A Florida landlord of over 500 housing units has come up with a novel way to alleviate rent arrears for the tenants by pledging to forgive $100 of overdue rent for every hour a tenant volunteers at a recognized nonprofit charity.
It was the nonprofit’s director of property management, Holly Butler, 48, who dreamt up the rent forgiveness scheme. “I thought it might be a kooky idea, but I pitched it,” she explained.
Butler’s team was on board, calling it the “Back on Track” program and offering the deal to any of their tenants who had lost work or hours because of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, commonly known as the novel coronavirus, pandemic.
Rent for a two-bedroom apartment at CHAF’s Pinellas Park site averages $700 a month. The nonprofit had suffered a rent revenue loss of approximately $300,000 by the end of 2020.
CHAF CEO Joseph Lettelleir ventured that they might never have seen that money anyway. But the “Back on Track” program, he asserted, gives tenants “some pride and a feeling they’re doing something ... Bottom line, they’re good tenants and we’d like to keep them.”
To date, more than two-dozen resident tenants have taken advantage of the program, pledging their time to food banks, trash-collection efforts, tidying up a trailer park, and clearing up trash along the shorelines with Tampa Bay Watch. One single event removed more than 400 pounds (approx. 181 kg) of garbage from the neighborhood nearby.
The charity Hope Villages of America also partnered with CHAF to support the rent relief program, welcoming volunteers to help sort, pack, and label food for distribution to a food pantry. Twenty tenants pledged 150 hours of their time, combined.
CHAF has been supporting its tenants since the onset of the pandemic. In April 2020, every household that paid rent on time received a $25 grocery store gift card. The nonprofit also helped tenants access payment plans for staggered rent payments.
The nonprofit’s latest rent forgiveness program “takes a group that is really struggling and offers them an opportunity to hold up their head and do something for the community,” said Lettelleir.
CHAF hopes that other landlords of affordable housing will follow suit and help struggling demographics keep roofs over their heads in hard times.