Saturday, March 12, 2016

The Cambridge Inclusionary Housing Program

March 12, 2016




That's the address of the website for the Cambridge Inclusionary Housing Program.

It takes applications from people who live or work in Cambridge or who are homeless.  It approves or rejects the applications.  When it approves applications, it sends information about the applicants to landlords, who accept or reject the applicants as tenants.

I did not choose the building where I got an apartment.  I accepted the apartment that the building told the Cambridge Inclusionary Housing Program that I could have.  

If I had not let the conglomerate's code accusations decide where I couldn't get a place to live in 2014, I could have moved out of my apartment at Braintree Village instead of being evicted.  Braintree Village started the eviction proceedings in 2013, based on vicious lies about me and its abuse of me, including hidden cameras that it had put all around the apartment by the time that I moved into the apartment.  I was only there for a few months before they started to try to evict me.  By the end of the second court hearing, I had decided that they were such liars and the situation was so dangerous that I should leave.  At the third court hearing, I signed an agreement saying that I'd move out no later than 3 months from the time the agreement was signed.

The conglomerate proceeded to attack me, making code accusations about every apartment that I read about online. It criminally invaded my privacy to read about every apartment that I read about, listen to every phone call, read every email.  There was an apartment that I could have rented; I decided not to rent it because it was number 306, and I knew that the conglomerate would accuse me of wanting to be voyeuristically videotaped if I lived there. I was homeless for two consecutive years because I didn't rent that apartment, and I was victimized by voyeurism during those two years anyway.

I have never chosen the addresses where I have rented apartments.  Like most poor people, I have taken what I could get.


Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, March 13, 2016 @ 1:09 p.m.