In Brenda Williams’ 35-year career in public housing, she has seen a lot. From the front lines of moving families into new homes to strategic planning sessions in board rooms, Williams makes it her business to ensure that affordable housing is within reach of everyone she can. “Housing is a life necessity,” she says, “and anything I can do to help people obtain it inspires me.”
This commitment to the wellbeing and safety of others has made her a trusted leader and subject matter expert, as well as one of Tallahassee’s 25 Women You Need to Know in 2024.
Williams chose Tallahassee. After working her way to the role of executive director of the St. Louis, MO, Housing Authority, serving as Transitional Administrator for the Camden New Jersey Housing Authority, and finally serving as the Chief of Staff for the New Orleans Housing Authority, she spent another 14 years in consulting work, providing strategic management services to housing agencies throughout the southwest. “I was in and out of 52 housing authorities over the course of 35 years,” she says.
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She decided it was time to make a home for herself. “I was tired of traveling every week,” she said. “And after growing up in the Midwest, I chose Tallahassee because of the weather.”
Now, she enjoys her current role of executive director of the Tallahassee Housing Authority, a job she embraces for its nuances and purpose. “My day often begins with text messages from people looking for a home,” she says. “When I can help someone find housing, it’s a good day. I just wish I was able to help everyone.”
To that end, she is a volunteer for Tallahassee Crime Solvers as a board member. “I want to be part of the solution in the neighborhoods that are often served by my work,” she said.
Much of her time is spent working on the $82 million redevelopment of the former Orange Avenue Apartments. “Moving someone into an apartment and off of the street is the most rewarding part of my work,” she says. “I like what I do because it’s an opportunity to change lives for the better and helps to make communities thrive.”
Construction on the second phase is projected to be complete in June, and she looks forward to moving families back into their new homes.
She always knew she wanted to work in social services, and earned a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology and a Master’s in Sociology/Social Work from Lincoln University. “I immediately went into my first job as section 8 coordinator in the St. Louis Housing Authority,” she said. “Back then, urban planning was not a field of study.”
Williams chose Tallahassee for the weather, and she stays because of the community. “The people in Tallahassee are kind and caring,” she says. “I love cooking for my friends, entertaining, and being at home!”
Seeing opportunity and hope for affordable housing in Tallahassee, Williams hopes that we will keep our eye on the prize. “The most important thing Tallahassee can do is stay focused on looking for creative ways to provide housing that is affordable in today’s economy,” she said. “All we have to do is stay focused on what is possible.”
David Buntjer was 18 when he died in September 2022, five months after welcoming the Statesman Journal into his Salem apartment to talk about the work he and other teens were doing to help other homeless youth.
On Wednesday a crowd celebrated the opening of a new transitional shelter in Monmouth bearing his name.
David’s House initially will provide transitional housing for five Polk County youth, and eventually house up to 10. Teens will be able to stay up to two years or until they graduate high school and turn 18.
It will serve as a stopgap between emergency shelters and permanent support. On-site staff will support the youth 24 hours a day, including helping with homework and chores or giving rides to appointments.
“Every kiddo deserves to grow up in a neighborhood,” said Christopher Lopez, associate program director at Mid-Willamette Valley Homeless Alliance.
In 2022, there were an estimated 1,500 youth in the Mid-Valley experiencing homelessness at any given time. Buntjer was one of them.
During the sentencing of the man convicted of shooting and killing his father a couple of months before Buntjer died, he said his father’s death was the hardest thing he had gone through and his difficulties with housing and feeling secure. In an earlier interview he recalled being threatened with a machete after asking older people if he and his peers could sleep near them.
Buntjer was part of Backbone, a youth advisory board involved in the implementation of Youth Homelessness Demonstration Project funding via a $3.7 million U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development grant to the Mid-Willamette Valley Homeless Alliance.
Backbone members are experiencing homelessness or youth at risk of experiencing homelessness and they provided input for a 2022 Mid-Willamette Valley Homeless Alliance plan to to end youth homelessness.
David’s House will be the first program of its kind in Polk County
The Monmouth property was purchased in 2023 for $650,000. Repairs and updates of the property followed before a Wednesday ribbon-cutting ceremony.
Lopez said the location of the home was intentional. Services are often concentrated in more urban centers and youth are traditionally forced to travel to Salem for services. That removes them from the communities where they live.
“That induces trauma,” Lopez said.
David’s House will be the first program of its kind in Polk County.
“This is a big deal,” Polk County Commissioner Jeremy Gordon said Wednesday. “We want to take care of people where they are.”
Jimmy Jones, executive director of the Mid-Willamette Valley Community Action Agency, referred to the youth-specific shelter as a “very, very rare thing.”
Megan Perez, program manager at MWVCAA, said the goal is for the house to feel like a home setting rather than a facility.
There’s a resource room upstairs where youth will be able to find clothes and decor so they can make the space their own. A large deck is available in the backyard along with garden boxes. There are donated acoustic guitars in the living room.
Buntjer’s family has remained involved in the development of David’s House. They donated bikes and other supplies because they knew how passionate Buntjer had been about opening spaces like this, Perez said.
Two portraits of Buntjer greet visitors and residents at the home. Friday, MWVCAA will host a vigil to honor David and other youth.
Dianne Lugo covers the Oregon Legislature and equity issues. Reach her at dlugo@statesmanjournal.com or on X @DianneLugo
Delaware can expect more investment in child care.
The state’s Department of Health and Social Services and Gov. John Carney announced funding changes for the sector this week, building on proposals in the governor’s final recommended budget. In that draft spending plan, Carney proposed expanding eligibility for Purchase of Care, subsidized child care, to 200% of the federal poverty level, while creating over 200 additional seats in state-funded pre-K.
Tuesday, he added to those actions:
- Capping family co-payments at 7% of family income, as opposed to 9%, and remove all co-pays for families below 150% of the federal poverty level, according to a press release, looking to see families pay less out-of-pocket for child care.
- Increasing compensated absence days from five to 10, providing child care centers and homes with additional stability and predictability in their budgets.
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“We know how critical the first five years of a child’s life are to future academic and career success,” said Carney in a statement. “Investing in our youngest learners has been a priority of ours from day one, and these investments further that commitment. I want to thank our child care providers for all they do every day to set our children up for future success.”
The administration has more than doubled investments in Purchase of Care and the Early Childhood Assistance Program, as previously reported. The coming year’s budget proposes investing $83 million in Purchase of Care, alongside $15.7 million in ECAP.
Advocates and providers alike have been pushing for the state to consider raising eligibility to 250%, as previously reported by Delaware Online/The News Journal. This week’s announcement didn’t look to move the needle on eligibility criteria, though aimed at other common concerns. DHSS leaders also already discussed the likelihood of rolling back copays, in a budget hearing late last month.
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State Sen. Kyle Evans Gay and Sen. Sarah McBride, sponsoring several pieces of legislation at these intersections of Delaware childcare, praised the move.
“Far too many Delaware families either cannot afford the cost of child care or live in a place where child care is scarce or completely inaccessible. This cost crisis facing families is only deepened — especially in Kent and Sussex counties — by the fact that child care providers do not receive the support or funding necessary to operate these critical small businesses,” these lawmakers said in a joint statement.
“It’s up to us to invest heavily in our child care infrastructure, lowering costs for the thousands of families who are simply trying to make ends meet while simultaneously supporting the early educators and providers who serve Delaware families and children.”
Got a story? Kelly Powers covers race, culture and equity for Delaware Online/The News Journal and USA TODAY Network Northeast, with a focus on education. Contact her at kepowers@gannett.com or (231) 622-2191, and follow her on Twitter @kpowers01.
The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services is still struggling to meet the vast majority of goals set under a federal consent decree, including having enough foster homes for children in the state and keeping siblings together after they’ve been removed from their homes, according to a biannual review by court monitors.
The monitors also found the state still has issues with properly investigating abuse or neglect in foster care.
The Michigan department has been under federal court oversight as a part of a settlement of a 2006 class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of children whose attorneys argued were mistreated in state care. Children’s Rights, the New York-based advocacy agency that filed the lawsuit, and the state entered into a new agreement in June 2019 that relaxed some oversight measures by amending the requirements the state must meet for creating assessments, service plans and provisions of services.
The latest monitoring report, which covers July to December 2022, found that the state lost foster homes overall in 2022 and struggled to have enough homes for siblings, children with disabilities and older children.
“These significant home losses compromised the placement array for children,” the court monitors wrote in the review. “The monitoring team has discussed with DHHS the need for the agency to develop and implement targeted, systemic strategies to improve the licensure and maintenance of foster homes, including homes for special populations.”
Michigan Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson Lynn Sutfin said the department has been working to recruit new foster families with weekly communications to people who sign up to receive information about fostering and a paid advertising campaign.
“We need foster families across the state to keep these children safe and to care for them until they can be returned to their family if it is safe or find a loving adoptive family,” Sutfin said. “Michigan has implemented a multi-faceted approach to providing homes for children in care via recruitment of new homes and enhancing efforts to retain existing homes.”
State officials also have been focusing on placing children with relatives so they can stay with family, she said. The state has invested in family-finding resources and created staff positions to identify and support relatives, she said.
Sutfin noted that the number of kids in foster care has decreased from 19,000 in 2008 to less than 10,000 now. This is because the Michigan department is doing more to provide services for families so they can keep kids in their homes, Sutfin said.
Still, Michigan has struggled to license more foster homes. In 2022, it fell short of its goal of licensing 965 new non-relative homes, reaching 87.6% of that mark. It licensed 845 homes, but during the year, 1,359 homes were closed for a net loss of 514 homes.
Its goal for 2023 fell to 902 homes, but the state continued losing homes in the first three months of 2023.
While the monitors’ review didn’t include the total number of foster homes, the state had 4,169 licensed foster homes through March 31, 2023, according to Fostering Media Connections, a nonprofit that surveys the states for foster home information.
“In (state fiscal year) 2022, DHHS still had substantial work to do to understand and stem net foster home losses and to heighten its focus on licensing foster homes for the special populations of siblings and adolescents,” court monitors wrote in the most recent report. “Significant home losses compromised the placement array for children and contributed to the separation of siblings and the placement of children in shelters.”
Steps to find more foster parents, homes
State officials have been taking steps to boost the number of foster parents in Michigan.
As part of her latest budget that took effect in October, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer increased payment rates for foster parents 8%, bringing the rate for caregivers of youth up to age 12 to approximately $670 a month and $800 a month for those older than 13. Payment rates also were raised in 2022.
The state also has been working to provide respite for foster parents.
“Right now, close to one-third of foster parents close their licenses every year, a fact that places new stress on a system that already badly needs more loving, caring foster parents,” said department Director Elizabeth Hertel in a statement when the payment increase was announced in August. “Through providing more money to foster parents while also giving them a break, we continue to do everything in our power to make Michigan the safest place in America to raise kids and nurture families.”
Continued challenges
Still, the current system faces challenges, according to court monitors.
The state human services department did not provide evidence that systemic and targeted strategies were meaningfully implemented to improve outcomes, nor did they make good faith efforts to maintain a sufficient number and array of foster homes, according to the December monitoring report.
The state has been working with Adopt US Kids to develop a framework for agencies to address foster parent retention.
The last time the Michigan department met the goal for an appropriate foster home array was in 2017.
The state department also struggled to ensure the safety of children while they were in child caring institutions, according to court monitors. They found evidence of insufficient licensing investigations and corrective action plans that were often delayed, unspecific and did not reduce the risk of harm to children. They noted frequent repeat violations, such as physical intervention and improper restraints causing injuries, recurred despite the corrective action plans.
Other areas state officials struggled with included keeping sibling groups together, investigating maltreatment in care reports, keeping kids in emergency or temporary facilities for longer than 30 days, services being made available to parents and children in a timely manner, allowing kids to have enough visits with their parents and providing services to support older kids achieving permanency, the monitors found.
In the latter half of 2022, 37% of kids who left foster care were reunified with their parents, 41% were adopted, 14% were emancipated and 6% went to a guardianship. The federal reunification goal is 60%.
The state will be released from the consent decree when it completes a list of improvements, such as better handling the maltreatment of kids in foster care, ensuring families and children are provided services in a timely manner, not separating siblings in foster care and not placing children in emergency or temporary facilities more than once per year.
kberg@detroitnews.com