Opinion: Conditional Housing Is Still Discriminatory

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“I learned the hard way that affordable housing isn’t guaranteed—it’s conditional. The moment your income changes or an agency misses a form, the system recalculates your worth and can pull the rug out from under you.”

An apartment building in The Bronx. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

When I received a housing voucher, I was finally able to move into a rent-stabilized apartment in what many would call a “luxury” building. I was told that if I maintained the apartment for five years, my rent would be locked in. But when COVID-19 hit, my case management through Homebase fell apart, and I had to pay the rent from my Social Security Disability income just to stay housed. 

I learned the hard way that affordable housing isn’t guaranteed—it’s conditional. The moment your income changes or an agency misses a form, the system recalculates your worth and can pull the rug out from under you. The recertification process has become a quiet form of income discrimination, punishing stability instead of supporting it. These systems are set up for people to stay stuck or fail. They claim to promote independence, but the fine print ensures dependence.

Seniors and families with children are the most vulnerable. Toby, 10, cried when his mother told him they had to go to a shelter. He lost his school, his friends, and his sense of home. Nearly a year later, he laughed again when his mom was finally awarded a housing voucher. For the first time, he felt safe.

 But today, at 16, Toby is back on unstable ground—his family must leave the apartment they fought so hard to keep. The fear and displacement he experienced as a child have returned, and this time, the pain runs deeper. Children internalize trauma quickly, and Toby’s story is not unique. When families are forced to move again and again, we are watching the slow unraveling of a generation.

And then there are our seniors—the silent backbone of our communities—being told to work longer, to survive on less, and to somehow “adjust” as costs climb and health declines. Many of us have already raised families, buried loved ones, and outlived friends. We are tired, yet the system demands endurance instead of compassion. Seniors shouldn’t have to prove their productivity to deserve peace. Stability and dignity in housing should be a right, not a reward for those who can still punch a clock.

If we are serious about ending homelessness, we must reform the voucher recertification process so that progress isn’t penalized and stability isn’t temporary. Families who rise should not be punished for surviving, and elders who have given their best years should not be left to struggle alone. 

City and state agencies must also invest in clear education for tenants with subsidies—plain-language guides, real-time alerts, and transparent communication about what happens when income or benefits shift. Housing should not be a secret exam that no one is taught how to pass.

With a new mayoral administration on the horizon—and Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani promising “affordable housing” and rent freezes—it’s time to demand accountability for what those words really mean. 

Affordability without security is a half-truth. Until recertification reform, transparency, and tenant education are prioritized, we are not building affordable housing—we are maintaining conditional housing. The next mayor has an opportunity, and an obligation, to change that.

Rhonda Jackson is co-chair of the NYC Fund to End Youth and Family Homelessness, a steering committee member of the NYC Family Homelessness Coalition* and a longtime advocate for housing as a human right. A survivor of homelessness herself, she works to ensure that no child grows up believing instability is normal.

*The Family Homelessness Coalition is among City Limits’ funders.

The post Opinion: Conditional Housing Is Still Discriminatory appeared first on City Limits.

Suspect in murder of Oakland coach from ‘Last Chance U’ makes first court appearance

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By JANIE HAR, Associated Press

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — The 27-year-old man charged with shooting former Oakland community college football coach John Beam made an initial court appearance Tuesday and will continue to be held without bail.

Cedric Irving Jr. has been charged with murder and several enhancements in Beam’s death, and he could face 50 years to life in prison if convicted, Alameda County District Attorney Ursula Jones Dickson said at a news conference Monday.

He did not enter a plea Tuesday and his arraignment was set for Dec. 16.

Prosecutors have not provided a motive for the shooting at Laney College.

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Beam, 66, was a giant in the local community, a father figure who forged deep relationships with his players while fielding a team that regularly competed for championships. The Netflix docuseries “Last Chance U” focused on Beam and the Laney Eagles in its 2020 season. He’d most recently been serving as the school’s athletic director after retiring from coaching last year.

Irving has no criminal record, the district attorney said.

Officers arrived at Laney College before noon Thursday to find Beam shot in the head at the athletics field house. He was treated at a hospital, but died the following day from his injuries.

Irving was arrested at a commuter rail station just after 3 a.m. Friday. He was carrying the firearm used to shoot Beam, and he admitted to carrying out the shooting, according to the probable cause document.

Oakland police say the shooting was “very targeted.”

Back-to-back shootings at two schools last week have roiled Oakland, a city of roughly 400,000 across the bay from San Francisco. On Wednesday, a student was shot and wounded at Oakland’s Skyline High School.

Beam joined Laney College in 2004 as a running backs coach and became head coach in 2012, winning two league titles. According to his biography on the college’s website, at least 20 of his players went on to the NFL.

Federal agents detain people at St. Paul industrial building, drawing protesters

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Federal agents detained people Tuesday at an industrial building off St. Paul’s University Avenue, prompting people to gather in protest.

A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesperson said in a statement that ICE Homeland Security Investigations “and law enforcement partners conducted court authorized law enforcement activity and served a search warrant in furtherance of a federal criminal investigation,” which is ongoing.

People on social media noted that federal agents amassed in Newell Park on Fairview Avenue on Tuesday morning before heading to Bro-Tex Inc. on Hampden Avenue near University Avenue. The company’s website says they’ve been manufacturing and converting cloth and paper wiping products since 1923.

Outside the building, some people swarmed vehicles driven by federal agents and followed one, kicking it and yelling, “No justice, no peace.”

Federal personnel sprayed people with a chemical irritant. An observer said a protester was arrested.

St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter and City Council Member Molly Coleman, who represents the area, went to the site.

Coleman wrote on social media that they’ve heard reports that “several individuals” were taken by the federal government and said they’re working on getting more information.

“Federal agents caused multiple injuries and deployed tear gas multiple times,” Coleman wrote. “The agencies that had a confirmed presence are: FBI, ICE, DEA, and HSI. Federal agents were seen with ‘police vests’ but we have confirmation that SPPD and the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office were not involved or present.”

A person who answered the phone at Bro-Tex said the company had no comment as of Tuesday morning.

Carter wrote in a post: “Though we don’t have many details right now, I share the concern and fear this raises for our works, families, and the entire community. Remember you have rights” and directed people to stpaul.gov/immigration-resources.

The Immigrant Defense Network is planning a community vigil at the site, 830 N. Hampden Ave., at 9 am. Wednesday.

“What happened today is not law enforcement — it is an assault on our community,” said a representative from the Immigrant Defense Network in a statement. “No one should fear that simply going to work, providing for their family, or standing up for their neighbors will result in federal agents storming a workplace, detaining people en masse, and deploying chemical weapons against Minnesotans.”

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Flush with cash? A solid gold toilet is up for auction

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NEW YORK (AP) — Art collectors have a chance Tuesday to buy one of the world’s most lucrative latrines: a solid gold, fully functional toilet.

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The piece, by Maurizio Cattelan — the provocative Italian artist known for taping a banana to a wall — goes up for auction Tuesday evening at Sotheby’s in New York. The starting bid will be the market value of the 223-pound, 18-karat-gold work, currently about $10 million.

Cattelan has said the piece, titled “America, ” satirizes superwealth.

“Whatever you eat, a $200 lunch or a $2 hot dog, the results are the same, toilet-wise,” he once said. Sotheby’s, for its part, calls the commode an “incisive commentary on the collision of artistic production and commodity value.”

Owned by an unnamed collector, it’s one of two such toilets that Cattelan created in 2016.

The other one was displayed in 2016 at New York’s Guggenheim Museum, which pointedly offered to lend it to U.S. President Donald Trump when he asked to borrow a Van Gogh painting. Then the piece was stolen while on display in England at Blenheim Palace, the country manor where Winston Churchill was born.

Two men were convicted in the toilet heist, but it’s unclear what they did with the loo. Investigators aren’t privy to its whereabouts but believe it probably was broken up and melted down.

“America” was exhibited at Sotheby’s New York headquarters in the weeks leading up to the auction.