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Eastern Iowa Is Now Part of Chicago
Caffinated Thoughts ^ | June 5, 2015 | Deberoah Thornton

Posted on 06/05/2015 1:10:58 PM PDT by PeterPrinciple

The distance from Chicago to Dubuque, or Clinton, or Davenport is around 200 miles. It’s almost 250 from Burlington. This is a drive of four to five hours, even with no traffic. Yet recent and proposed actions by the federal government make Eastern Iowa part of the “greater-Chicago area.”

The expanding federal nanny state has decided that our river towns, struggling to provide good jobs and decent housing for low-income people who already live here, should focus on recruiting low-income people from outside the state, instead of recruiting military veterans, active retirees, or young graduates, who can remain home, start businesses, begin families, and lift their neighborhoods up.

The process is starting with the low-income housing rental programs of Dubuque. Many people rent housing instead of buying, allowing greater flexibility — including ease of moving for jobs, increased cost controls to help manage expenses, and no responsibility for maintenance. As of 2012, 35 percent, or one in three American households, rent, with the most growth in the 30 to 39-year-old age group. There has been an increase in renting among those over age 70, for similar reasons. In addition, half of all renters are people with incomes under $30,000 a year.[1] Many of these people also have children, whether as a single parent or as a couple.

Unfortunately, rental properties in the last few years have not kept up with demand, resulting in “lower vacancies, higher rents, and higher (quality) construction.” As a result, by 2011, 50 percent of renters were considered housing burdened, paying over 30 percent of their income for housing. Of these over half are “severely” burdened; paying over 50 percent of their income.[2] Increased local regulatory and zoning requirements, such as those in Iowa City on the number of residents per bedroom, have contributed to both the destruction of low-income rentals and a lack of new units.[3]

As a result, many people turn to government-supported low-income housing programs, specifically the Housing Choice Vouchers (HCV) program or Section 8. The HCV program is supposedly controlled by local (generally city or county) public housing agencies (PHAs). The money for vouchers comes from taxpayers – after being routed through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The general requirement for Section 8 is that annual income must not exceed 50 percent of the median income for the specific area. Further, 75 percent of the vouchers must be given to people with incomes less than 30 percent of the median.[4]

Once an individual receives a Section 8 voucher, they find a rental owner who will accept it. Typically there are more applicants than money available. Many waiting lists are long. And typically there are more Section 8 voucher holders than there are owners willing to accept them. Both the individual application process and the owner’s property requirements are significant and onerous.

If HUD is successful at finalizing the Affirmatively Further Fair Housing (AFFH) regulation – proposed a year ago – local control of Section 8 will be eliminated. According to the press release, “HUD will provide data for every neighborhood … in the country, detailing the access African American, Latino, Asian, and others … have to local assets, including schools, jobs, transportation, … that can play a role in helping people move into the middle class. Long-term solutions will involve various strategies, such as helping people gain access to different neighborhoods and channeling investments into underserved areas,” said HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan.[5]

After an extensive investigation of alleged discrimination in their local priority ranking system, which was found to unfairly keep minorities (mostly from out of state, specifically Chicago, Illinois, which is four hours away) from being approved and placed on the Dubuque Section 8 voucher list, HUD forced officials to sign a Voluntary Compliance Agreement ceding control of their program even before AFFH is finalized.[6] Dubuque is being required to not focus on the local needy citizens, but instead to attract and recruit new low-income renters from outside of Iowa. They must specifically advertise for and recruit low-income applicants reflecting the demographics of Chicago.

Dubuque is not a city which could be considered wealthy and elite. Local residents are not looking to increase the number of people who are dependent on government services for their daily living needs. Instead, Dubuque (like our other river cities) is struggling to revive its economic base, keep its young people from moving away, and provide for the needs of those who currently live there, who vote there, and who pay taxes there, to whom they already have an obligation.

The negative and unintended result of the HUD micromanagement of the Section 8 program in Dubuque is already beginning. The list of eligible applicants is expected to close this summer, and the wait time could be two years or more. There is not enough money to fund the required number of vouchers.[7] The administrative burden is significant and Dubuque is required to follow HUD’s every direction for the next five years or more.

The elected officials responsible for our Iowa towns, including those such as Cedar Rapids, Iowa City, and Mount Pleasant – and those even further west – must take note. Once they lose local control of housing, then schools, zoning, transportation, the environment, and business location will be next. The central planners intend to use “big data” to force every region to meet nationally determined standards for every aspect of our communities. These regions will be directed by unelected governing boards that do not report to voters and do not even have to be contiguous.

Because they took the federal government’s money, Dubuque is now controlled by HUD and has become a part of Chicago. If our local governments keep taking the central planners’ taxpayer-provided money, ever more of Iowa will be forced to be just like Chicago, whether you live 200, 250, 350, or even 450 miles away.


TOPICS: Government; Local News; Society
KEYWORDS: chicago; hud; iowa; section8
It is a blog, and a reprint from another source http://www.limitedgovernment.org/index.html. Good points and documented with footnotes.

The best laid plans and free money.................

1 posted on 06/05/2015 1:10:58 PM PDT by PeterPrinciple
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To: PeterPrinciple

The Faculty Lounge follies continue.


2 posted on 06/05/2015 1:44:00 PM PDT by Don Corleone ("Oil the gun..eat the cannoli. Take it to the Mattress.")
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To: PeterPrinciple

How do you think Obama won the caucuses in 2008???

A few busloads here and there made the difference.


3 posted on 06/05/2015 2:09:43 PM PDT by CMailBag
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To: PeterPrinciple

This is all part of a nationwide plan to export excess Democrat voters from inner city precincts into Republican controlled precincts giving Democrats more control over local governments, especially in the suburbs.


4 posted on 06/05/2015 2:10:09 PM PDT by centurion316
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To: PeterPrinciple
"proposed actions by the federal government make Eastern Iowa part of the “greater-Chicago area.”

Better stated as Chicago is part of the lesser Dubuque area.
5 posted on 06/05/2015 5:55:42 PM PDT by clearcarbon
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To: PeterPrinciple

This is just a part of the plan to suck rural America into the urban hell holes. So much for the part of America where no one locks their doors...


6 posted on 06/05/2015 6:02:31 PM PDT by Senator_Blutarski
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To: Senator_Blutarski
I was way too polite in my previous post. This is just a plan to ensure that black trash gets shipped to rural America so we can all suffer. I'm about 100 miles upstream from Dubuque.

Here's an example:

A La Crosse drug dealer is facing his seventh felony case is just over a year after police arrested him this week for selling crack cocaine days before he is set to be sentenced for the same crime.

Andre Brown, 31, is jailed on a $100,000 cash bond and returns Tuesday to La Crosse County Circuit Court to face charges of delivery of cocaine, possession with intent to deliver cocaine, possession of drug paraphernalia and felony bail jumping.

Brown on Tuesday while on bond for drug delivery sold $400 worth of crack cocaine to a police informant in front of his young children, according to La Crosse police reports. Investigators found 9.8 grams of crack cocaine hidden in his bed sheets when they searched his house at 1408 S. West Ave.

“The defendant has made statements to law enforcement that he’s a for-profit dealer,” Assistant District Attorney Emily Hynek said in court Friday. “There is no amount of supervision we can impose that can protect the community from his drug dealing.”

Police began investigating Brown in March last year by going through garbage bags left outside his house, where they found small amounts of marijuana and crack cocaine.

On April 24, 2014, officers stopped his wife at 11th and Jackson streets for driving without a valid license before Brown appeared and shouted at police for harassing her, according to the criminal complaint.

Investigators with a warrant searched the couple’s home and found their children, ages 2 and 5, alone in a bathtub filled with 7 inches of water. The children were hungry and afraid, according to the complaint.

Authorities found 28 muscle relaxants, marijuana, a scale with white powder and a marijuana grinder in the house, the complaint stated. Brown had two cellphones and $95 when arrested for second-degree recklessly endangering safety and possession of a controlled substance, THC and drug paraphernalia. He was released from jail on April 25 on a $1,000 signature bond.

While out on bond, brown sold 2.5 grams of crack cocaine on July 3 and again on July 8, according to a criminal complaint. Police arrested him again Aug. 26 when he battered and choked his wife. He was released from jail Sept. 9 on a $2,500 signature bond.

The next day, Brown tried to hit a woman and almost hit another woman with his car. He posted a $5,000 cash bond on Sept. 16.

On Sept. 24, he sold $400 worth of crack cocaine to a police informant in front of his 3-year-old child just hours after leaving court, according to the complaint.

Prosecutors charged him with 19 crimes between six cases and he pleaded guilty to six charges, including delivery of cocaine, child neglect and battery. His cases are set for sentencing June 15 and July 7.

7 posted on 06/05/2015 6:11:44 PM PDT by Senator_Blutarski
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