To address the issues facing Trey and many other tenants across the city, the City of Akron partnered with United Way of Summit & Medina, Google.org, the Beeck Center for Social Impact + Innovation, and the Centre for Public Impact on the TOPC program and designed a prototype of a digital platform to help tenants find safe and livable housing. They demonstrated the platform to the public on November 2 at the TOPC Demo Day.
The platform helps tenants easily search a property’s history of evictions and complaints by address and search for the property owner. Once implemented, the tool will give step-by-step instructions on filing a complaint and what resources are available to prevent existing tenants from being evicted. Tenants can access culturally relevant and linguistically appropriate resources, including housing rights; file a complaint connected to the City’s 311 system; and connect to legal services.
Throughout the design sprint, the City of Akron and United Way of Summit & Medina conducted user research, ideation, prototyping, and usability testing with tenants and experts in property management. The research showed three key insights:
Tenants face barriers to accessing information to resolve housing issues
Tenants who are predominantly low-income, BIPOC, with a disability, and elderly experience many challenges and poor living conditions in Akron. They struggle to understand their rights and appropriate living standards, report their housing issues to their landlords and the housing compliance agency, and follow up on solutions. They are afraid to report their concerns because they don’t want to be evicted or be sued, among other reasons. Tenants want to know what their potential housing looks like before they commit to renting a unit.
A digital tool from the City helps close this knowledge gap by increasing transparency in data access. Tenants will spend less time searching for information in various sources, improving their ability to make informed decisions and find livable housing for themselves and their families.
There are disparities in the balance of power between tenants and landlords.
Many residents lack the basic knowledge of the Akron housing-eviction process protocol to combat their impending legal issues or avoid a housing crisis. With eviction filings in Akron on the rise, especially post-COVID-19 pandemic, numerous city and state officials have called the impending situation a crisis, resulting in high rates of housing insecurity. During discovery research, one tenant exclaimed: