is anyone saying they don't want direct op subs or section 9 increases besides republicans in congress?
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Replying to @SoBendito @jennyaction
Right. And it’s also that - to the extent that section 9 is not very flexible and bars you from getting other types of subsidies - maybe it puts us in a politically stronger position if there is a way to stay public, but be funded through section 8.
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Replying to @ceaweaver @jennyaction
It definitely does imo, if for no other reason than it would make public housing residents part of a broader constituency that both has more political and organizing power than public housing residents currently have and would have even more with their inclusion in the coalition.
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Replying to @SoBendito @jennyaction
Right. So the answer to Jenny’s original question is yes and no. YES, some people (besides just Dems and R’s in Congress, some socialists!) see Sec 9 as a liability to keeping NYCHA public. But also NO, no one I know or have seen is OPPOSED to more Sec 9 funding
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Replying to @ceaweaver @SoBendito
Got it. Thanks for clearing up (spent the last week puzzling about it.) Filing under "people who mostly agree fighting each other instead of the state."
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Replying to @jennyaction @SoBendito
Lol well re: fighting the state, there’s another (interesting/valid) debate here re: “is it smart for leftists use an organizing strategy that relies on attacking an agency that the right would like to disappear entirely? And if no, what do we do re: resident distrust of NYCHA?”
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So yes we all basically agree, but I do think it’s a nascent convo about the future of social housing, what our relationship to the state is, etc - and we don’t all agree on that! So I’m (optimistically) filing under: “left wing social movement growing pains.”
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Replying to @ceaweaver @SoBendito
feel like it's not all that nascent (like has been taking place over decades, and some parts of it--i.e., public vs. community control--since the inception of public housing?) But agree that it's an important one and needs to center actual residents (present and future!)
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feels like a political statement even to just type into the void "NYCHA residents of the future" and that's a problem.
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Totally. So, also, it’s also debate about universalism, who we imagine public housing serving in the future versus who lives there now, and how we expand the constituencies when there is so much deeper need for very low income/no income people….there is a lot here to unpack
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Lol even just our little twitter convo has like 3 different interesting threads on it rn
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