Thursday, November 2, 2017

MoCo HOC under fire from East County renters

Residents from several buildings owned or funded by the Montgomery County Housing Opportunities Commission heavily criticized their treatment and living conditions at the HOC's monthly meeting yesterday in Kensington. Among their complaints were pests and violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act.

A resident who testified from his wheelchair in the audience said management of HOC-owned Alexander House is denying him the apartment unit he needs. Instead, they are placing him in a noisy, street-facing unit that will also hamper his escape route during fires. He recounted caretakers of other senior citizens and physically-challenged residents on his floor trying to bump them in wheelchairs down staircases during a fire evacuation this past year. If he wants a unit more suited to his needs, he would have to pay $500 more per-month in rent, he said management told him.

Residents who had complaints at one HOC building moved to the Oakfield Apartments off Georgia Avenue in Glenmont. The mother - through tears - and daughter told commissioners this was no improvement, complaining of bedbugs and a variety of other problems. Oakfield is not owned by HOC, but has received funding from the commission.

Commissioners had no comment on the unconfirmed allegations at yesterday's meeting. They instructed staff to speak to the complainants "offline" outside the meeting. Staff would then update the commission at a later time, they said. The accusations follow an embarrassing audit of HOC properties earlier this year by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, in which federal inspectors found 405 code violations. Montgomery County Councilmembers have failed to pass a lengthy list of rental housing reforms recommended by the County's Tenant Work Group in 2010.

2 comments:

  1. "HOC," LOL, why pretend it's not section 8 by calling it something different? What, freeloaders were insulted? Pfft, I get it, we have morons and retards living in the county and they have to live somewhere while they sit on their moronic and retare assessment 24 hours per day, 7 days per week, while waiting for their EBT (WELFARE) card refill. Such shit, all of them, well, 90% of them are utter wastes of carbon, the remaining 10% are somewhat worthy of the air they take in. So many taking so much, one felon a hole can cost me and you 2, 3, 10 million all said and done in their lifetime of crime. Such waste. Image how progressive the world would be without them, it would be amazing.

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    1. I do see an utter waste of carbon here, but it isn't anyone related to HOC.

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