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For Refugees In Seattle, Rising Rents Mean The Search For Home Isn’t Over

Credit Isabel Vázquez
/
NextGenRadio
Floribert Mubalama came to the U.S. three years ago, after living for 8 years in a refugee camp. He now lives in SeaTac, Wash. with his family — and two other refugees he’s taken in.";s:

This story originally aired on May 27, 2017.

There’s a letter on Yulina Bilombele’s dining room table that she cannot read.

“Defendant failed to pay the rent and has further failed to vacate and surrender the premises.”

Bilombele is a refugee from the Democratic Republic of Congo. She’s 80 years old. She does not speak English. She is too frail to work and she does not have the money to pay rent.

So, she turns to the man many Congolese refugees in Seattle call: Floribert Mubalama.

“They want us to help them,” he says. “They have to go to an appointment. They need a ride. They have to go to their first job,” he said. 

Or, in this case, they need to read an eviction notice.

Mubalama, 36, has made helping his fellow Congolese refugees integrate his mission, especially connecting them to basic, affordable housing, which is one of the biggest barriers to starting a new life in Seattle.

Congolese were the largest group of refugees to arrive to the U.S. last year, according to the Refugee Processing Center. The nearly 300 Congolese people who arrived in the Seattle area in the past five years have found themselves dropped in the middle of a regional housing crisis.

Mubalama still keeps the green book he received during his refugee orientation in his living room. He flips to a page that lays out the timeline for resettlement in the U.S.

The period expected and according to this book is two to five years,” he reads.

That’s ostensibly how long it will take for refugees to integrate fully into their new lives, with stable employment and housing. But that’s not reality.

Refugees arriving in the U.S. receive funding from resettlement agencies that covers their rent for 90 days. After that, they are left on their own to meet their housing costs, but Mubalama says it’s not enough time for the Congolese refugees in his community to become self-sufficient.

Mubalama came to the U.S. in 2014 after living in a refugee camp in Malawi for eight years. He met his wife there, got married and started his family.

At first, he was placed with his pregnant wife, two children and his brother in a single-bedroom apartment in Tukwila, about 10 miles south of downtown Seattle. With help from a social worker, Mubalama and his wife managed to break their year-long lease and moved to the three-bedroom apartment in nearby SeaTac where they now live. This process, he says, is not easy for Congolese refugees.

“Landlords are very hesitant to rent to refugees,” Mubalama says. “They don’t know where you are coming from.” 

Other challenges like language, lack of credit history and past trauma all make it difficult for refugees to find and maintain stable homes.

So, Mubalama started the Congolese Integration Network, an organization that connects refugees from the Democratic Republic of Congo to resources and people that can help them resettle. It’s an unpaid passion project for him.

“I don’t take it as work,” he says. “It’s paying back. All the time I was living in the refugee camp, I lived out of people’s compassion.”

Just a 10 minutes’ drive from Mubalama’s home is a large apartment complex where many Congolese refugees have found a place to live: the Buena Casa Apartments in Kent. Mubalama says these apartments have typically been a place that new refugees can afford, a cheaper option than many other Seattle-area apartments.

However, on June 1 rent will go up by $25 to $200 depending on the unit size. It’s an increase that many who are already struggling to make monthly rent payments will not be able to handle.

Gurmeet Singh is the co-owner of the Buena Casa Apartments. He says that raising rent is the only way he can meet higher property tax bills, which increased to $390,000 this year. Rent in the apartment complex will now be $850 for one bedroom and $1,300 for two.

“My parents immigrated to the United States in 1981, so I understand the difficulties they are going through,” Singh says. “If our costs hadn’t increased, we wouldn’t have done this.”

For now, Mubalama is worrying about Yulina Bilombele’s eviction notice. Bilombele couldn’t find a stable home when she came to the U.S. two years ago. She stayed with Mubalama for a few days and then found herself in a homeless shelter. Eventually, she moved in with a family at the Buena Casa Apartments but they left earlier this month. Now alone in the small unit, Bilombele must pay the full rent or face homelessness again.

“My fear is that I don’t have enough strength because of my age,” Mubalama translates for Bilombele. “The money they are asking for, I don’t have have it.”

Mubalama says the struggle to find and maintain basic shelter in the U.S. discourages new refugees who had high hopes for their new life in America.

“When we are resettled, the first thing we expect is a home to stay,” he says. “That is the thing we didn’t get. Our first biggest expectation was not met. It was home.”

This time, there may not be a place for Bilombele at the Mubalama home. The family is already accommodating two other homeless refugees, and does not have space for more.