How to get involved in the Georgia runoff elections

Right now, all eyes are on Georgia.

That’s because the outcome of the upcoming Jan. 5 runoff elections will determine control of the U.S. Senate, with hopes of meaningful action on climate, voting rights, equality, reproductive freedom and racial justice hanging in the balance.

Here’s the problem: Runoff elections in Georgia have historically favored Republicans. But the incredible work this November by all the amazing groups in Georgia, including CREDO grantees Fair Fight, Vote Forward, Vote.org, the ACLU and others, proved that organizing, fighting voter suppression and turning out young voters and voters of color were big keys to flipping the state.

And that’s where your help again could make a big difference. We’ve put together a quick guide on how you can get involved in the Georgia runoff election, no matter where you are.

Volunteer with Fair Fight

CREDO grantee Fair Fight, the organization founded by progressive voting rights activist and former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, helped register 800,000 voters in Georgia and played a major role in flipping the state in November.

Now, with the focus on Georgia again, Fair Fight is mobilizing voters for the January runoffs — and they’re looking for volunteers to call and text voters in the state to make sure they have the information they need to make a plan to vote either by mail or in person.

To get started, you’ll need to attend one of the many Zoom training sessions being held over the next few weeks. Sign up to attend a training and start volunteering with Fair Fight here.

Help turnout young voters with Sunrise Movement

Young people in Georgia voted in record numbers in November, and our allies at Sunrise Movement are working hard to replicate that turnout with younger voters this January. Whether you’re new to phonebanking or a seasoned activist, you can join one of their phonebanks on Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 6 – 8pm EST to contact young Georgia voters and ensure they vote in the upcoming election. 

Sign up here to help turnout young voters with Sunrise Movement. 

Mobilize Latinx voters with Mijente

November election exit polls in Georgia found that Latinx voters overwhelmingly rejected Trump and Republican Senate candidates, so their voices and votes will be critical to the outcome in the January runoffs.

CREDO grantee Mijente is working to turnout Mexican, Cuban, Puerto Rican and other Latinx voters across Georgia, so if you speak Spanish (although not required), you can help the organization with its mobilization efforts ahead of Election Day.

Learn more and sign up to help mobilize Latinx voters with Mijente.

Turnout Black voters with the NAACP

The NAACP doesn’t mince words on its civic engagement website: “Black voters in Georgia will decide the future of America” and “Black voters in Georgia are the most powerful voters in America right now.”

The NAACP is recruiting volunteers from out-of-state and within Georgia to boost Black voter turnout. Sign up to help with their text and phonebanks, join their poll watching efforts or provide legal protection for voters, if you’re qualified.

Apply to become an ACLU Poll Worker

If you live in Georgia, you may be able to apply to become a poll worker in your county through the ACLU of Georgia. While the organization is currently recruiting previous poll workers who participated in the recent election, you still have the opportunity to apply through the ACLU’s website. 

Learn more about becoming a poll worker and how to apply here.

Georgia Voter Resources from Vote.org

If you vote in Georgia, our friends and grantee partners at Vote.org have all the information, rules and deadlines you need to request your ballot, vote early or in person, track your ballot, provisional ballots, and what to do if your ballot is rejected.

How the Center for Economic and Policy Research is Fighting for an Economy that Works for Everyone

The Center for Economic and Policy Research uncovers the stealth causes of economic inequality that often elude policymakers and other researchers. We look at the causes and effects of inequality: how working people are falling farther behind on the one hand, while high-powered executives cash in on the other. CEPR shines a light on the ways in which the system is rigged and offers policy solutions that reverse the trend of growing inequality.

Through our research, we have brought to light the abuses wrought by outsized corporate influence, lack of regulation and increased financialization. CEPR Co-director Eileen Appelbaum’s groundbreaking work on private equity has educated the public and policymakers about PE’s abusive practices. CEPR Senior Economist Dean Baker is an expert in other ways the rich and powerful have deliberately structured the market to redistribute income upward. He outlines how government-granted patent monopolies allow pharmaceutical companies to extract billions from everyday people when drug research could be publicly funded for a fraction of the cost. His work debunks the myth of “maximizing profits,” illustrating how corrupt corporate governance structures allow CEOs to rip off the companies they work for, causing great economic waste.

This power grab by corporate elites and their enablers has created an economy that is unequal and unjust, with low wage workers, women and people of color paying the price. CEPR analyzes the data and provides research that documents the devastating effects of an unequal economy on real peoples’ lives.Our Project on Work, Poverty and Inequality examines the United States’ outdated social safety net and sheds light on how more Americans than ever are falling through the cracks. The project includes reports, public comment, and other pieces calling for improvements in how the country measures and addresses economic security, with a particular focus on families.  This work reflects “Progressive Family Values”, a change in the way we discuss poverty and the safety net.Our series of reports on unionization document how unions have historically improved the lives of workers across race, ethnicity and gender lines. Unions have protected workers of color most of all, but unionization is shrinking everywhere except the public sector. Unfortunately, public sector workers are increasingly under attack and Black public sector workers are paying the highest price.

The Covid 19 pandemic has lifted the veil on the many challenges faced by frontline workers, those “essential” workers who have been the real heroes of the pandemic. As we noted in our series of reports, these Americans “have been “essential” and under-supported for much longer than their time in the spotlight. Our work documented that women workers and Black workers are overrepresented in these industries.

But we don’t just write about the problems, we provide innovative policy solutions. CEPR Senior Fellow Shawn Fremstad is a widely-recognized proponent of new public measures of poverty and economic insecurity that better reflect differences in wealth, debt and hardships between various groups.  Some of our bold ideas include fundamentally rethinking our economic security system for workers and working-age people.Other policies that were once considered outside the mainstream are now widely supported. Dean Baker’s work on publicly funded drug trials as a means to address soaring prescription drug costs is a perfect example that is particularly relevant today. Other policy prescriptions include work sharing, which in the time of Covid would allow workers to maintain their ties to their employer and hold onto their benefits. CEPR has also pushed to have states adopt state-run retirement plans to offer a universal low-cost alternative to private 401(k)s.

Just as importantly, we work with numerous stakeholders to ensure that our policy solutions are enacted.  CEPR educates policymakers at the national, state and local levels. We provide advocates with the data-driven research they need to successfully pursue social change. Our partnerships with grassroots groups have resulted in real victories. Eileen Appelbaum’s unique research showing that paid leave programs are not “bad for business” has been crucial in the fight for paid leave. And we were a founder of the Fed Up coalition, which has successfully changed the way in which the Fed operates so that it better serves the people.

Since its inception CEPR has been at the forefront of research on the policy debates of “tomorrow”, from the housing bubble and paid family leave to Private Equity and the Fed Up campaign. Our work is more crucial than ever as the world grapples with how to address the economic devastation caused by the Covid 19 pandemic and the insidious effects of systemic racism. CEPR remains committed to looking at economic issues through a social and racial equity lens and will continue to call out the root causes of inequality and push for an economic recovery that works for everyone.

This month, the Center for Economic and Policy Research joins Free Speech For People and Green America on our December donations ballot to share a portion of our monthly grant. Please visit CREDODonations.com to vote for one, two or all three organizations to help us determine how to distribute these donations among these amazing groups.

6 Great Holiday Gift Ideas From CREDO Grantees

Are you wondering what you should get for your progressive loved ones this holiday season? 

We have some good news for you! We’ve curated some of our favorite gift ideas from current and past CREDO grantees to make shopping a little bit easier this year. Whether it’s supporting civil rights, climate justice or equality, our progressive grantees have some great holiday gifts that you can purchase safely from the comfort of your home.

Sunrise Movement

Sunrise Movement is building an army of young people from the plains to the mountains to the coasts to win the Green New Deal and center racial and economic justice in the fight against the climate crisis. Since 2019, CREDO members have helped us donate over $100,000 to help Sunrise Movement fight for climate justice.

At Sunrise Movement’s online store, you can stock up before the holidays on branded winter wear, like this  beanie made by Collection, a network of environmentally sustainable and worker-owned cooperatives in Western North Carolina, or a cool 3-ply, union-printed face mask with “Green New Deal” stamped on the front. You can also purchase stickers, posters, water bottles and other accessories with the organization’s famous logo.

Shop Sunrise Movement’s store here.

American Civil Liberties Union

Whether it’s winning full equality for LGBTQ people, fighting for immigrants, ending mass incarceration, or preserving abortion or voting rights, the ACLU is on the frontlines defending all people from government abuse and overreach. Since 1988, CREDO members have helped us donate $1.5 million to the ACLU.

This year, the ACLU is offering a wide range of gifts to support their work, from t-shirts featuring slogans like “trans people belong” and “No body is illegal” to their popular “Know your rights” handbook in print form and a stress ball in the shape of the Constitution (currently out of stock, but restocking soon). 

Check out their staff picks, or browse the entire ACLU store.

Planned Parenthood

Planned Parenthood was founded over 100 years ago on the idea that women have the right to access the information and care they need to live healthy lives. Today, the Planned Parenthood Action Fund fights to protect that right — no matter what. Since 1986, CREDO has donated over $3.5 million to Planned Parenthood and its affiliates, and we’re proud to be among the organization’s largest corporate donors.

At the Planned Parenthood marketplace, you can find apparel with the now-iconic “I Stand with Planned Parenthood” logo or a t-shirt featuring the phrase “Stand with Black Women” designed by Black woman entrepreneur and owner of District of Clothing, Dionna Dorsey. There, you can also find a wide range of bags, hats, drinkware, stationary, and health care brochures to purchase.

Visit Planned Parenthood’s marketplace to support their important work.

She the People

She the People elevates the voice and power of women of color as leaders, strategists, organizers and voters. The organization is building an inclusive, multiracial coalition to realize the promise of American democracy. CREDO has donated $36,465 to help She the People keep women of color in the news and strengthen their organizing and progressive issues in the center of national media, and support gatherings of women of color in swing states.

She the People’s online store is also small, but mighty. In addition to apparel including phrases like “Love. Justice. Belonging. Democracy.” and “We are the women making the dreams of our ancestors a reality,” the store features gorgeous prints by Kayla Jones, an incredibly talented queer, Black graphic designer, art director and activist.

Visit She the People’s online store here.

Black Voters Matter

Black Voters Matter believes that effective voting allows a community to determine its own destiny. Towards this end, Black Voters Matter works to strengthen and expand civic engagement in Black communities. It is a power building organization that believes that voting and electoral organizing is one way to build power. This August, CREDO members helped us donate $81,040 to the organization, which helped them in part to reach 15 million Black voters during the election.

Black Voters Matter’s online store is small, but powerful. It features only two articles of clothing for sale — a hoodie and a t-shirt with the organization’s signature phrase “Black Voters Matter” on the front and the words “It’s About Us” on the back.

Get your Black Voters Matter apparel here.

Amnesty International

Amnesty International is a global grassroots movement and one of the world’s foremost defenders of human rights. With millions of activists worldwide, the organization works tirelessly toward fair treatment for people everywhere. Since 1986, CREDO members have helped donate more than $1.3 million to support Amnesty International’s work.

At Amnesty International’s USA store, you can find a 3-pack of washable, reusable “I <3 Human Rights” face masks, candle-to-dove mugs, t-shirts and sweatshirts adorned with the group’s logo, and a wide assortment of bags, hats and accessories featuring pride, social justice and human rights slogans.

Check out Amnesty International’s shop here

 

BONUS GIFT: The iPhone 12 from CREDO Mobile

We’re excited to announce that the iPhone 12 is now available from CREDO Mobile! Now’s your chance to get 55% off the new iPhone 12, while supporting our grantees every month at no extra cost to you! If you’re not already a customer but would like to join, click here to get started. If you’re a current customer looking for a special iPhone 12 add-a-line deal, click here!

Vote for Center for Economic and Policy Research, Free Speech For People and Green America

Every month, CREDO members vote to distribute our monthly donation to three incredible progressive causes – and every vote makes a difference. This December, you can support economic justice, protecting our democracy, and climate justice by voting to fund the Center for Economic and Policy Research, Free Speech For People and Green America.

Center for Economic and Policy Research

CEPR fights for economic justice in the US and abroad, offering progressive policy solutions that protect the most vulnerable and upend inequality. CEPR’s original research centers social and racial equity to create economic power for the people.

Support from CREDO will help CEPR provide real policy solutions to address the economic devastation caused by the pandemic. Support for essential workers can’t end when the lockdown does. CEPR will continue to fight for equal opportunity for all.

Free Speech For People

Free Speech For People fights to take on big money in politics; to ensure free and fair elections; to challenge corporate abuse of the Constitution to evade public interest laws; and to advocate for amendments to the Constitution to reclaim our democracy.

Support from CREDO members will help Free Speech for People to expand its legal and legislative efforts to abolish super PACs; to end foreign-corporate money in elections; to defend the right to vote and the integrity of our elections; and to protect democracy.

Green America

Green America – a trusted national nonprofit since 1982 – mobilizes consumers, investors, business leaders, and corporations to take economic action to create a more socially just and environmentally sustainable society.

With CREDO’s support, Green America will push corporations to cut their emissions and reform labor practices, help make our food system more sustainable, and empower individuals across the country to take actions that build a better world for all.

Your vote this month will determine how we divide our monthly donation among these three progressive groups. Be sure to cast your vote to support one, two or all three by December 31.

CREDO members who use our products and services everyday are the reason we are able to make these donations each month. Learn more about CREDO Mobile and CREDO Energy and join our movement.

Our November grantees thank you for your support

Each month, CREDO members vote on how we distribute funding to three incredible nonprofits. Those small actions add up – with one click, you can help fund groups working to provide international medical relief, end homelessness, and combat the climate crisis. In November, nearly 40,000 CREDO members voted to distribute our monthly donation to Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), the National Low Income Housing Coalition, and the YEARS Project.

These donations are made possible by CREDO customers and the revenue they generate by using our services. The distribution depends entirely on the votes of CREDO members like you. And for that, our November grant recipients thank you.

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)
$52,657

“Thank you CREDO and its members for your support of Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). Your generosity helps doctors, nurses, midwives and many others provide life-saving medical care to people in urgent need around the world.” — Avril Benoît, Executive Director

To learn more, visit www.doctorswithoutborders.org

National Low Income Housing Coalition
$49,013

“In these challenging times, it has never been clearer that housing is healthcare. To the CREDO board and membership: thank you for supporting NLIHC’s ongoing efforts to end homelessness and housing poverty. Together, we can achieve housing justice.” — Diane Yentel, NLIHC President & CEO

To learn more, visit www.nlihc.org.

The YEARS Project
$48,330

“Thank you so much for your support! CREDO members like you make it possible for The YEARS Project to combat the misinformation campaigns of well-funded climate deniers and press for climate justice before it is too late. Welcome to the fight!” — Joel Bach, Founder and Executive Producer

To learn more, visit www.theyearsproject.com.

Now check out the three groups we are funding in December, and cast your vote to help distribute our donations.

CREDO members who use our products are the reason why we are able to make these donations each month. Learn more about CREDO Mobile, the carrier with a conscience.

How are CREDO members feeling over this holiday season? Here are the survey results.

As you know, this holiday season is like no other, and for many of us, things haven’t always been easy.

That’s why last month, we wanted to touch base with you, our members, to see how you were coping with the prolonged pandemic, gauge how you were processing the season and ask what you are thankful for in spite of the difficult times.

More than 8,000 CREDO members took our survey, and the results are in. Despite the hardships many of us are facing, many CREDO members are still so thankful for what they have, whether that’s their health or family, our shared progressive values, the results of the election (“Goodbye Trump!”), or the hope of a vaccine. Our members also shared some incredible and heart-wrenching stories of their recent experiences. Thank you for sharing your personal stories — it truly means so much to know how each of our members are feeling, especially during these times.

Here is a quick recap of some of the highlights from the survey:

In the midst of the pandemic, this Thanksgiving may have felt very different. Were your celebrations, if any, different than normal?

More than half of respondents believed that Thanksgiving celebrations were “extremely” or “very” different this year, with more than 90 percent believe they were unlike years past.

In which of the following ways, if any, were your Thanksgiving celebrations different?

Almost all CREDO members who responded were taking measures to reduce any possible transmission, whether that’s smaller gatherings, social distancing, or video calls.

Agree or Disagree? The crises of this year have helped me put some important things in perspective.

82 percent of respondents believe the crises of this year have put important things into greater perspective. We agree, too.

Which of the following, if any, have you held more dearly this year?

As we put more into perspective, we also tend to hold those important things more dearly too, including our healthy, family, relationships, justice, nature, equality and community.

What are you most thankful for this season?

We also asked our members what they are most thankful for right now. Here’s just a small sample:

“Being with my other half”
“My health”
“Being able to pay my bills”
“My family’s safety and good health”
“Surviving but stressful.”
“Trump is on his way out”
“My children”
“Being able to provide food every week to families in need”
“Being alive”
“Family”

Every day is Giving Tuesday at CREDO

Today is Giving Tuesday, the global movement established to promote generosity and kindness and inspire millions to give back.

Here at CREDO, every day is Giving Tuesday for our members. That’s because CREDO donates $1 million every year to the progressive causes we all care about, like voting rights, reproductive freedom, LGBTQ equality, racial and climate justice, and so much more, all at no extra cost to our customers. In fact, our members have helped us donate more than $90 million to nonprofit organizations since 1985.

In addition to the 200,000 meals we donated recently to help those experiencing food insecurity over the holidays, we’re also donating to three amazing groups this month — Center for Economic and Policy Research, Free Speech For People and Green America.

On this Giving Tuesday, we’re not asking for your financial support. Instead, we’d like to give you the opportunity to give back without opening your wallet by helping us decide how to distribute our December donations.

Please visit CREDODonations.com and vote for one, two or all three of these great nonprofits fighting for economic justice, protecting our democracy, and climate justice. There, you can also learn more about our donations program and view the hundreds of organizations we’ve donated to over the years.

A big “Thank You” from the CREDO team

Dear CREDO members,

As we gather for a very different kind of Thanksgiving celebration this year, we wanted to take a moment to give a big “thank you” to you, our CREDO customers and members.

During a year that, for many of us, has been difficult to be thankful for much, we are truly thankful for everything you’ve done to help us give back to so many who needed our help and fight for our progressive values when times were tough.

Because of CREDO members like you, we were able to go above and beyond our regular donations — nearly $2 million each year to progressive nonprofits — to help groups that needed it the most.

In April, we established a COVID relief fund to rush $75,000 in donations to frontline organizations responding to the pandemic. In May, during nationwide protests for racial justice in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, we donated an extra $50,000 to Color of Change to continue their critical work fighting injustice in all its forms. In August, as the election season heated up, you helped us donate $250,000 to groups protecting the right to vote. In September, after Republicans stole another Supreme Court seat, we gave $50,000 to Take Back the Court.

This month, thanks to you, we are donating 200,000 meals to families experiencing hunger this holiday season. And to the thousands who responded to our recent Thanksgiving survey — the overwhelming majority who are celebrating today in small groups with immediate family to help slow the pandemic — we want to thank you, too.

From all of us here at CREDO, have a safe Thanksgiving, and we look forward to the upcoming season with hope and gratitude that you’re on our side.

With thanks,
The entire team at CREDO

CREDO Tip: Staying home and safe while enjoying Black Friday this year

Packed packing lots. Crowded stores. Throngs of people lined up in the middle of the night anxiously waiting for doorbuster deals. Black Friday is as much tradition as it is consumer spectacle. 

But with the pandemic raging across the country, we’re unlikely to see this yearly mayhem unfold at malls, big box stores or on the local news — and that’s probably a good thing, as we all do our part to stay safe and healthy while slowing the spread of the virus as much as we individually can.

So how can we enjoy the unofficial start of the holiday shopping season as it kicks off next week? Here are some tips to get gifts for your loved ones and have a safe alternative to the traditional Black Friday this year.

Shop Local (with curbside pickup)

As Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress refuse to pass another round of much-needed stimulus, small businesses are really struggling to stay afloat right now. In fact, 850,000 small businesses have already shut down permanently during the pandemic.

That’s why we recommend supporting local businesses in your area, if you can, instead of mega-corporations or billionaire-backed retailers. You’ll not only directly support your community during this tough time, but you’ll help maintain the character of your neighborhood and probably reduce your carbon footprint at the same time. Check the websites of local business or your favorite search engine or social media platforms to find others you might not know about — they, too, may be running some sales during the holiday season and offer pandemic-safe options like curbside or window pickup.

Support Black-Owned and People of Color-Owned Businesses

Black, brown and Native people have been disproportionately hard hit by the pandemic, and it’s further exacerbating long-standing racial inequities in our economy and health care system. Black-owned businesses in particular are facing incredible challenges right now, and it could only get worse.

In addition to shopping local, seek out Black-owned and people of color-owned businesses for your holiday shopping needs. Some of these businesses may be in your area, but many have online outlets. Here are some resources to buy from Black-owned, Latinx-owned, and Native-owned businesses.

Give to Your Favorite Cause

Instead of partaking directly in consumerism on the biggest shopping day of the year, consider giving back to the causes you care about. Here at CREDO, we’re partial to our allies and grantees who fight for our progressive values, like civil rights, climate justice, economic equality and so much more. You can find the whole list of the organizations we support (and links to their websites) at CREDODonations.com

And while you’re there, you can vote to help us distribute our monthly donation among our November grantees Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), the National Low Income Housing Coalition, and The YEARS Project.

Write Letters to Georgia Voters

This year, CREDO members really stepped up to help turn out the vote by joining our friends at Vote Forward to write letters to voters to ensure they made a plan to vote on Nov. 3. But the election season isn’t quite over yet.

As you might know, there are two critical runoff races in Georgia that could determine control of the U.S. Senate next year. Vote Forward is again asking for volunteers to send up to 3 million letters to Georgia voters to encourage them to register to vote, request and return their absentee ballots and turn out to vote for the January 5th runoff elections.

Learn more and sign up to write letters to Georgia voters here.

Binge on Netflix

If shopping isn’t your thing, there’s another great pandemic-safe activity we’ll be doing on Black Friday: Binge watching our favorite shows on Netflix. Whether it’s checking out our recommendations for great political documentaries or your favorite TV shows, Netflix is sure to have something to keep you entertained if you decide not to partake in a Black Friday shopping spree.

It’s time to solve the affordable housing crisis.

America is experiencing a housing affordability crisis. Even before the pandemic, in no U.S. state, metropolitan area, or county could a worker earning the federal or prevailing state or local minimum wages and working a 40-hour work week afford a modest two-bedroom rental home, and in fewer than 5% of counties could they afford a one-bedroom rental. The National Low Income Housing Coalition (a November 2020 grantee of CREDO Mobile) found in its annual publication of Out of Reach that the 2020 national “Housing Wage” (the average hourly wage full-time workers must earn to afford a rental home at HUD’s fair market rent without spending more than 30% of their incomes) is $23.96 per hour for a modest two-bedroom rental home, and $19.56 per hour for a modest one-bedroom rental. The average minimum wage worker must work 97 hours per week to afford a two-bedroom rental or 79 hours per week to afford a one-bedroom rental at the average fair market rent. NLIHC’s The Gap report documents a systemic shortage of affordable housing, showing that nationally, just 36 affordable and available rental homes exist for every 100 extremely low-income renter households. This shortage – and today’s modern phenomenon of homelessness – did not always exist. In fact, there was a modest surplus of homes affordable and available to the lowest-income people in the late-1970s. At that time, our country housed almost everyone, including the lowest-income families. The difference between then and now: federal subsidies. Adjusting for inflation, the federal budget authority for housing assistance programs in the 1970s was nearly three times more than it is today, despite the significant growth in the number of low-income renters eligible for assistance. The result of this federal disinvestment in affordable housing during the decades since is a shortage of 7 million homes affordable and available to those with extremely low incomes, 11 million renter households that are “severely housing cost-burdened” (paying 50%, 60%, 70% or more of their incomes on their housing), and just one in four households eligible for federal housing assistance actually getting the help they need. These households forgo healthy food or delay healthcare to pay the rent. In the worst cases, they become homeless. The coronavirus pandemic has exacerbated this crisis, and the American public recognizes the need for change. There has never been a more urgent time to expand rental assistance and protect those facing housing insecurity.The country’s affordable housing crisis most harms the lowest-income renters, disproportionately people of color. Inaction is expensive; investments in proven solutions to end homelessness and housing poverty benefit us all. Like roads and bridges, affordable housing is a long-term asset that helps communities and families thrive. Failures of both the private market and public policy — at the federal, state, and local levels — have contributed to today’s crisis. The federal government has an indispensable role to play in addressing it. Congress must fully fund key federal housing programs that serve the nation’s lowest-income renters. These programs include the national Housing Trust Fund, Housing Choice Vouchers, public housing, project-based rental assistance, and other rental housing programs. A fully refundable renters’ tax credit for low-income housing cost-burdened renters would also help struggling families afford their rent. Most urgently, immediate action must be taken to protect those at grave risk during the pandemic through emergency rental assistance; a national moratorium on evictions and foreclosures; and emergency funds for homelessness service providers, housing authorities, and housing providers.The National Low Income Housing Coalition is grateful to be selected as one of CREDO’s 2020 grantees. Founded in 1974, NLIHC is solely dedicated to ensuring the lowest-income seniors, people with disabilities, families with young children and others in our country have safe, accessible and affordable homes.  NLIHC works with and on behalf of low-income people. Funding from CREDO Mobile will support NLIHC’s data-driven research, policy analysis and advocacy, public education and communications, and outreach and mobilization efforts to achieve affordable housing solutions for those most in need.

We can end homelessness and housing poverty in America. We have the data, the solutions, and, as a country, the resources. We lack only the political will to fund the solutions at the scale necessary.

Get Involved

  • Contact your members of Congress and express your support for legislation that ensures those with the lowest incomes have access to decent, affordable homes.  Urge them to immediately pass desperately needed pandemic relief that includes $100 billion in emergency rental assistance, a national eviction moratorium, and $11.5 billion in homelessness assistance.  
  • Become a member of NLIHC to support NLIHC’s work to increase affordable housing for people with the greatest needs.
  • Connect with one of NLIHC’s state and local partners supporting policy at the state/local level.
  • Sign up for updates and calls to action from NLIHC.