Current:Home > InvestTradeEdge Exchange:Class-action lawsuit claims Omaha Housing Authority violated tenants’ rights for years -Summit Capital Strategies
TradeEdge Exchange:Class-action lawsuit claims Omaha Housing Authority violated tenants’ rights for years
Charles H. Sloan View
Date:2025-04-09 07:15:53
A federal class-action lawsuit alleges the Omaha Housing Authority continuously violated the legal rights of low-income tenants over the last seven years.
Current and TradeEdge Exchangeformer tenants suing OHA claim the public housing provider illegally overcharged them for rent, denied them the right to contest rent hikes and sought to boot them when they could not pay.
In some cases, the federally funded agency tried to evict extremely poor tenants instead of offering rent exemptions entitled to them by federal law, the 54-page complaint alleges.
The contents of the lawsuit filed Thursday mirror the findings of a Flatwater Free Press investigation published in December.
OHA CEO Joanie Poore declined to comment on the lawsuit citing pending litigation.
The agency should pay back tenants it harmed and reform its policies to ensure residents know their rights in the future, said Diane Uchimiya, director of Creighton University’s Abrahams Legal Clinic, which filed the lawsuit along with local firm Car & Reinbrecht and the San Francisco-based National Housing Law Project.
“People have suffered with these violations of law … and they have basically paid rent and paid late fees or been subject to eviction cases and they shouldn’t have been,” Uchimiya told the Flatwater Free Press on Thursday.
OHA’s “predatory and unlawful actions“ threatened some of the city’s most vulnerable renters with homelessness, National Housing Law Project lawyer Kate Walz said in a press release.
The seed for the lawsuit came from former Creighton clinic director Kate Mahern, a veteran attorney who previously sued OHA in federal court four times.
While voluntarily representing OHA tenants in eviction court last year, Mahern noticed that a letter informing her client of a $400 rent increase made no mention of the tenant’s right to challenge the decision as required by federal law.
That client, Rhonda Moses, is now one of the four named plaintiffs in the case brought Thursday.
After Mahern pointed out the missing grievance clause, OHA dismissed the eviction case against Moses and added the clause to its template for rent-change letters, Flatwater previously reported.
Moses moved out anyway, fearing it was only a matter of time before the agency would try to oust her again. The certified nursing assistant believes OHA now owes her thousands of dollars — money she needs to keep a roof over her head.
“My rent should have stayed the same for the whole six years (I lived there) because they never let me dispute it,” Moses said on Thursday. “I just feel I got robbed.”
The lawsuit alleges OHA failed to adequately inform tenants of their “grievance rights” from as far back as October 2016 through September 2023.
Two other plaintiffs, Shernena Bush and Samantha Hansen, represent a separate class that alleges OHA failed to inform them of exemptions to paying rent.
The housing authority charges a “minimum rent” of $50 a month to tenants with no or very low incomes, but federal law and OHA’s own policies say the agency must grant a “hardship exemption” to families unable to pay the minimum rent.
Last year, OHA filed to evict Bush and Hansen for nonpayment of rent two times each, but the cases were settled or dismissed and both still live in public housing.
The lawsuit alleges that OHA employees never told the two minimum-rent tenants of their ability to apply for a hardship exemption even after they repeatedly asked how they could pay $50 a month without any income.
Bush sold her plasma to stay up with her rent bill but had to stop after her blood’s iron level fell below acceptable levels, the lawsuit says.
Six current and former minimum-rent tenants told Flatwater last year that OHA never offered them an opportunity to apply for a hardship exemption before they received eviction notices.
In Illinois, minimum-rent tenants won a settlement last year that required the Chicago Housing Authority to give qualifying tenants rent credits and to erase unpaid minimum rent charges going back years.
It’s unclear how many current and former OHA tenants could qualify to be part of the class-action lawsuit but they may number in the thousands, the complaint says.
The plaintiffs are asking the court to require OHA to properly inform tenants of their rights to grievance hearings and hardship exemptions. They’re also asking that OHA pay back tenants like Moses, Bush and Hansen who were allegedly overcharged.
The plaintiffs’ attorneys hope to settle the case with OHA, but they’re prepared to go to trial, Uchimiya said.
___
This story was originally published by Flatwater Free Press and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
veryGood! (74926)
Related
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Sigourney Weaver chokes up over question connecting her movie roles to Kamala Harris' campaign
- Jinger Duggar Wants to Have Twins With Jeremy Vuolo
- Baywatch’s Jeremy Jackson Confesses to Smelling Costars' Dirty Swimsuits
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Baltimore ‘baby bonus’ won’t appear on ballots after court rules it unconstitutional
- Watch as abandoned baby walrus gets second chance at life, round-the-clock care
- Errol Morris examines migrant family separation with NBC News in ‘Separated’
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Sigourney Weaver chokes up over question connecting her movie roles to Kamala Harris' campaign
Ranking
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Real Housewives of Orange County's Alexis Bellino Engaged to John Janssen After 9 Months of Dating
- Oh, the humanities: Can you guess the most-regretted college majors?
- Ukraine says one of its Western-donated F-16 warplanes has crashed
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Why Black students are still disciplined at higher rates: Takeaways from AP’s report
- SEC to release player availability reports as a sports-betting safeguard
- Escaped killer who was on the run in Pennsylvania for 2 weeks faces plea hearing
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Nordstrom Rack Clear the Rack Sale: $9 Heels, $11 Shorts + Up to 94% Off Marc Jacobs, Draper James & More
Tallulah Willis Shares Update on Dad Bruce Willis Amid Health Battle
'A good, kind soul': Friends remember murdered Florida fraternity brother as execution nears
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Man whose escape from Kansas prison was featured in book, TV movie dies behind bars
Mama June Shannon Shares Heartbreaking Message on Late Daughter Anna Cardwell’s Birthday
The 15 games that will decide the College Football Playoff field
Tags
Like
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Real Housewives of Orange County Alum Lauri Peterson's Son Josh Waring's Cause of Death Revealed
- The US Appetite for Electricity Grew Massively in the First Half of 2024, and Solar Power Rose to the Occasion