A fresh start
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Paul Clinton
Back in 1996, Carrie Stevens needed a break. Fresh out of an
abusive relationship, Stevens found herself in a battered women’s
shelter with her daughter, Paige.
With a little help from the good Samaritans at Human Options, the
group that ran the shelter, Stevens secured a low-income Section 8
housing voucher that put her on the path to a string of dwellings in
Eastside Costa Mesa.
“It’s been a godsend,” Stevens said. “Out of a horrible situation,
a good thing happened.”
About 9,100 residents in the county use vouchers from the Orange
County Housing Authority, and every month about 70 are returned to
the agency because the resident no longer needs or is eligible for
the assistance. Any returned vouchers are then turned over to people
on a waiting list.
In July, those needing vouchers received great news when the
Department of Housing and Urban Development announced it was handing
the county another 452 vouchers. The housing authority has a waiting
list of 12,000 hopefuls, making the vouchers near gold for those who
hold them.
For Stevens, the vouchers knock off about $700 of her
$1,300-a-month rent. Stevens only brings in about $150 to $200 a week
by working at The Latest Thing, a Mesa Verde curio shop. She sells
fairy wands and seashell mobiles -- many of which dangle in her
window sills.
Stevens said she can’t work full time because she contracted
hepatitis C while she was addicted to heroin and the condition has
weakened her energy levels.
Without the voucher, Stevens wouldn’t be able to make her rent
payments.
An afternoon with Stevens makes it clear she handles the home with
tender loving care. She planted her apple, kumquat and fig trees in
the backyard and many of her other plants in the frontyard to spruce
up the landscaping.
Securing the house was an ordeal. Stevens was turned down by more
than 30 landlords, who blanched when she told them she had a voucher.
She acknowledges that the vouchers can carry a stigma.
Not all property owners accept the vouchers. Some believe they
attract a “lower class” of tenant who may or may not make the rent
payment, landlord Barry Saywitz said. Not all landlords participate
in the program.
“I don’t think the voucher program is ideal for everybody,”
Saywitz said. “What I like about it is the rent is guaranteed.
There’s less risk of a tenant not paying their rent.”
Stevens and her 10-year-old daughter live in the house with their
two cats, Vinnie and Max, and a snake named Mocha.
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment and politics. He may be
reached at (949) 764-4330.
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