Research Analyst
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
Researcher focused on federal rental assistance, housing affordability, and homelessness.
I study housing insecurity in the United States, with a particular focus on federal rental assistance programs — including Housing Choice Vouchers, Public Housing, and Project-Based Rental Assistance. My work examines how funding limitations create widespread unmet need for rental assistance, the gap between renters' incomes and rising housing costs, and the connection between federal housing policy and the current homelessness crisis.
Selected Publications
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
A proposed rule would put as many as 3.7 million people — more than half of them children — at risk of losing their rental assistance to rigid time limits or stringent work requirements.
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities |With Sonya Acosta
A proposed rule would bar mixed-status families from receiving rental assistance, forcing nearly 80,000 people to choose between their housing and their families.
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities |With Alicia Mazzara, Will Fischer, and Nick Kasprak
An analysis of where households receiving federal rental assistance live across the 100 largest metropolitan areas, finding that many assisted households live in high-poverty areas shaped by a long history of racist housing policies.
Selected Citations
The New Republic
"Even if they're technically exempt, they could lose their rental assistance anyway, for all the additional red tape that it would require to verify compliance and exemptions," said Gartland. "It's quite possible, especially for people with lower incomes, that it's difficult to get all that paperwork to prove that exemption."
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
"That gap between the supply of voucher-affordable units and the amount of families actually using their vouchers in lower-poverty areas suggests that there are other factors at play that are preventing people from using their vouchers in lower-poverty areas," Gartland said.
CNN Business
"Despite some popular notions of housing hardship, like expecting more impact in coastal areas where housing costs are highest, hardship was concentrated in southern states," said Erik Gartland, a research analyst on the housing team at CBPP. "This overlay of race and hardship reflects systemic racism and pre-pandemic disparities in housing that has grown as we have seen a disproportionate impact of the pandemic on Black and Latino workers."
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Organization
Center on Budget and Policy PrioritiesNote
Views expressed on this site are my own and do not necessarily represent the positions of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.