“When we look at this experience, we are keenly aware that doors were opened, conference rooms were made available and seats were placed at the table for billionaires, millionaires and developers,” said [COPS/Metro] leader Father Jimmy Drennan, referring to Missions investors, such as Weston Urban co-founder Graham Weston, a one-time billionaire."
VIP Sounds the Alarm: "Every Delay is a Night Without a Home"
“Every delay means there’s folks that don’t have a place to sleep more permanently,” Valley Interfaith Project (VIP)'s Rev. Sarah Oglesby-Dunegan told Arizona’s Family.
After an old hotel was set to become transitional housing for seniors, families, and domestic violence victims, Mesa City Council took the final vote off the council agenda with no explanation why. The move pushes the decision to February, delaying the opening by about two months.
Read more'The Angels are Here, the Angels are Us': DAI Recognized by The Lab Report Dallas

[Excerpts]
On a Tuesday evening in mid-November, dozens of cars slow-rolled, bumper-to-bumper, along Northwest Highway, queuing to turn onto Hillcrest Road. Temple Emanu-El was this year’s host for Dallas Area Interfaith’s Reimagine Dallas...The group, which consists of about three dozen congregations of various faiths and denominations, has since 1984 organized around issues rooted in justice, making sure policymakers and other powerful people follow through on their promises.
Read moreA Hard-Fought Win for Tenants: DAI Secures Safer Reporting of Code Violations

For years, Dallas Area Interfaith (DAI) tenant leaders have shone a public light on the hazardous, unbearable apartment conditions they face, and urged city officials to develop solutions to hold landlords accountable. Despite paying market-rate rents, mold, rats, and leaky sewage are just some of the issues experienced by these tenants.
Almost a decade ago, DAI was at the center of a successful effort to overhaul the Dallas rental housing code. After years of continued organizing, leaders have now secured a mechanism to ensure the code is enforced.
Read moreTMO, Allies Hold Houston Accountable on Disaster Recovery, Leverage Creation of a Home Repair Fund

Over a year after Hurricane Beryl and a derecho windstorm made thousands of homes uninhabitable, TMO (The Metropolitan Organization) leaders and allies persuaded the City of Houston to boost funding for home repair from zero to $100 Million, using federal disaster recovery dollars.
Read moreFrom House Meetings to Legislation: COPA Blocks 'Ghost Unit' Rental Application Fees & More in California

In 2023, leaders from COPA congregations, schools, and nonprofits spoke with over 400 families, hearing dozens of stories about families that had paid thousands of dollars in unnecessary application fees just to apply to live in an apartment. Sometimes, families learned later that the apartments they had applied for didn’t even exist.
In response, COPA leaders reached out to member institutions, building a powerful constituency across Central California. Leaders at Holy Cross engaged leaders at Temple Beth El and Mujeres en Acción, who in turn reached out to other institutions as the team grew. All in all, 13 institutions joined the process and, together, built a relationship with Assemblywoman Gail Pellerin.
COPA leaders:
- researched the issue with state policy experts and attorneys - worked with Assemblywoman Pellerin to craft new legislation,
- testified in both the Assembly and State Senate (in 3 different languages!) and
- overcame vested opposition by crafting a compromise with power groups.
In Missions Stadium Deal, COPS/ Metro Secures Living Wages, $500K in Relocation Aid + $34M for Infrastructure From Developer
Concrete Community Benefits are Now Included in Tax-Funded Downtown Project
Thanks to the intervention of COPS/Metro, concrete community benefits are now part of a partially tax-funded Downtown Missions Stadium project, thus creating a fairer deal for San Antonio residents, including those who will be relocated in advance of construction.
COPS/Metro had been in negotiations with elected officials, city council members, city staff, Weston Urban, SAISD officials, institutional leaders, community leaders, and local residents. COPS/Metro's complete statement and press can be read below:
Read moreVIP Advances 'Yes in God's Backyard' Legislation for Housing
[Excerpt]
...faith leaders and lawmakers from both sides... support two bills. The first: HB 2815, known as “Yes in Gods Back Yard”.
About HB2815, Rev. Sarah Oglesby-Dunegan, Minister at Valley Unitarian Universalist Congregation said, “Many of our congregations are sitting on unused land that they're eager to convert into affordable housing. This bill would adjust zoning to make it easier to do so. With restrictions on density to ensure projects fit with neighborhoods and requirements that the units be affordable to low- and middle-income people."
Then there’s HB2576. This would renew the state's low-income tax credit. Both bills work to address a long-term affordable housing solution while leveraging private equity.
Religious Leaders Calling on State Lawmakers to Address Housing Crisis, ABC 15 [pdf]
Religious Institutions Want AZ Law to Allow Low-Income Housing on Their Property, KJZZ [pdf]
VIP Charts Course on Proposal for Affordable Senior Housing
[Excerpt]
What we kept hearing was housing, affordable housing in particular, and rental housing,"
said Barb Quijada of the Valley Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Chandler.
....VIP had been hosting open house meetings for about two years, where representatives ask people about the real-life problems they are confronting.
Interfaith Group Maps Campaign for Dominion, Arizonan SanTan Sun
Interfaith Leaders Spearhead Housing Fight in Chandler
[Excerpt]
“Despite our differences in theology, we have so many things in common across the different denominations,” said Quijada, who is a member of Valley Unitarian Universalist Congregation.
One of those things in common is affordable housing in the Valley. These congregations, which include Catholics, Methodists, Episcopalians and even Muslims, are all coming together through VIP to fight for issues they believe are worth fighting for.
Interfaith Effort Fighting for Affordable Housing in Chandler, ABC 15 [pdf]
VIP is Fighting NIMBY-ism for Affordable Housing in Chandler

[Excerpts]
"I think as a community, as a church, most of us are looking out for each other. It's important we stay together as a congregation and the people we know and love aren't forced to move away," Davis says.
....VIP is assembling Chandler residents, like retiree Susan Davis, to share their personal experiences of housing insecurity with elected officials in hopes of garnering support for the project.
- Davis, who is a member of Saint Matthew's Episcopal Church, moved to Chandler in 2019 to be closer to the church. At the time, her rent was $1,100. It's now $1,900, plus fees.
- "I'm struggling now to survive month to month. I'm just making it by the skin of my teeth," she tells Axios Phoenix.
How Metro Phoenix Churchgoers Are Fighting Against NIMBYs, Axios Phoenix [pdf]



