DENTON COUNTY, Texas — Dozens of families in a small town just east of Denton, Texas are looking at having no place to call home soon. Revisha Threat became a Providence Village Resident about a year ago. She relocated to Texas after learning it was a great place to raise a family.
“I sit in my living room and cry because I just don’t know what to do,” said Revisha Threat. That because, like some of her neighbors, Revisha fears being homeless. The rules just changed in their Providence Village subdivision .
Revisha learned HOA officials voted to no longer allow Section 8 renters, a government subsidized rental assistance program. She believes it stems from neighbors not wanting renters. saying some of those neighbors have even sent death threats to her family.
“It’s gotten a little dangerous to the point where I can’t let my kids go to the pool or go anywhere outside of the home because of all the threats I’ve received,” Revisha Threat said, Some Section 8 renters thought the new rule would not affect the m and so did their landlord. When talk about the proposed changes started, some property investors and landlords attended a Q&A session and walked away believing they would be grandfathered in as Section 8 landlords. The HOA reportedly revealed later those fines would be levied as soon as 30 days if the Section 8 renters were not relocated out of Providence Village or paying for their lease.
HOA language also added property investors would be limited to owning only one single home. Yvette Townsend already had relocation plans, but now she must move. She moved into Providence Village last December.
“I’m on Section 8 because I have a brain condition. I can’t work because my hair fills with fluid,” said Yvette Townsend, “So if I don’t have the brain condition, I will be working, and I wouldn’t be on Section 8. ” Real Estate Investor Judy Rooker rents out 10 homes in the neighborhood.
She can’t afford the HOA fines at $300 a week for having Section 8 tenants. Rooker is not just a property owner who rents to just anyone. She takes the time to get to know the families who she develops a professional relationship.
She explained she has had more issues with Non-Section 8 renters than those who do receive government rent assistance. “On June the six they gave us the new rules and then they said all that stuff, you know, everybody can only have one rental house and then all this section is banned,” Rooker said. Rooker and her team are already consulting with attorneys to see if the HOA has violated not only her rights as a business owner, but more importantly, the rights of her tenants.
Rooker owns more than 50 properties all together across Dallas-Fort Worth, and this is the first time she has been forced to tell good tenants they have to get out. The same goes for landlord Alecia Mackey when it comes to finding families a safe place to call home. She helped Stephen Smith rent a home in Providence Village through Section 8 assistance due to a job-related injury.
She is heart-broken about telling her tenants like Stephen Smith they must move. Especially since relocating to other Section 8 approved housing can take weeks if not months in some cases. “It hurts tremendously,” said Alecia Mackey, “I have three families here in Providence Village, and I’m very close to all of them.
I text happy Mother’s Day to the families. We say Merry Christmas, that they’re family to me and they’re being discriminated against. I don’t know why.
” Mackey’s tenant Stephen Smith fought back tears about being forced to move his family. Despite getting hurt on the job, as a husband and father, he still wants to provide his family with a safe, comfortable place to call home. “I have been working hard trying to purchase a home.
And when this happened to us, we didn’t think it was going to be possible, but we were able to get on the program and we were able to meet this nice lady right here,” said Stephen Smith. Some of the residents in Providence Village who are unhappy with the new rules plan to voice their concerns at a town hall meeting. They plan to share how the new rules will leave them with no place to go due their landlords not being able to afford the hefty fines.
WFAA TV reached out to Providence Village HOA but didn’t hear back. .
From: wfaa
URL: https://www.wfaa.com/article/news/local/providence-village-hoa-kicking-out-section-8-renters/287-43244102-8ae9-41f1-b11a-932ebfe306b4