Bureaucratic nightmare for seniors

Latest

Chicago seniors must routinely fight the Chicago Housing Authority
bureaucracy.
PHOTO/JANE ADDAMS SENIOR CAUCUS

 
CHICAGO, IL — In Franz Kafka’s novel, The Castle, a land surveyor, as ordered, leaves his home, travels a great distance, and arrives at his ruler’s village to discover his services are no longer required, despite the summons. An official explains the situation: “In an administration as large as [this], it can happen at some point that one department issues an order, another a second, neither department knows of the other. . . and so a little confusion can nonetheless arise.” Angry and perplexed, the surveyor responds that the explanation supplies “some insight into the ridiculous tangle that may under certain circumstances determine a person’s life.” Later, he emphatically insists upon knowing exactly what his rights are.
The Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) is a bureaucratic labyrinth that has carte blanche to treat its senior residents with no respect for their rights or their physical and emotional health. The building where I live, owned by CHA for just over a year, is about to undergo renovation and we may be subject to relocation.  I investigated to find out what we might face and what rights we have.
CHA and its agents inform residents of renovations with very little notice and with no specific person consistently available to answer questions or provide exact details. They supply written updates and notices, but only in English, ignoring the needs of non-English speaking residents. Residents are often requested to waive their right to the minimum 30-day notice. Regardless of disabilities or specific needs, there is no individual planning for each person’s move. Required assistance in packing and moving is not regularly available. A few days can elapse between notification and move, or moving schedules can extend to months while residents wait and live out of boxes.
Residents are given lists of CHA buildings to investigate for relocation, with no transportation assistance or any idea of what might be available. In many cases, these buildings do not know that people will be visiting to find apartments nor do they have the necessities such as grab bars, wheelchair ramps, accessible doorways and the like. Necessary transfer of utilities to their new apartments, with required transfer fees, etc., become the responsibility of the residents. At one building, residents fought for months and finally received, with the assistance of Jane Adams Senior Caucus and attorneys at the Shriver Center, rent credits to offset some of the financial hardships incurred.
While those that remain in their buildings are exposed to noise, dust, lead and perhaps even asbestos hazards and lose community rooms, computer facilities, cafeterias and other amenities, those who are relocated often are nowhere near their original buildings, miss their familiar communities and social contacts of many years.
This is about senior citizens, many in frail health, and who, like the land surveyor, have traveled far, seeking to live with dignity, something that the CHA apparently does not consider a human right.
*I want to acknowledge information and assistance shared with to me in the preparation of this article by JASC, Shriver Center for Poverty Law and the wonderful activist residents of a number of CHA buildings.

+ Articles by this author

The People’s Tribune opens its pages to voices of the movement for change. Our articles are written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Articles entitled “From the Editors” reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: peoplestribune.orgPlease donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement for change. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff. The People’s Tribune is a 501C4 organization.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

Moms Aim to Close Dilley ICE Detention Center by Mother’s Day

Thousands of mothers and others across the country are banding together to demand that ICE end the detention of children and families by Mother's Day.

No Data Centers in Michigan!

'The resistance to data centers in Michigan is awe-inspiring! Data center proposals are canceled across the state and country due to public resistance. We want food, water, and clean air.'

He Died on the Floor—And They Told Everyone Else to Keep Working

There is something profoundly broken—morally, culturally, economically—when a workplace responds to death with not even a pause. The message was clear: the Amazon packages matter more than the people moving them.

The Economy: ‘It’s the Best of Times, it’s the Worst of Times’ 

What's going on with the economy? Why is it that the stock market overall has been booming in recent months, while jobs are dwindling and many of the jobs that are available don't pay enough to live on?

Israel Has Buried Gaza in Rubble, But Our Love for the Land Will Always Survive

In this piece originally published at Truthout, Hend Salama Abo Helow, a researcher, writer and medical student at Al-Azhar University in Gaza, speaks about the deep connection of Palestinians to the land.

More from the People's Tribune