City Desk
- Details
- Category: City Desk
By Mark Moran - Producer-Editor, Contact - News
Big Sky Connection - Organizers in Bozeman are fighting for legal representation for people facing eviction. They say the number continues to rise, along with rents and a shortage of affordable housing. Bozeman Tenants United says evictions have dropped sharply in other places around the country that have adopted a similar policy. Landlords call such a law unfair. Comments from Benjamin Finegan (FIN-uh-gun), director, Bozeman Tenants United.
Mark Moran
June 24, 2024 - A group formed to fight for the rights of Bozeman's lower-income renters is pushing for mandatory legal assistance for people facing eviction. Opponents say it's unfair to landlords.
Bozeman Tenants United calls itself a multiracial, intergovernmental movement to win safe, dignified and affordable housing for working-class renters.
Benjamin Finegan, director of the group, said rising rents and less availability are proving to be "death by a thousand cuts" for renters, who he pointed out are forced to spend as much as half of their income on housing, if they can afford it at all. He called evictions "acts of violence," and claimed they are at the heart of Bozeman's housing crisis.
"Where an eviction, in a lot of ways, is a death sentence," Finegan argued. "It means that you are out on the street with nowhere to go, possibly with kids. It means that you have a red stamp on your rental record, and it will be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to find new housing."
Finegan is working to get financial support from Bozeman to pay for legal representation for low-income households facing eviction. The state landlord's association is among the groups pushing back on the idea, saying rent prices are simply driven by market conditions and supply and demand.
Finegan noted Bozeman would join more than a dozen other towns and cities around the country that have instituted some form of legal assistance for people facing eviction. In Bozeman, Finegan said at least two-thirds of residents are low-income renters and as the number continues to grow, his group will push for the funding to pay for legal help.
"Fighting for approximately $670,000 per year in order to actually fund enough attorneys to give people full legal representation through eviction court filings, as well as illegal, dangerous living conditions," Finegan outlined.
Finegan added mandatory, city-funded legal representation for low-income people has sharply reduced the eviction rate in other places across the country that have adopted it, including a dramatic drop in evictions in Kansas City.
| Best Practices |
- Details
- Category: City Desk
Click on the image above for the audio.
PNS - Tuesday, June 25, 2024 - Charges against fake electors in Nevada are dismissed, Milwaukee officials get ready to expect the unexpected at the RNC convention, and the Justice Department says Alaska is violating the Americans with Disabilities Act.

- Details
- Category: City Desk
Click on the image above for the audio.
PNS - Tuesday, June 25, 2024 - Opponents of latest AR state tax cuts say they benefit wealthy Arkansans; Julian Assange agrees to a plea deal that would allow him to avoid imprisonment in the US; Tech-based carbon-capture projects make headway in local government; NV nonprofit calls Biden's student debt initiatives economic justice.

- Details
- Category: City Desk
Click on the image above for the audio.
PNS - Monday, June 24, 2024 - Montgomery mayor seeks public safety solutions at U.S. Conference of Mayors; SCOTUS Will Hear Challenge to Tennessee Law Banning Transition Care for Minors Abandoned IL coal mines pose health and environmental complications; and hearing on Council Bluff railroad crossing "Triangle of Death."


