The Next Move - Season 1
Episode 3: A Homes Guarantee with Tara Raghuveer
Episode Summary
Rent is due and sheltering in place becomes infinitely more difficult if you can’t make rent. In this episode, George talks about our national housing crisis with Tara Raguvheer, Director of KC Tenants and the Housing Campaign Director for People’s Action–and what our world can look like if we detach profit motives from the provisioning of basic needs, like a place to call to home.
Guest Bios
Tara Raguvheer
Tara Raguvheer is the Director of KC Tenants and the Housing Campaign Director for People’s Action.
Twitter: @taraghuveer Facebook: @taraghuveer
George Goehl
At age 21, George Goehl walked into a soup kitchen to eat. Over time, he became an employee – first washing dishes and eventually helping run the place. Three years later, he was struck by seeing the same people in line as when he first arrived. He began to organize.
Today, George is the director of People’s Action, a multiracial poor and working class people’s organization. He leads one of the largest race-conscious rural progressive organizing efforts in the United States.
Following the financial crisis, George and National People’s Action mobilized more people into the streets than any other organization to demand accountability, help win Financial Reform, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and secure mortgage relief.
The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Guardian, CNN, MSNBC and others have covered George’s organizing work.
Learn More
Join our weekly organizing call for a Homes Guarantee.
Learn More
- Read our briefing book, “A National Homes Guarantee,” a vision straight from the people impacted by the nation’s housing crisis.
- Watch our Homes Guarantee intro video.
- “The mismatch between housing need and costs has been a constant feature of the U.S. economy,” Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor in The New Yorker. “The dynamic is especially acute for African-Americans.”
- Read more about Tara’s work and the work of the Homes Guarantee team in The New York Times as they re-imagine organizing in an age of social distancing.