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He described policies that simply offer basic employment referrals as fundamentally inadequate for stabilizing low-income households, calling them "checking a box."
Lundin warned that allowing private landlords to independently manage occupancy rules could spark widespread housing discrimination, calling it a "continued assault."
He argued the underlying strategy deliberately targets vulnerable demographics while reallocating government benefits elsewhere.
"The proposed rule is in line with what the administration as a whole wants: reduce the number of poor people who are getting benefits from the government; increase benefits for people who are not poor," said Korey Lundin.
Federal data indicates that 56 percent of targeted adults receiving assistance in 2023 were completely unemployed, amplifying logistical fears surrounding the stringent documentation standards.
"Work requirements can increase the burden for working recipients to prove that they remain eligible for benefits by requiring that they produce additional or more frequent information about their wages and hours," reported the Congressional Research Service.
The research agency cautioned lawmakers about the difficulty of enforcing rigid labor metrics without destabilizing poverty-stricken families.
"There is an inherent tension between helping families meet their basic needs and promoting work in low-income assistance programs," reported the Congressional Research Service.
As agencies debate sweeping policy overhauls, foundational operations remain fragile, underscored by a massive digital intrusion hitting the D.
C. Housing Authority on Monday afternoon.
An emergency correspondence from Councilmember Robert White's office verified that the breach entirely severed access to critical digital infrastructure and public resources.