Kimberly Clark submitted an application for the new waitlist the first day PHA started accepting them. As of April 1, she won’t have anywhere to live.
“It just hurts,” said Clark through tears. “Everyday I go to bed crying.”
For the past 23 years, Clark has rented a rowhouse across the street from her childhood home in Southwest Philadelphia. But the property recently changed hands, and the new owner hiked the rent to $1,200 — the same amount that appears on the disability check she receives each month, her only source of income.
Clark, 50, had been paying $500 a month for the place, which she shares with her 13-year-old son.
She said there’s no room for her and her son to stay with her family across the street, meaning she may have to move into a homeless shelter while she waits to hear from PHA.
“I don’t want my baby to go into no shelter,” said Clark. “I pray everyday that we make it.”
PHA expects to notify those who made the latest waitlist by March 1. Those who were not selected will be notified at a later date, said Tillman.
At least 2,000 vouchers will be released this year on a rolling basis after PHA verifies all of the applications. The hope is to distribute all of those vouchers by the fall.
The rest will be distributed in the coming years as existing participants leave the program.
None of the people who receive a voucher this time around is guaranteed housing, only the opportunity to search for a landlord willing to accept the rent subsidy, which can be a daunting months-long process in a city experiencing an affordable housing crisis.