COALITION TO
PROTECT PUBLIC
HOUSING
SAVE THE DATE
AUGUST 29 2007
NEW ORLEANS
HURRICANE KATRINA
TRIBUNAL
The Demolition of Public Housing in Chicago:
A Human Rights Crisis
Introduction
Public housing units in the City of Chicago are being (and have
been) destroyed in record numbers in the last 5 years. As part of a
deliberate policy based, in part, upon federal legislation, the City of
Chicago and the Chicago Housing Authority in conjunction with the
United States Department of Housing have systematically
demolished more than 13,702 housing units since 1999.

Some results have been: (1) forcing more than 20,000 legal
residents — primarily female-headed families with children — from
their homes against their will into an uncertain fate including, for
many, absolute homelessness; (2) breaking up and dispersing
established communities of neighbors and friends against their will;
and (3) depriving thousands of non-legal residents (“squatters”)
who occupied public housing structures because they had no
adequate housing of their own of even the most minimal housing.
Overwhelmingly, the people forced to move were (and are) people
of color.

This massive destruction of public housing is not yet complete. A
planned 22,000 units total are to be destroyed. Though there is a
stated goal to return some legal residents to new or rehabbed
units, there will be a net loss of 13,629 low-income units overall.
Moreover, 5 years into the 10-year plan, only 200 new low-income
units have been created and now the source of funding for more
units is disappearing from the federal budget.

Yet, despite this massive demolition, the need for housing
continues to grow. More than 55,000 families are now on the
waiting list for public housing in Chicago. In addition, more than
7,000 households are on the Cook County Housing Authority
waiting list for public housing and housing choice vouchers. Finally,
more than 75,000 households are on Illinois’ Housing Choice
Voucher (Section 8) waiting list, with almost half of those living in
the city of Chicago.

Finally, we consider all of this disruption within the current local and
national economy, which has created a paradoxical “jobless
recovery.” Indeed, we are especially aware and fearful of the
growing gap between the cost of housing and current wages.

Relevant Human Rights Law
International human rights law speaks clearly to the rights and
concerns of displaced public housing residents in Chicago and
around the nation:

--The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, of which the United
States was a principal drafter and has adopted, provides:
“Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the
health and well-being of himself and his family, including housing.”
Art. 25(1)

--The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights, to which the United States is a signatory, “recognize the
right of everyone to an adequate standard of living ... including
adequate. . .housing.” Art. 11(1)

--The United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights has further clarified the right to housing (General Comment
No. 4) such that the right prohibits mass, planned, forced
displacement of persons against their will particularly when their
displacement will result in homelessness. General Comment No. 7.
Indeed, whole communities within public housing — against their
will as part of a nationally legislated, locally planned effort,
designed to reduce housing options and remove many housing
subsidies for low-income Chicagoans constitutes a “forced eviction”
under human rights law. Forced evictions are a gross violation of
the human right to adequate housing.

--The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, signed
and ratified by the United States, includes a right to “life” and the
right to protection from arbitrary or unlawful interference with one’s
home. Art. 6 and Art. 17

--The International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Racial Discrimination, signed and ratified by the United States,
prohibits actions with respect to housing that have the effect of
discriminating against persons of color. Art. 5(e)(iii)

-- The International Convention on the Rights of the Child provides
both a right to adequate housing and a right to an education. Art.
27 and Art. 28. There is an intimate relationship between housing
stability and a child’s readiness to learn. Families displaced by
forced eviction from public housing have suffered from repeated
educational disruption — recent research suggests a loss of 4-6
months of educational progress every time a family moves. The
United States is the only country besides Somalia not to have
ratified this Convention, although both Somalia and the USA have
signed the Convention, indicating their intention to ratify it at a later
date.

--The American Declaration on the Rights and Duties of Man
speaks of the right to life, well-being and personal security and the
inviolability of the home, including the right not to be forced to
leave against one’s will. Arts. I, IX, XI and VIII

--Article 26 of the American Convention on Human Rights, signed
by the United States, and Article 34(k) of The Charter of the
Organization of American States, also binding on the United States,
requires progressive measures on the part of governments to fully
realize a universal goal of adequate housing for all sectors of the
population.

Action Steps
The Coalition to Protect Public Housing is a network of public
housing residents and support organizations including the
Community Renewal Society, the Chicago Coalition for the
Homeless, the Jewish Council on Urban Affairs, Americans for
Democratic Action and the UIC Voorhees Center for Neighborhood
and Community Improvement. For the past seven years the
Coalition has worked to protect public housing residents’ rights and
ensure a future for public housing.

The Coalition is committed to ensuring the implementation of the
human right to adequate housing and the right to be free of forced
evictions for the residents and former residents of public housing in
Chicago. Consistent with this, CPPH is moving forward with an
action agenda using a human rights framework. Activities may
include:

--Organizing throughout the Chicago community in neighborhood
forums to document human rights violations

--Working directly with the United Nations Special Rapporteur on
Adequate Housing

--Filing a formal complaint with the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights in which violations of the human right to housing in
Chicago will be highlighted, investigated and documented.

--Hosting a local conference for education and discussion of the
human right to housing

--Filing a “shadow report” with the United Nations Human Rights
Committee

--Urging the UN to set a deadline for the United States to report on
its human rights’ compliance

--Advocating national, state and local legislative measures to
ensure at a minimum the recognition, and, also the implementation
of the human right to adequate housing

--Developing a media strategy based on human rights principles
and the action agenda

The Coalition welcomes the support of all Chicagoans in our
struggle to end the human rights crisis that has been created by
the Chicago Housing Authority’s demolition plan.
OAS HEARING
SENATOR OBAMA
VIDEO CLIP ON
PUBLIC HOUSING
CRISIS IN CHICAGO
..
ORGANIZERS PAGE DOUBLE CLICK
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A TRIBUTE TO RENE MAXWELL
C.P.P.H. NEWSLETTER
2006 WORLD SOCIAL FORUM
SPEECH BY ARIESTEDE STEELE AND
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VOICE OF THE VOICELESS
: GOSPELMENTARY
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
ON C.P.P.H.
C.P.PH. WRITTEN SUBMISSION TO
O.H.C.H.R. AT THE U.N.
H.J. RES 32 HOUSING BILL TO AMEND
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