and proposing
large additional budgetary resources to housing. But she
noted that a wider range of permanent options for affordable
housing, particularly for the most vulnerable, is required.
“Though a good goal, implementation of mixed income
developments in many cases leads to displacement,
discriminatory practices and a reduction of the stock of
affordable and adequate housing for low-income households,” said
Ms. Rolnik.
Ms. Rolnik stressed that in designing
and implementing these options, affected residents and
community members should be partners in the planning and
decision making process, as required by international human
rights norms.
The Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, adopted on 10 December 1948, states that, among
other matters, “everyone has the right to a standard of
living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and
of his family”, including housing.
Ms. Rolnik, who
serves in an independent and unpaid capacity, will present
her official report to the UN Human Rights Council in March
2010.
ENDS