This Week’s Top Agenda Items

  • City could bar landlords from rejecting applicants over housing gaps
  • City looks to monitor social media for 311

City could bar landlords from rejecting applicants over housing gaps πŸ”—

The Commission on Human Relations is looking to add β€œpast or present housing status” to the city’s code as a protected status.

Christopher Soult, the commission’s deputy director, said landlords are increasingly asking for a housing history, similar to a work resume. Some landlords are automatically denying applicants with gaps in their housing history or who list addresses linked to shelters or residential treatment facilities.

The legislation does not prohibit landlords from refusing to rent to people based on credit or eviction history, which is allowed by law.

Council Member Bob Charland of the South Side said housing discrimination clogs the shelter to housing pipeline. People who are denied housing remain in shelters they wouldn’t otherwise need.

Council Members Theresa Kail-Smith of Westwood and Anthony Coghill of Beechview both said they were worried the change would put an undue burden on landlords and the city.

Rachel Shepherd, the commission’s executive director, said there would be no additional cost to the city. The commission, which was founded in 1955, already has systems in use for investigating discrimination.

The final vote is scheduled for September 30.

Formbricks Modular Survey Embed

Question 1

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City looks to monitor social media for 311πŸ”—

Pittsburgh is planning to start monitoring social media and tie individual users to their comments.

The change would come as an expansion of the new Salesforce 311 system, which now has the ability to tag duplicate reports.

Heidi Norman, the city’s director of Innovation & Performance, told City Council Monday that the current 311 system is the first phase of the city’s β€œcustomer relationship management system.”

In the future, she said, β€œWe are going to get into things like: what is a particular constituent saying about government in social media?”

The transition to the Salesforce system has been plagued with confusion and complaints.

Council Member Charland also responded to Norman’s plan: β€œI would rather us stick to picking up the trash and figure out how to do that and get that part right before we talk at all about expanding into any of these kind of troubling capabilities that we might have.”

The expansion of the system is not up for a vote by Pittsburgh City Council.

Question 2

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Council Considers Homeless Protections From Housing Discrimination and May Monitor Social Media