Nancy Powell and her daughter rent a house in Wendell with help from a housing assistance voucher. Each month, Powell pays her share of the rent directly to her landlord, and the Wake County Housing Authority (WCHA) is supposed to pay the other part.
The agency began making late payments last November, according to emails between Powell and her landlord that INDY viewed. The delays grew longer each month: the WCHAโs share of December’s rent didnโt arrive until January 9, and then Januaryโs rent didnโt come until February 21. By April 7, when the landlord still hadnโt received March’s or Aprilโs payments from the WCHA, he informed Powellโwho was up to date on her own paymentsโthat he might have to terminate her lease.
โI’ve been attempting to communicate with Wake Housing for some time now regarding issues with their payments for you, and they have been continually dodging me and ignoring me,โ the landlord wrote to Powell.
โYou’re a good tenant, and we don’t want you to have to move out, but if we can’t get any resolution on this, we are going to have to terminate the lease and ask you to vacate the property by the end of the month,โ he continued.
Powell says she called and visited the WCHA repeatedly but they either ignored her or claimed not to know the answers to her questions. She says one former staff member at the agency even hung up on her landlord midconversation. In May, Powell says her landlord asked her to leave the apartment by the end of June.
โHe doesn’t trust [the WCHA] anymore because of how inappropriately they handled the situation,โ Powell says.ย
โIt’s been hard for my daughter,โ she adds. โShe was crying, like, โI’m tired of moving every year.โ And it’s very stressful and expensive. If you’re on a housing voucher, you can’t exactly afford to move.โ
Landlords owed rent
Powell and her landlord are not the only ones whoโve had trouble getting rental payments and answers from the WCHA, the federally funded agency in charge of managing Wake Countyโs public housing and distributing housing assistance vouchers. In his May report to the WCHAโs board, interim director Michael Best wrote that the WCHA owes about $1.9 million in unpaid rent to landlords around the county.
Meeting minutes from the WCHAโs May board meeting detail Bestโs report and list a series of guests who took turns raising concerns about the agencyโs operations.
The first speaker, a representative from the regional property management firm Fitch Irick Corporation, complained that the WCHA owed them rent money.
The second speaker, a private landlord, was experiencing the same problem.
The third, Wake County commissioner Safiyah Jackson, โexpressed her concern regarding the crisis at the housing authority,โ according to the minutes, and asked how she and the county could help course-correct.ย
INDY asked Best about the overdue payments and โcrisis.โ He explained that after he was hired in April, he learned that the Housing Authority had recently experienced a large amount of staff turnover, which led to emails from landlords and tenants going unanswered and complaints going unresolved.
Best says he learned that the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), which oversees the housing voucher program for low-income renters, had assessed the WCHAโs operations, determined the agency was โtroubled,โ in HUD parlance, and prescribed a โrecovery plan.โ
โItโs a very complex situation,โ Best says. โBottom line, we have to take each individual case and try to work through it in order to get some resolution.โ
According to Best, the WCHA inherited most of its current problems. In addition to managing some 300 units of public housing and distributing about 540 housing vouchers each year, the agency is responsible for low-income renters who move to Wake County from other jurisdictions and bring their housing assistance vouchers with them, or live in Wake County but have a voucher from a statewide housing authority. (This is the case for Powellโher voucher comes from the North Carolina Commission of Indian Affairs.) The โinitialโ housing authority is supposed to pay the WCHA for those voucher recipientsโ housing assistance, which the WCHA is supposed to pass along to their new landlords. But Best said the WCHA is owed $1.9 million by 114 different public housing authorities around the country.
How did the WCHA allow that balance to climb so high?
According to Best, before he arrived, the agency failed to submit updated HUD paperwork for 260 voucher households who moved to Wake County from other jurisdictions. Without that paperwork, the โinitialโ housing authorities didnโt know whether or how much money to send to the WCHA.
Best says the WCHA has cleared the paperwork backlog for all but 54 of those 260 households and is working to finish the rest. He adds that even without updated paperwork, HUD instructs initial housing authorities to continue paying tenantsโ rent.
Best and his staff are currently in the process of contacting each of the 114 public housing authorities individually to ask them to pay. He describes a laborious process of back-and-forth messages, conference calls, and exchanges of paperwork to settle each balance. He adds that a handful of housing authorities, including Durhamโs and New York Cityโs, owe the majority of the $1.9 million.
โItโs going to take a little time,โ Best says. โBut bottom line, we’re on top of it.โ
In response to a request for comment, the Durham Housing Authority declined to say how much they owe the WCHA but indicated that payments are owed both ways.ย
โWe have been in contact with the Wake County Housing Authority, as recent [sic] as last week regarding the outstanding payments as well as the payments that they owe us,โ a spokesperson wrote in an email to INDY.
“We have the adequate staffing”
Even if the out-of-town housing authorities are to blame for some of the unpaid rent, itโs not entirely clear why itโs taken the WCHA so long to start trying to collect the money. One reason seems to be the high turnover at the agency: Best says most of his staff have only been at the WCHA a few months longer than he has and that there was โa big turnoverโ after the pandemic.
In response to INDYโs inquiry about reasons for the turnover he says, โI donโt even know, because nobodyโs really here to even ask that question.โย
The WCHA has hired four new staff members since Best arrived, he says. They now only have one โcrucial vacancyโ to fill and are actively interviewing candidates for that role. The WCHA website lists 14 current employees.
โWe have the adequate staffing to aggressively address the issues at hand,โ Best says.
As for the total number of unpaid rent cases the WCHA is handling right now, he couldnโt say for certain.
โI’m working 15 or 20 directly,โ Best says. โThese are ones that landlords have sent over emails, and we’re researching to find out the status of their payments โฆ but I realize there’s more.โ
Best also declined to provide a timeline for when all of the past-due rent will be paid because of the interagency coordination involved.
HUD and Wake County have both taken notice of the WCHAโs challenges.
HUD’s โrecovery planโ includes a series of internal evaluations and reforms, Best says.
Although the WCHA is an independent agency, the Wake County Board of Commissioners appoints its board. A Wake County spokesperson told INDY, โWe are aware of the concerns that renters and landlords have voiced regarding timely payment, and weโre willing to support the Housing Authority as they work to address these challenges.โ
Correction: Nancy Powell lives in a house in Wendell, not an apartment. She says a housing authority staffer hung up on her landlord during a call, not on her.
Chloe Courtney Bohl is a Report for America corps member. Follow her on Bluesky or reach her at [email protected]. Comment on this story at [email protected].

