March 13NLIHC’s Housing Policy Forum 2026 will convene community leaders, policy experts, researchers, tenant advocates, affordable housing practitioners, and members of Congress for thought and ...
Memo: Tomorrow is Election Day! Make Your Voice Heard; Trump Administration Obligated to Use Contingency Fund for Food Assistance Payments; and More ...
Our Homes, Our Votes (OHOV) is NLIHC's nonpartisan campaign to boost voter turnout among low-income renters and elevate housing as a key election issue. The campaign equips housing advocates, tenant ...
House Republicans are warning the Trump Administration against the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) plan to issue a new Continuum of Care (CoC) Program Notice of Funding ...
On October 30 at 4:00 pm ET, the Training Institute for Tenants & Residents (TITR) co-hosted a webinar on “Civic Engagement 101: The Power of Advocacy and Voting Rights” with NLIHC’s Our Homes, Our ...
The Council of Large Public Housing Authorities (CLPHA) released an interim report on October 23, Estimating the Cost to Preserve the Nation’s Public Housing, which estimates the capital needs of the ...
On May 5, 2025, Massachusetts’ eviction record sealing law officially went into effect, providing renters with past eviction filings a clean slate towards securing safe, stable, and affordable housing ...
Yesterday, October 23, NLIHC hosted the relaunch of its State and Local Tenant Protections Network. Created as an informal meeting space for state and local housing advocates, tenant leaders, ...
Research published by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), “Colliding Crises: The Dangers of Extreme Heat in Affordable Housing,” found that nearly 80% of affordable homes across the United States ...
On October 14, NLIHC held a HoUSed campaign national call to address the upcoming FY2025 Continuum of Care Program Competition Notice of Funding Opportunity, challenges facing fair housing programs ...
A partial shutdown of the federal government is extending into its third week, after the Senate repeatedly voted on and failed to pass two stopgap funding bills, known as continuing resolutions (CRs).